steel coil question
#1
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Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 9
steel coil question
Question for all of you steel haulers. If you properly secure your coils what are the chances of a load shift or even worse losing your load?
#2
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 1,567
Re: steel coil question
Originally Posted by bean head
Question for all of you steel haulers. If you properly secure your coils what are the chances of a load shift or even worse losing your load?
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Terry L. Davis O/O with own authority
#3
If a coil is properly secured it should stay on the trailer even if the trailer was on it's side. Not that I am recommending anyone lay their truck on it's side. :wink: The reason coils don't stay on the trailer is because the driver didn't use enough securement. He took shortcuts.
#4
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: East Central IL between the corn and the beans
Posts: 4,977
Even with a properly secured coil a driver should drive like the coil is unsecured.
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#5
Originally Posted by Uturn2001
Even with a properly secured coil a driver should drive like the coil is unsecured.
#6
I have hauled coils for years and usually add at least one more strap or chain than is necessary to properly secure the load. I am still not completely comfortable hauling them. Perhaps that is a good thing.
#7
Originally Posted by GMAN
I have hauled coils for years and usually add at least one more strap or chain than is necessary to properly secure the load. I am still not completely comfortable hauling them. Perhaps that is a good thing.
I also use Gman's method... Example: 34,500 lb coil = FIVE 10,000lb rated chains. When loaded "shotgun" I also add a "trip" block in front at the base of the coil... I saw a small car that was crushed (with a teenage girl driver) in Tennessee several years ago. Gman, you may remember that. I'm thinking it was that stretch between Lawrenceburg and Pulaski. If I ever "lost" a coil due to negligence and killed someone they may as well put me down as I would be pretty much useless after...
#8
I am familiar with that area, DaveP. I have seen too many accidents and trucks hauling 45,000 pound coils with only 2 chains on them. That is a scary thought. I remember when I leased to CRST Malone there was a coil on the yard. One of their trucks turned over and the coil went into the woods. That night they got the truck up but waited until the next day to get the coil. When they got the coil up there was a woman and child underneath. They were taking a walk in the woods when they were killed. A coil doesn't just come loose if it is properly secured. There are way too many who are willing to take short cuts when securing these type of loads. One or two chains are not sufficient to hold a coil, even in a coil rack. If one chain snaps or breaks the other one isn't going to hold it. I have seen coils that have fallen off of the truck and rolled down the highway. I have also seen trucks that have had coils run over the cab. These don't happen unless the driver failed to take the time to secure his load. If you have a load secured with 5 chains, all of them are not going to break at the same time.
#9
Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Valdosta GA
Posts: 78
How much longer does it take to properly secure a coil as aposed to just a few chains? I can't imagine someone cutting corners on something that dangerous but apparently it happens. The thought of one of those coming loose is pretty scary.
#10
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: East Central IL between the corn and the beans
Posts: 4,977
Originally Posted by Chris M
How much longer does it take to properly secure a coil as aposed to just a few chains? I can't imagine someone cutting corners on something that dangerous but apparently it happens. The thought of one of those coming loose is pretty scary.
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