Captain Obvious
View attachment 78341 Today I got to haul an AS 350 to a movie studio in Hollywood. First time in 17 years of driving truck that I have hauled an aircraft.
That's cooler than when I used to drive for Superior Trucking back in '70s. We hauled a lot of jet engines for GE. Some of those babies were huge and required escorts and bridge warnings. And they had speed and vibration detectors to assure a gentle ride. The air suspension helped, but still hitting that bump going over the Lake Pontchatrain Causeway could be the cause of an insurance claim. It wan't me; HONEST!
It might have been big, but backing into a dark cave would give me the shivers.You both are lucky. I had a reefer trailer. Most interesting thing I got to do with it was deliver in a cave.
There is, or used to be, a guy there you could pay about $35 to back your trailer in for you if you were scared. I told him no, I would be ok. I did it, came back out and asked him how many suckers he got a day because there is less room to back into parking at most truck stops in the country. That cave seemed massive compared to some places I backed into just to walk inside and pee.
And the job gave me all the incentive I needed to be sure to go back and finish school.
That is certainly understandable.Working at Wal-Mart during college did the same for me.
It might have been big, but backing into a dark cave would give me the shivers
Working at Wal-Mart during college did the same for me.
I was thinking the exact same thing.@Fiveslide Who did the $35 man work for? Did he have, or did his employer have insurance to cover this if it didn't go well? I wouldn't turn my rig over to anyone without...
-Skip
For me it was the part time gig at McDonalds all through highschool...
I hope the ventilation is good in there!You both are lucky. I had a reefer trailer. Most interesting thing I got to do with it was deliver in a cave.
There is, or used to be, a guy there you could pay about $35 to back your trailer in for you if you were scared. I told him no, I would be ok. I did it, came back out and asked him how many suckers he got a day because there is less room to back into parking at most truck stops in the country. That cave seemed massive compared to some places I backed into just to walk inside and pee.
Weighs nothing compared with the useful load of your rig.
@Fiveslide Who did the $35 man work for? Did he have, or did his employer have insurance to cover this if it didn't go well? I wouldn't turn my rig over to anyone without...
-Skip
And the job gave me all the incentive I needed to be sure to go back and finish school.
That's cooler than when I used to drive for Superior Trucking back in '70s. We hauled a lot of jet engines for GE. Some of those babies were huge and required escorts and bridge warnings. And they had speed and vibration detectors to assure a gentle ride. The air suspension helped, but still hitting that bump going over the Lake Pontchatrain Causeway could be the cause of an insurance claim. It wan't me; HONEST!
If you think the engines were huge back then, look at the specs of today's GE90-115B and GE9X engines. Larger than my first apartment.That's cooler than when I used to drive for Superior Trucking back in '70s. We hauled a lot of jet engines for GE. Some of those babies were huge and required escorts and bridge warnings. And they had speed and vibration detectors to assure a gentle ride. The air suspension helped, but still hitting that bump going over the Lake Pontchatrain Causeway could be the cause of an insurance claim. It wan't me; HONEST!
Funny how that works, isn't it.??
All through high school all I wanted was out and go to work. I did not want to take anymore classes for anything. Until I learned that minimum wage is a starting point, not a living.
After posting, I realized I incorrectly called them jet engines. Actually they were turbines to be used in hydro-electric dams.If you think the engines were huge back then, look at the specs of today's GE90-115B and GE9X engines. Larger than my first apartment.