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Thread: Did I do the right thing?
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13th December 2004, 11:45 AM #1
Did I do the right thing?
On Saturday night approx 10PM I was driving up the Calder towards Bendigo when a B Double turned onto the Highway in front of me. It was safe when he did this 1Km in front of me. He was slow reaching 100Km/h but I was patient and waited until I reached an overtaking lane. I wasn't in a hurry and besides there would be no point in flashing him etc and I didn't. We all have to share the roads.
I left him miles behind me until I hit the next town when he caught up to me. Here I was doing 70Km/h in a 60 Km/h zone with a B Double sitting less than 3m behind me. I stuck to the 70 (10K’s over) and then he started flashing his headlights. Reminded me of the Duel Film. I couldn’t pull over as is was a narrow road with nowhere to pull off. He couldn’t overtake because of double lines.
I politely asked him on Ch40 CB if I had done something to upset him. He used language that indicated to me he was a gynecologist! He had a 63 Tonne load and &*%#s like me should &*$@#^& off the &$#@%* road you %$#@@&ing ^%$^&*. I explained (without swearing) that maybe the speed limit was unreasonable but I didn’t want to get fined for speeding. #$%^ !@@#$$ off you @##$ ##@ was the response. I told him the limit was 60 and I was doing 75 at this time. @#$@#$ *#$@#%%^.
I ignored him and shortly after turned off the highway towards Castlemaine.
It wasn’t as if I slammed on my brakes in front of this bloke, he chose to ignore the speed limit more than myself and caught up with me over a distance of 1Km.
I am not the type of person who thinks he should limit the speed of all other road users by hogging the road. I understand a bit about trucks and braking and taking a run at steep hills etc. I do hold a Heavy Rigid drivers licence but I do not drive trucks for a living.
Should I have baited him? I was almost going to but then thought that stirring up this head case could make him endanger other road users.
Should I contact the company he works for? I have the name of the transport company. Do companies take the word of a stranger and occasional road user over that of their “professional” drivers who spend all their time on the road?
Should I have travelled at a speed that suited this bully driver and risked my licence because “he had 63 Tonne on board”?- Wood Borer
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13th December 2004, 12:07 PM #2
Ring his company! We cant afford to have these d###heads on the road. Just recently up my way we had a truck run into the back of a car and pushed it off the freeway killing a young boy. The truck driver didn't even bother to stop.
A couple of weeks before that our accounts lady was one of the victims of the truck than rammed through about 35 cars killing one person and smashing the wrist of our lady. Apparently over 160 people have been called to appear as witnesses.
You may feel that it's not the Aussie way to dob someone in, but look at it this way - would you want him driving behind your wife and kids.
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13th December 2004, 12:12 PM #3
Ring up his company.
But they probably won't do anything, but at least you have tried!
On the radio this morning there was a report that on the spot drug testing started at 11 am today. The 4th driver tested positive to drugs.
Maybe the truck driver uses them too!
If the VIC tests show high figures its probably only a matter of time before there is Oz wide drug testing
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13th December 2004, 12:17 PM #4
In a perfect world you would ring the company or the cops and the guy would have his license revoked and never be allowed behind the wheel of one of those monsters again. He was probably speeding - and I don't mean 70 in a 60 zone, I mean illegal pharmaceuticals.
I've had heaps of run-ins with these idiots on the Hume and Federal highways. They are so blasé about speed because they spend all their working lives on the road. They don't mind pulling out in front of you but are the first to get on the air horns and drive up your asre if you do it to them.
My cousin is a truckie. We have this argument all the time. He gives me that line about keeping up speed to get up the hills, the time it takes to get up to speed again if you have to stop or slow down etc. I say none of that matters, you shouldn't be driving like that and tell it to the family that loses a family member because you were worried about losing momentum or missing a deadline.
It's tough being a truckie, long hours, tight deadlines. At the end of the day though, you're the one in control of the truck and responsible for the mayhem you cause if you stuff up. I'm sure there are polite and conscientious truckies out there - my cousin is probably one of them - but they are few and far between in my experience.
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13th December 2004, 12:37 PM #5
You did the right thing. Some truckies (not all) use the sheer might of their vehicles, along with drugs and anything else they have consumed, to intimidate motorists. I had an experience with a cowboy on the Coorong (between Meningie and Kingston) a couple of years ago, semi and trailer with no load. There was no way he was going to let me overtake, he swerved off the road numerous times at speeds of up to 130kph and broke my windscreen. Eventually (it took about 10 kms) I got past him and was set to report him to the police in Kingston, except my dearest in the passenger seat (and Ops Manager for a transport Company) said let him go. I wrote to the trucking Company in Mt Gambier, no answer, waste of time, but got it off my chest. On Adelaide radio this morning there have been discussions on this very subject and one caller suggested ringing ahead to the police in the next town. Generally, Aussies are not dobbers, but how else are we going to eliminate the "I own the road" attitude of some heavy vehicle drivers.
