Forum Discussion
- rhagfoExplorer III
#1nobby wrote:
Chuck_thehammer wrote:
History..
car crash test in the 1950's a tissue box on rear window shelf..
could shatter the front windshield..
Ha! We used to ride back there as kids......that's when we weren't sitting on Dad's lap steering the car.
Mythbusters disproved that, not enough mass. - 1jeepExplorer IIWhile your loading stuff in your bed and not tying it down just think about this....You can buy a new drive shaft, some of us ride motorcycles and cant buy new heads when that junk hits us!
So tired of people not thinking about their loads, mattress' on the roof of a mini van held on with thread. ladders on work van roofs secured with a bungee cord!
Yes I see it all during my daily ride. last month I was behind a work truck that had hammers hanging off its headache rack...they were hanging off a bungee cord! - profdant139Explorer IICaveman, good idea, but it is very hard to fix stupidiity. It is very common to see debris from ladders, gardening tools, etc., on the freeways.
- CavemanCharlieExplorer III
profdant139 wrote:
There are a lot of mattresses on the LA Freeway system at the end of every month -- folks moving from one apartment to another and strapping their old mattresses to the roof of the car with twine. Weekend afternoons are prime time for this trick.
They hit the freeway and the twine snaps. The fun begins.
This is a known issue -- I have even heard the traffic reports on the radio refer to "the usual end of the month mattress problem" as the cause of tie-ups.
I don't know if this happens in other places the way it does here.
WOW.... Maybe the LA police should run some public warning advertisements to encourage people to stop doing this. - profdant139Explorer IIThere are a lot of mattresses on the LA Freeway system at the end of every month -- folks moving from one apartment to another and strapping their old mattresses to the roof of the car with twine. Weekend afternoons are prime time for this trick.
They hit the freeway and the twine snaps. The fun begins.
This is a known issue -- I have even heard the traffic reports on the radio refer to "the usual end of the month mattress problem" as the cause of tie-ups.
I don't know if this happens in other places the way it does here. - subcamperExplorer IIBack in the late 80s a coworker told me the story of his friend who owned a pickup truck. He had a load in the bed and covered it with a tarp that was tied down. The tarp was too long, so he stuffed the excess between the bed and cab. While driving, the excess tarp vibrated down between the bed and cab until it wrapped around the driveshaft. The tarp was securely tied to the bed and did not rip or let loose. The driveshaft instantly stopped, locking up the rear wheels and putting the truck sideways into a skid. The force of locking up the shaft instantly caused the frame to bend until the top of the bed was touching the cab. Lots of expensive damage (new frame). Foryunately nobody got hit by his uncontrollable truck before it finally stopped.
Steve - _1nobbyExplorer
Chuck_thehammer wrote:
History..
car crash test in the 1950's a tissue box on rear window shelf..
could shatter the front windshield..
Ha! We used to ride back there as kids......that's when we weren't sitting on Dad's lap steering the car. - CavemanCharlieExplorer III
Timtation wrote:
Several years ago I was accelerating (GMC 1500) in the merge lane, saw my opening just as I saw what may be a dead deer ahead in my lane. No time to change into the freeway, locked up the wheels and found the deer was an innerspring mattress. It wrapped around the drive-shaft, locked the rear wheels, put me into a slide that somehow I controlled within the lane but scared heck out of next lane cars. Eventually I was able to get to the shoulder using both reverse and low. Had it towed home on a flat bed and it took three days and a second bolt cutter to get the mattress off the drive shaft. Shaft and undercarriage probably was never cleaner.
I saw a picture on the internet of someone who had run over a mattress and it got wrapped around the driveshaft. It must happen fairly often I guess. - TimtationExplorerSeveral years ago I was accelerating (GMC 1500) in the merge lane, saw my opening just as I saw what may be a dead deer ahead in my lane. No time to change into the freeway, locked up the wheels and found the deer was an innerspring mattress. It wrapped around the drive-shaft, locked the rear wheels, put me into a slide that somehow I controlled within the lane but scared heck out of next lane cars. Eventually I was able to get to the shoulder using both reverse and low. Had it towed home on a flat bed and it took three days and a second bolt cutter to get the mattress off the drive shaft. Shaft and undercarriage probably was never cleaner.
- Last_TrainExplorerWe avoid this kind of problem by using our Ridgeline's in-bed trunk. Locked and water tight. ;)
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