Ever get tyred of lorry incidents?

He’ll be on skid row now

Skid marks too, and not on the road.

Immigrant:

ROG:
http://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/lanes-A46-blocked-Hobby-Horse-island-lorry/story-28510251-detail/story.html

No other vehicle is involved and the driver, who is said to have suffered minor injuries, has been taken to Leicester Royal Infirmary for a check up.

No,No,No,…
I drove many Kilometer. Over the Alps and other Mountains. Mostly full weight but also Groupage with just anything,taking Turns quiet Quick and nowhere really Slow.
As long as its loaded well you cant turn a Single Deck over. No Way
I dont know the Driver,but i dont blame them at all.
1.) Its the Warehouse who loads them
2.) The Person who puts the Staff in Place.

The Driver is responsible for the Load,but with that Load as i see it he may have been in a hopeless Situation.

Wow !! “As long as its loaded well you cant turn a Single Deck over. No Way” so tell me, the next time I see a fridge or bulker, and god forbid, an empty flat bed(and I have seen one) rolled over, I’ll wind down my window and shout, move along, nothing to see, its not physically possible to put anything other than a double decker over :unamused:

Common, if you drive like a prat, most things are acheivable :unamused:

Immigrant:
The Driver is responsible for the Load,but with that Load as i see it he may have been in a hopeless Situation.

Then He should not have taken to the road. Accidents do happen, but usually involve a bit of human error, and unfortunately, whether that’s been poorly loaded or not, the buck will stop at the drivers door, and he’d have a hell of a job to shift it to someone else’s door. To do that you have to prove someone else’s negligence, and that you could not reasonably foresee the events to unfold :unamused:

For instance, in the case of a mate of mine, loaded a wooden packing case on his trailer. under heavy braking, the large metal cylinder weighing a couple of tons, comes out the front of the case and lands on the back of a car. First reaction of the police is to point the finger at My mate, he points out that the wooden packing case was still securely strapped to the trailer bed. Investigation revealed that the cylinder had not been secured within the case, that is the responsibility of the packers, they were held to blame :wink: