I had an 11' snow plow on my M135. I took it to town one day the evening of a blizzard to get groceries and other essentials. I was on a service road, approaching a curve to my left. There was two cars coming down the road toward me that would be taking the curve at the same time, turning to their right on the inside of the curve and inside of me. The road was packed snow and ice, very slick. I had another of those fateful thoughts like "They are going way too fast". This proved to be true. I had the plow up and angled to my right, which put the lower left corner of the blade about 3' off the road. I saw the young girl in the first car, with a huge smile on her face as she and her friend following her closely in a car behind were playing on the roads after getting off work. Another OH S@#$, and I started lowering the plow so it would not cut off the top of her car. I got it low enough before she hit, with the expression on her face changing rapidly from laughter to terror, that it started cutting at the center of her hood. It twisted the hood, cut the top off the fender and battery, went on at an angle to just go past her body while cutting off the front upper part of the door post and left end of the window. This force spun her around and off the road to the inside of the curve. The friend closely following avoided by steering toward me, hitting my truck in the back of the cab step and pushing the fuel tank off location. The tank was pushed against the frame, where something on the frame cut a slit in it about 2" wide and 12" long. My tandems then ran up over the hood of her car. The tank was not full, luckily. The slit was high enough only about 5 gallons ran out. After all of the cops and ambulance stuff was over (No one was hurt, just badly scared), I stuffed a large rag in the tank slit and drove the truck home. I found bits and pieces of her car in the bed of my truck! In the duece, my wife and young son experienced only some bumps like we would off-road with no bruises or bumps. WE thought, "My, if we had been in our Blazer, what would have happened to us?" Later, at work, I learned a friend of mine knew the girl in the first car. I was told she had to deal with nightmares of the collision for a long time after. I imagine watching the edge of an 11' plow cut your car apart right past your left side is a traumatic experience! I hope they both learned from it.
Regards Marti