Hunter2506
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I considered that, but there was nothing reckless about it. Besides, the incident is on record with the requirement of a commercial wrecker anyway.I hope the driver owned his own tractor and Fre (hopefully) will not see their trailer advertised like this.
Not that I can think of. At least nothing short of walking everywhere you want to drive, poking the ground with a shovel. The deuce didn't sink at all when I wasn't pulling. Perhaps stopped trying to rock out sooner, but that truck sunk quick. And the deuce did too, once I was hooked up; Maybe 20-30 seconds of pulling before I had to unhook and move over.As as fleet perspective and from a safety review board: was there ANYTHING this driver could or should have done to eliminate this accident. Incidents are accidents.
He has turned that rig around there countless times with no trouble whatsoever. And he was doing fine until he found the bad spot, about a 100' x 50' section that was particularly soggy. Not something we're really used to here in Eastern CO, where the earth is usually dry as a popcorn fart and rock hard.
Either way, the only damage through this whole thing was my winch ferrule and the two rear mudflaps on the tractor that got sucked under the tires when he was trying to back. And the only time lost was his (and mine). He didn't have to leave until this AM.
I know. But the earth was too soft to worry about broken axles and drivelines, and the LDT465 pretty much runs out of power before things really start to break anyway. Not quite the same equation as juiced 1 ton diesels hammering aluminum transmissions and 11" ring gears with 450 HP and 700 lb/ft of torque.A 14,000 lb Deuce is not strong enough, frame wise, to be tackling such a task.
I bought this truck specifically to be a bad weather vehicle, both to keep me mobile and to get other vehicles back to being mobile. I just hadn't envisioned the other vehicles being larger.
That said, the Pete tractor isn't a whole lot heavier than the deuce. Sleeper 379's are about 17,500 empty. He was about half full on fuel, so maybe 19k. But all that weight is up front, so the steer tires and beam axle became an anchor of sorts. Even that purpose-built wrecker with a (50 ton?) winch struggled a bit.
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