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General Forestry => General Board => Topic started by: florida on September 26, 2012, 03:22:18 PM

Title: New way to unload your logs
Post by: florida on September 26, 2012, 03:22:18 PM
For you guys still using the old fashioned techniques here's how they do it in the Ukraine.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8p2tSNYAiPM
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Chuck White on September 26, 2012, 05:20:23 PM
I'm pretty-much on pins and needles whenever I meet a loging truck!

Back when I was stationed in South Dakota I had a good friend who was killed when a small diameter log came off the top of a logging truck and came through his windshield, impaling him right there in the drivers seat.

He had some of his grandchildren in the car with him at the time.

So...... I give logging trucks all the room I can spare whenever I meet one.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: logboy on September 29, 2012, 01:49:52 AM
My old man dodged one while driving a customer's car (with the customer in the passenger seat). The trucker lost the rear of his log trailer on the snow and it came across the center line. My old man went down through the ditch to get away from it. The customer commended him on his driving.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Warbird on September 29, 2012, 03:39:31 AM
Wow.  I like how the guys get out and check their car before seeing if anyone else was hurt.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: ouachita on September 29, 2012, 04:38:17 AM
The driver in the red car took evasive action and made a U turn.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Kansas on September 29, 2012, 05:46:23 AM
Had one guy bring in logs from Nebraska. His straps loosened, and when he got to the yard, logs were hanging over the side. We had to lift the logs with the skid steers so he could unstrap.

Then you have walnut logs in the spring when the bark starts to slip. Log truck going down the road, and a log slips out of the bark and is lying on the highway.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Ron Wenrich on September 29, 2012, 05:54:33 AM
You should see tulip poplar in the spring.  We've had them slip completely out of the bark when unloading, just like a banana.  Never lost any on the highway. 
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: scsmith42 on September 29, 2012, 07:08:08 AM
It looks like the truck had a brake failure and ran the red light.  You can see the car's in front of it hustling to get out of it's way.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Magicman on September 29, 2012, 09:10:10 AM
Yikes for sure.   :o
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: clww on September 29, 2012, 12:50:43 PM
Gotta love those distracted drivers! :o
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Rooster on September 29, 2012, 01:16:05 PM
Quote from: ouachita on September 29, 2012, 04:38:17 AM
The driver in the red car took evasive action and made a U turn.

Ahhh!...Now I get it...  the "U" in "U-turn" is for Ukraine.

I've been thinking all these years it was because the car travels in the shape of the letter "U".

My driver's ed. teacher is smiling down on me from heaven...he's probably stuck in traffic on the "Paved with gold Highway".  Thanks, Mr. M!
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Bobus2003 on September 29, 2012, 02:04:35 PM
Earlier this year we had a Loaded Pup Come unhitched from the tractor goin down the Interstate.. pup went down through the ditch took out a fence and a few trees before smashing through the back wall of Wal-Mart.. Logs were strewn all over the parking-lot
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: beenthere on September 29, 2012, 02:19:06 PM
One episode like that would be enough for a new law that says "no more pups". 

Doesn't take much.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Mooseherder on October 01, 2012, 08:50:46 AM
I've been at an intersection when a driver of a Semi Dump trailer load of demolition concrete shifted when he turned too fast just like in this video.
Thankfully there wasn't anyone in the lane he flopped over into.
I helped get him out of the cab.  It was scary, the motor was still trying to run.
The driver door was towards the sky and hard to open.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Jeff on October 01, 2012, 09:03:23 AM
Here is the longer version that shows the aftermath.

http://youtu.be/RzIDe5ApjC4
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Bill Gaiche on October 01, 2012, 09:10:54 AM
I bet those extra driving points that he earned didn't help on his next job interview. Hopefully no one was injured. bg
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: beenthere on October 01, 2012, 11:54:56 AM
In Madison, there are some cow barns on campus. Couple years ago SIL and I were driving out of Madison and came to an intersection with about 8-10" of fresh cow manure on the road at the stop bar at the light. A couple deep ruts through the pile.  No one around paying too much attention to the mess.
Drove on and shortly came to the University Farms shop buildings. There was a dump truck there with a good high pile of cow manure on the hood, and a guy with a hose.   ;D ;D :D :D

