If your pulling a trailer marked at the same height as a bridge is it perfectly fine to go through or too close for comfort/too risky…
Ie if I’m pulling a double decker trailer marked up at 16’0” and there is a bridge marked with a circular sign at 16’0” does that mean you CAN go through or not? Would you personally or not?
To close for comfort for me, but its your choice risk it and lose, it your licence and your money to pay any fines nobody elses.
I took the chance once at 14.2 under a bridge marked the same height,I scraped it with the back end simply because the road on the other side started a slight incline before the back end was clear,fortunately no damage was done.
If you are driving a green truck then they go under beidges marked 6 inches lower than the hight of your truck so foot down and go for it. Anything else then why bother? If it is close enough to ask opinions of others and slow down to a crawl they just go a diffrent way.
Many years ago I had a regular drop in Wick Lane E3, bridge was (and still is) marked as 13ft but my truck was 13’-9", first time I had to go there the customer watched me and said that I had at least 3" to spare.
DickyNick:
If your pulling a trailer marked at the same height as a bridge is it perfectly fine to go through or too close for comfort/too risky…
Ie if I’m pulling a double decker trailer marked up at 16’0” and there is a bridge marked with a circular sign at 16’0” does that mean you CAN go through or not? Would you personally or not?
I would drop the suspension if it were that tight, but I would say it’s ok
In the Highway code the description below a height sign says words to the effect of vehicles over that height prohibited, not vehicle over the marked height, those the same height and those close to that height at the drivers discretion prohibited.
Also in the guidelines’ for marking bridge heights it does state a measurement (3" I think) as a margin between the actual bridge height at its lowest point and what it should be marked at at.
So yes if I had a trailer marked up as 16ft pulled by a truck with the correct fifth wheel height for that measurement, then I’d go under it, all be it with some care.
Martin:
Many years ago I had a regular drop in Wick Lane E3, bridge was (and still is) marked as 13ft but my truck was 13’-9", first time I had to go there the customer watched me and said that I had at least 3" to spare.
I know the bridge you mean and our 40 yard roll ons go under it and they are just under 14 foot
Trailers with the height marking may as well be written in dog muck, it’s the height of the combination that needs measuring, there can be 9” difference in fifth wheel and tyre height on identical lorries,
jbaz73:
They sell tape measures in our pound shop, for a QUID!!! There is no excuse!
Too much effort…
They get all floppy and unwieldy over 8ft and don’t always zip back in… Then ur left with 15ft of metal measuring tape to scoop off the floor then you get a paper cut from the sharp edges… It’s not worth the grief.
muckles:
In the Highway code the description below a height sign says words to the effect of vehicles over that height prohibited, not vehicle over the marked height, those the same height and those close to that height at the drivers discretion prohibited.
Also in the guidelines’ for marking bridge heights it does state a measurement (3" I think) as a margin between the actual bridge height at its lowest point and what it should be marked at at.
So yes if I had a trailer marked up as 16ft pulled by a truck with the correct fifth wheel height for that measurement, then I’d go under it, all be it with some care.
The words Norfolk and bridge heights can only mean one place, North Walsham.
lolipop:
To close for comfort for me, but its your choice risk it and lose, it your licence and your money to pay any fines nobody elses.
I took the chance once at 14.2 under a bridge marked the same height,I scraped it with the back end simply because the road on the other side started a slight incline before the back end was clear,fortunately no damage was done.