asianflava wrote:Yep, like everything else, there are good ones and bad ones. Unfortunately, it's the bad ones that make the newspaper.
madjack wrote:asianflava wrote:Yep, like everything else, there are good ones and bad ones. Unfortunately, it's the bad ones that make the newspaper.
...yep and they are driving 4 wheelers as well...if you could see what we(truckers) see when looking down into cars, you would be skeered...very skeered...I'll tell ya some hair raising tales sometimes....
madjack
asianflava wrote:madjack wrote:asianflava wrote:Yep, like everything else, there are good ones and bad ones. Unfortunately, it's the bad ones that make the newspaper.
...yep and they are driving 4 wheelers as well...if you could see what we(truckers) see when looking down into cars, you would be skeered...very skeered...I'll tell ya some hair raising tales sometimes....
madjack
Yup, those 4-wheelers.But they have more bad than good drivers. Trucks don't have freshly minted drivers, driving around with their friends in the back seat screaming into their cell phone so that they can be heard over the music.
JunkMan wrote:madjack wrote:...correction sledge...there are many that can back like that...it's just that the roads have been flooded with 4 week wonders...
I guess it all depends on the driver. I was one of those "4 week wonders", and was paired up with an old timer when I started driving over the road. Whenever we got to our destination, he would get out and "take care of the paperwork", then come out and tell me what dock to back the truck / trailer into. At first, this made sense to me, because I had no idea of what I had to do when checking in with the dock foreman. After a couple of weeks, I figured out that the guy couldn't back worth a darn. Even though he spent many years on the road, his backing skills sucked, unless it was a straight shot in to the dock.
Most of the focus in my driving school was backing. I grew up in Detroit, and that is where I went to truck driving school. Since many of the drivers being trained would end up being local drivers, we spent a ton of time backing into docks off of narrow alleys, and other tight places.
In my short carreer on the road, most of the drivers I met that drove over the road, weren't that great at backing into crappy docks, unless they regularly delivered into places like Detroit, Chicago, New York, etc. where there a lot of crappy docks. Most of them were used to delivering to truck terminals and large warehouses, that had nice straight on docks, that were easy to back up to.
Although I haven't regularly driven a "big rig" in over 20 years, the skills I learned in truck driving school still come in handy on a regular basis, backing up campers and utility trailers. I regularly pull a 21' car trailer, 35' 5th wheel, and 21' boat, and if it will fit, I can probably get it in there!
sledge wrote:well, sad part is As Always the Truck WON. I'm pretty sure the car driver Died, Didn't hurt the Truck Driver at all..
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