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13th December 2004, 12:58 PM #6
I think you did the right thing Borer, you can't and shouldn't pick a fight with someone driving a 63 tonne truck up your asre, especially an asrehole like this guy.
I'm the last one to support dobbing but it's absolutely the right thing to do with these truck drivers, there seem to be more incidents being reported recently, although I'd guess they were happening before just not reported.
I think it's the Linfox? trucks that have a 1800 number on the back you can call if you're concerned about how a truck is being driven, maybe these should be made compulsory for all trucks.
Phoning ahead to the local cops is a good idea also, if they're as serious as they say they are about calming the truckies down then they'll respond. Make sure it's your passenger making the call though as driving whilst on a mobile is something else that should be punished.:mad:
HH.Always look on the bright side...
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13th December 2004, 03:08 PM #7
I've worked in Distribution most of my working days. I have a lot of time for most of the guys working the trucks - they are a great bunch of blokes generally and will turn on the rogues if you let them know.
Funny that Tikki, I loaded a 2 1/2 tonne fork lift on that Mt Gambier companies truck in Melbourne to take it to Adelaide. I never saw it again. :eek: :eek: :eek: :mad:
It got lost :mad:
The more I see these days the more I agree with the signature seen on here
"99% of @#$#@#$ give the others a bad name."
JamiePerhaps it is better to be irresponsible and right, than to be responsible and wrong.
Winston Churchill
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13th December 2004, 03:13 PM #8Originally Posted by barnsey
HH.Always look on the bright side...
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13th December 2004, 03:14 PM #9they are a great bunch of blokes generally
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13th December 2004, 03:36 PM #10
The ones that I've talked to generally say that it is guys who are put on and will do anything to earn cash at the sake of safety. They are the desperates and the truckies don't like them on their side of the highway either!! :eek: :mad:
Alas they only find the ones who do it to them and that results with an even worse attitude or off the road temporarily till the injuries recover :eek:
I believe WB should report the incident to the authorities, but I think a word in the ears of the good ones down at the local truck stop is probably a better option.
Darwin's theory of evolution still has a lot going for it!!
JamiePerhaps it is better to be irresponsible and right, than to be responsible and wrong.
Winston Churchill
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13th December 2004, 03:36 PM #11
Depending on the company what happens to the driver when he is reported, some treat it as a warning - too many and your out, others ignore it.
If police recieve a number of calls about erratic or dangerous driving they will respond quickly. Just one call and you might be looking at a follow up visit or call (if the jacks are bored).
FWIW this is my experiance and each cop / station / region will differGreat minds discuss ideas,
average minds discuss events,
small minds discuss people
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13th December 2004, 03:45 PM #12
I drive a car a fair bit on the highways and I think the attitude of the truck drivers has improved significantly over the past 30 years.
I find most them pretty good but there is the cowboy element amongst a small number which give the rest a bad name.
I have found the Road Train drivers in SA and QLD on the outback tracks particularly good. They slow down, for you, call you up on the radio and tell you to move to the other side of the road so you don't eat their dust, tell you the road conditions ahead - I haven't met a bad one yet.- Wood Borer
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13th December 2004, 03:58 PM #13
I must get all the nut bars then....
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13th December 2004, 04:12 PM #14
I've driven the highway between Sydney and Coffs Harbour a few times over the last two months and I've seen one almost every trip, seems to be worse at night......
Always look on the bright side...
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13th December 2004, 04:19 PM #15
you don't argue with someone bigger than you ... its not worth it.
you should report him. he's in the wrong and dangerously so. Even if nothing happens as a result you've tried. You might get a better response than you expect. e.g. Yarra Valley Trams will take up a complaint with a tram driver and get back to you. There is a particular junction near me where Trams seemed to regularly go through the lights on red despite them having a clear view of the junction from a long way off.
One day they are going to strawberry jam a kid on their way to school who is watching the green man and not watching for trams. Every time I see it happen I take the number, direction and time and contact the company. Since I started doing this the number of "jumpers" at this particular junction appears to have decreased. If that makes me a dobber then so be it but I'd rather that read all about some incident in the local paper.no-one said on their death bed I wish I spent more time in the office!
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