Jump to content

Did I save a railway bridge..?


John K

Recommended Posts

Sunday avro I'm driving home from the Stratford garden centre (can you tell I'm 46 with no hope for life) on the B4632 and I get stuck behind one of those MASSIVE European HGV's

 

And before you say anything I was in the Ford Mundane so I was stuck and anyway I wasn't in a hurry.

 

I followed him all the way to Mickleton and at the south end of the village he indicated for a right off the roundabout to continue towards Cheltenham.

 

No big deal - except for the really low railway bridge between Mickleton and Weston Sub Edge and then the monstrous diversion down country lanes at Willersley for the sewer works... Who says local knowledge has been superseded by Sat Navs...

 

As he was pulling away from the roundabout I managed to get past him, straining the mighty Mundane to its limits (oh Mr Grumpy where were you...) and then put the hazards on slowed him down and made lots of hand waving and pointing gestures which I hoped indicated reduced headroom in the universal motorists language.

 

Any way he stopped, looked, waved and flashed...

 

I'd like to think I at least stopped a very long reverse down a country lane if he noticed the bridge and Lord knows what if he didn't...

 

A Knighthood might be a little OTT, so an OBE will do just fine...

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Know those roads well - colleague of mine once managed to launch a Citroen ZX into the copse at the bottom of the hill before that very railway bridge.  Never figured how he managed to get it about 6ft in the air!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Know those roads well - colleague of mine once managed to launch a Citroen ZX into the copse at the bottom of the hill before that very railway bridge.  Never figured how he managed to get it about 6ft in the air!

I reckon I know the very wood... going downhill through the 'S's on the Broadway side of the hill, bridge, then there is a sharpish right hander into a tight left.

Getting airborne just there is quite impressive..!

But it's a fab road when the hedges are low and the visibility is good. In the better weather there are a few too many geegees and bicyclalists to go quickly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

LOL respect is due, that's a straight road where the cross road is..!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

One good deed ... what comes around .....  etc. etc .

 

BUT !

 

Had you have gone ahead of him . set up a camera ,  recorded  the "rail disaster of the century " on film .   Sold the distribution rights to the media . Hence making a huge sum of dosh .

 

Then retire from public life to the haven of your choice & live happily ever after  :)

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

One good deed ... what comes around .....  etc. etc .

 

BUT !

 

Had you have gone ahead of him . set up a camera ,  recorded  the "rail disaster of the century " on film .   Sold the distribution rights to the media . Hence making a huge sum of dosh .

 

Then retire from public life to the haven of your choice & live happily ever after  :)

You are a sick and twisted man... And also rather evilly brilliant..!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I made a nice sum once from one of my customers when I was selling skip loaders.  One of their drivers used to take a shortcut down a country road under a low abandoned railway bridge.  He used the shortcut once but had forget to retract the telescopic arms.  The impact managed to rip the skip loader body clean off the chassis.  Body couldn't be repaired so he needed a brand new one and in a hurry, which I had in stock. The problem was the cab was green and the body I had was bright red - but he had no choice and took it.  A £22k mistake and I still see that green and red Christmas truck driving around Warwickshire...with a different driver, of course.

 

So don't dismiss letting people drive into bridges, fixing their mess keeps all sorts of people in work and it stimulates the economy. :t-up:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As a Rail Engineer I attended many, many bridge bash incidents and in most cases the vehicle comes off the worse but not always. In Chesterfield we once had a single track brach line bridge knocked off its bearings by 600mm and the police never found the vehicle that did it. In Shipley one year an abnormal load had to pass under a Rail bridge and had a Police escort leading it. When I arrived on site the bridge had been severely damaged and the bottom steel girder flanges has been sliced through by the load. When I asked the police what had happened they were a bit sheepish.....eventually they admitted that they took the wrong route and the lorry just followed them!! I attended too many fatalities when the drivers or other vehicles were hit when trying to get under bridges that were too low for them. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some years ago I was part of a working group set up to find out why the Whitehouse railway bridge in Swindon was being hit by so many lorries.  It was the most frequently hit bridge in the UK at some point.

 

Anyway, we duly assembled at a site visit and the first thing I noticed was that on an advertising hoarding to one side of the bridge was an advert for a bra – the one with the foreign supermodel (I can’t remember her name) with the catchphrase “Hello Boys”.  I did suggest that this was much more likely to catch the eye of most red blooded lorry drivers rather than the low bridge warning signs and was probably a contributory factor in the bridge strikes.

 

The ladies in the group seemed quite shocked that this might be the case.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some years ago I was part of a working group set up to find out why the Whitehouse railway bridge in Swindon was being hit by so many lorries.  It was the most frequently hit bridge in the UK at some point.

 

Anyway, we duly assembled at a site visit and the first thing I noticed was that on an advertising hoarding to one side of the bridge was an advert for a bra – the one with the foreign supermodel (I can’t remember her name) with the catchphrase “Hello Boys”.  I did suggest that this was much more likely to catch the eye of most red blooded lorry drivers rather than the low bridge warning signs and was probably a contributory factor in the bridge strikes.

 

The ladies in the group seemed quite shocked that this might be the case.

 

Nothing changes, well apart from the advertising sign I guess.

 

gallery_14931_556_34642.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

One of my uncles has also had a driver hit a bridge, oddly but fortunately in the new lorry, which was the only one insurance beyond 3rd party.

 

 - As said, its more common than you might think.

 

 

Daniel

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Please review our Terms of Use, Guidelines and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.