Over the years I’ve sat through maybe six or eight meetings where
fleet managers were told of upcoming requirements to improve underride
guards on trailers. Their responses to proposals were usually negative,
based on the costs involved.
In 1952, the old Interstate
Commerce Commission first required simple rear horizontal bars that came
to be called “ICC bumpers.” Non-industry people wanted these flimsy
things strengthened to keep errant motorists from crashng their cars,
and themselves, beneath trailer bodies. This didn’t happen often, but
when it did, the car drivers were killed or badly injured.
The
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had its way, and in 1998
came a requirement for “rear-impact guards” that absorb some of the
collision forces. Each trailer maker designed its own, which complicated
repair costs because instead of replacing a damaged member by welding
on a piece of channel iron, specific parts had to be found and bolted
into place.
Managers’ fears of greater expense were borne out,
in repairs as well as initial added cost to trailers. Two or three
hundred bucks is not a lot to add to the price of a $10,000 or $15,000
trailer, unless you run 500 or 1,000 or 5,000 trailers, especially at a
time when everything in trucking was going up in price. Managers have a
point.
About 25 years ago, when I first started hearing about
bumpers in those meetings, I noticed a hard-heartedness among fleet
managers: If a motorist is stupid or drunk or drugged enough to rear-end
my trailer, should I have to worry about what happens to him?
A
lot of people say yes, for several reasons: Then as now, failure to see
a stopped semi up ahead is not just stupidity or being impaired. It’s
also a result of motorists’ expectations and perceptions, and road,
traffic and weather conditions.
They don’t expect to see traffic
slowing and stopping; when this happens, even professional truck
drivers sometimes rear-end other vehicles. Maybe they’ve become zombies
from hours of continuous driving, or it’s dark and rainy and they can’t
see, or roadside lights distract them and take attention from traffic,
and their perception – depth and otherwise – is compromised.
That’s
also true if a semi is making a U-turn across a highway and a motorist
comes around a bend and sees it too late and crashes under the trailer –
a side-impact accident. The motorist didn’t expect to see a big rig
doing that, and that curve kept him from seeing it until he was right on
it.
Maybe all drivers should watch out for such things, but in
our everyday world, most of them don’t. (By the way, there’s also a call
for side-impact guards, like those used in the United Kingdom and in
Japan – something more for frugal managers to fear.)
Know what? I
agree with those safety people. Because in 1973 I heard about a guy who
was killed when he underrode a semi in Buffalo, N.Y. According to the
story, the semi was stalled on an expressway with some of its lights not
working. It was dark and rainy, and the guy had had a drink or two. He
rammed the semi and was decapitated.
He was one of perhaps 100
people who died in that kind of wreck in ‘73, so was almost
statistically insignificant in a year when 54,051 other people also died
on American highways.
But he had a name -- Mike Mathews -- and
he was my best buddy in college. He was brilliant without being
eccentric,Welcome to we new store sdktapegroup.
and was terrifically humorous. He could party with the rest of us yet
still ace an exam the next morning. He could discuss philosophy and the
physical attributes of certain ladies with equal vigor. He was doing
well in life after we graduated, but his life lasted only eight more
years. And he certainly was significant to his family, including his
young widow and little boy, and to friends like me.
Since then,Buy Promotional high quality Anti-scratching PET protective film
at Phones. things have changed with trailers. Many now have the
stronger rear-impact guards, and some have the better Canadian versions.
And that highly reflective red-and-white tape – another NHTSA mandate
from 1993 that some managers complained about -- makes trailers easier
to see at night. Also, many fleet managers now seem enlightened and see
public safety as a responsibility.
Too bad all that wasn’t in
place back in ’73, when Mike was killed. Sometimes I think of him when
the subject of safety equipment comes up and people complain about the
cost. If you knew Mike, or somebody who was killed like he was,You Can
Buy Various high quality Improved PE protective film Products. you might just order the stuff.
No comments:
Post a Comment