
People can't/don't read bridge heights and try to go under the railroad bridge.
In most cases, the bridge wins

11foot8.com
Uncle Al



Al originally sent that to me in a private message and I laughed so hard I thought I was going to spit my teeth out.Uncle Al wrote:11foot8.com
Kind of like what the railroads used to do before tunnels and bridges back in the day when brakemen might have been on the top of the cars.crfriend wrote:As I related privately to Al, I fondly recall a sight I saw during a drive from Atlanta, Georgia (USA (more or less)) to Huntsville, Alabama (same country, but one would be forgiven for not recognizing it) in which along the way there was a structure overhanging the roadway with stout iron chains hanging therefrom and a prominent sign atop proclaiming, "If you hit this you WILL hit the bridge." And, yes, the bridge showed some pretty decent battle scars.
Absolutely, and I recognized that in me upon first viewing it because I still recall with sheer terror the first time I drove a box-van of the type that hit the barrier so many times on that web-site! As terrifying as it was, it was still exhilarating, and, no, I didn't hit anything. OK, I did drive the rear wheels over a kerb, though which induced a sensation not unlike just before the boat's mast topples into the water.Kirbstone wrote:Entertaining viewing, no doubt, but tainted with 'Shadenfreude' nonetheless.
For every cubic foot of earth that comes out of that bore there is a financial sum to be paid, and since the highway "loading gauge" (to use the railway term) is already set by some of those "pioneer tunnels" it doesn't make much sense to dig bigger bores (why drive a 30-foot diameter bore through a mountain when the thing'll be bracketed by a pair of 25-footers?).In Europe, while a lot of older tunnels are too low for modern container trucks, they appear to have settled on a minimum height of 4.65 meters or 15 ft 3 inches. Motorway bridges are much higher, of course, but the new tunnels all seem to have that minimum headroom.
I recall seeing some of the video footage of assorted capsize events in high cross-winds. It's a good thing the rigs have been banned. The typical way that companies try to get around the problem here is by cascading multiple trailers onto one tractor -- aka "LCVs" or, "Longer Combination Vehicles". The Aussies call 'em "road-trains", and I can state from experience that it's terrifying indeed to be anywhere near one of the things in a good breeze as they shake like snakes. For my druthers, if it's more than one truckload it belongs on the rails.Greedy firms (like Marks & Sparks) in recent years deployed so-called super-cube trucks as tall or taller than double-deckers, none of which would fit into the tunnels and several of which fell foul of our windy weather. They have been banned, so far as I know.
It turns out that there's a 100+ year-old sewer line that runs about a foot below the road that cannot be taken out of service... The other thing about digging down is drainage.Big and Bashful wrote:Such an easy cure as well (Yes the link worked this time). Just dig the road bed down a foot or so, problem solved. Do I win a prize?
It's a railroad bridge, and to raise the bridge, you'd have to create approach and departure grades hundreds or thousands of feet long on either side of the bridge to get it to the more-or-less Interstate "standard" of 14 feet.Jim wrote:Fine each vehicle that hits it until you have enough money to raise the bridge.
Done, and done. Note the large warning sign just above the crash-barrier with the flashing lights on it; that's tripped by an optical sensor somewhere to the northeast of the truck-eating bridge.dillon wrote:[...]Perhaps reducing the speed limit dramatically and using a laser-interuption system to trigger a big flashing sign that tells them their vehicle is too tall for the underpass would be better.[...]
I don't feel bad for them a bit, the same way I don't feel bad for Biff or Muffy when they wedge a rental-van under a bridge on Boston's Storrow Drive (which is very well marked). If you don't pay attention, you get what you deserve. It's the folks that get stuck in the resulting traffic-jams I feel for -- they didn't have it coming. I know, that's heartless, but nature doesn't have any pity either. Folks need to take some responsibility for their actions.I do feel bad for the hapless grad students moving into Durham to study at Duke University and destroying a U-Haul truck containing their possessions in the process...but I still laughed like heck at the videos, even though my sense of decency tells me I should not.