He said someone ran the red light and he had to hit the brakes real hard. He said he was planning to go back down and clean up the intersection.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: thecfarm on October 01, 2012, 03:53:37 PM
Happens around here with the chicken stuff. But that stuff does not stay too deep too long.  :D
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Jeff on October 01, 2012, 04:17:42 PM
We had a full 48" chip van flop over at the intersection of 115 and 55 in Cadillac because of a lazy driver.  He didn't like to crank up the empty vans high enough when he spotted them, and at times when he went to back under the loaded vans, they would be low, so he would not want to crank on the very difficult to turn landing gear crank, SO, the tractor was air ride. He would blow the air out of the tractor suspension, lowering the tractor, back under, then air the suspension back up. Problem was, the one time he did that the bottom jaws on the fifth wheel only locked around the head of the pin, instead of below it.  We heard later that when he made the turn in Harrison, that people in the jack-pine restaurant saw the rear wheels on the trailer pick up when he went around the corner there. His next hard turn was where he flopped over. Luckily, he didn't land on a car, which he almost did.  The highways were closed for many hours while the mess was cleaned up, as the top blew out of the van when it went over.

Made the nightly news on several local stations.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Warbird on October 01, 2012, 05:07:40 PM
Quote from: Jeff on October 01, 2012, 09:03:23 AM
Here is the longer version that shows the aftermath.


Did the driver of the truck survive?  I note in this longer version that the cab got smashed in when it hit that pole.  :-\
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: thecfarm on October 01, 2012, 10:41:12 PM
There was a bad accident about 20 minutes from me a few years ago.. Trailer truck driver with a load of logs,maybe tree length took the corner a little too fast. Rolled over onto a mini van and a young girl in the back was killed. We went by it after many hours of it happening. I knew something happened,just did not know how bad until I got home.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: sawguy21 on October 02, 2012, 09:51:01 AM
One of our logging foremen met a loaded logging tuck on a corner when the pole came out and peeled the side off his pickup, the the pintle hook was iced up and the driver had failed to make sure the latch fully closed. He was talking to dispatch and all she heard was OH #*%^ OH )$%& I'll call you back.  :D He wasn't hurt.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Okrafarmer on October 02, 2012, 10:42:37 AM
When I was a kid, it seemed like a wheeler a week on its side. I'm sure it wasn't that bad, but I think they have tightened up the safety laws and enforcement since then. Since nothing much ever happens in Maine, a wheeler wreck usually made the newspaper, and I heard about it, because my parents worked for the newspaper. Then again, almost any wreck made the paper, whether anyone got hurt or not, and a lot of times the newspaper photographer got out there to take a picture. It was funny coming down here, and car wrecks are a dime a dozen PER DAY, and they don't make the news unless someone dies.

The other thing that happened in Maine all winter long, was people drowning from going through the lake ice on their snowmobiles (or vehicles).
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Magicman on October 04, 2012, 09:34:44 AM
This guy had a bad day.


(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/20011/2410/DSCN0237_%28Medium%29.JPG)
He was making a 90° turn and cut short.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Okrafarmer on October 04, 2012, 11:34:17 PM
At least no one has to wonder if he knows how to tie down his load.  :-X Looks like one stack fell off. Hmm. The rest are hanging in there pretty good.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: thecfarm on October 05, 2012, 10:19:16 PM
i say one thing for you Okra,you remember Maine alot diffeant than the way I do.  ;) I only lived about 15 minutes from a paper mill on a state highway,I don't remember trucks accidents at all. Yes,some go through the ice and still do too,but get out too.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Okrafarmer on October 06, 2012, 01:01:08 AM
Quote from: thecfarm on October 05, 2012, 10:19:16 PM
i say one thing for you Okra,you remember Maine alot diffeant than the way I do.  ;) I only lived about 15 minutes from a paper mill on a state highway,I don't remember trucks accidents at all. Yes,some go through the ice and still do too,but get out too.

Well, after all, I only spent my childhood there, and a couple years since. I guess as a kid, things seem more dramatic, and you only remember the dramatic things, whether they are frequent or seldom. Whether there were many log truck accidents or not, they sure were talked about when they did happen.

One thing is for sure, my mom was very scared of the trucks, in the winter time, coming down the road, swaying from side to side. She never felt like she had enough road on her side-- each encounter was traumatic to her.
Title: Re: New way to unload your logs
Post by: Magicman on October 06, 2012, 08:53:04 PM
My Mom remembered and was always frightened by passing log trucks.  She either saw or heard about a load giving way and crushing a car/people when she was small.  We would hear that story every time we met a loaded log truck.