- Sep 14, 2015
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Looks like the top part of the heater was bent pretty bad during the fall.
Tier 1 straps are needed. Not that cheap kite string Home Depot gives you![]()
Yeah a landscaper here in town, bounced a boulder out of his truck at a RR crossing ( speed) and it killed a lady and injured her daughter. I think there mighta been a camera or two that recorded snipets of the incident. He didn't go back and render assistance. He turned the corner, stopped and then left.
oh here is the link. i guess they both died.
Wow, so sad.Yeah a landscaper here in town, bounced a boulder out of his truck at a RR crossing ( speed) and it killed a lady and injured her daughter. I think there mighta been a camera or two that recorded snipets of the incident. He didn't go back and render assistance. He turned the corner, stopped and then left.
oh here is the link. i guess they both died.
That plus the base and the vertical shroud (I think)...pretty much trashed. Oh, well...$$$ come, $$$ goes.Looks like the top part of the heater was bent pretty bad during the fall.
How the heck did he get that car into that bed....a Dukes of Hazzard-style jump?
That's what I saw as well....it's a goner, IMO.Body looks bent as well. Pole no longer runs up the centre. I'm guessing it's new heater time.
And that big round top is grabbing air as the truck moves forward, acting like a sail to pull it...slick shaft and tailgate + wind + no straps = oh, crap !Why wouldn't you use a strap though? ven without the danger of it going overboard, which may look unlikely as most of the weight is inboard, it has the potential to roll side to side and get damaged.
The City of Palo Alto in Northern CA had aluminum street light poles everywhere and aluminum railings on bridges and overpasses where pedestrians were allowed...it was a constant struggle to keep thieves from unbolting and running off with the aluminum and heading to a recycling center. That was in the 70's through the 90's, not sure how much AL that city still has in place as before.So if you tie off your load well and even flag it, should you be pulled over?
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Two men caught with stolen power pole on SUV in Jacksonville
<p>Two men were arrested in Jacksonville for trying to steal a light pole after Hurricane Irma.</p>www.actionnewsjax.com
That kind of theft can be a death penalty if they make a mistake. Not all underground wiring is 240vac. It is not uncommon to read about electrocutions from stealing copper. Even the ground wire getting cut could lead to problems down the line.The City of Palo Alto in Northern CA had aluminum street light poles everywhere and aluminum railings on bridges and overpasses where pedestrians were allowed...it was a constant struggle to keep thieves from unbolting and running off with the aluminum and heading to a recycling center. That was in the 70's through the 90's, not sure how much AL that city still has in place as before.
After much lobbying by PG & E and AT & T, who was having spools of conductors stolen out of service yards or cut down off of in-service poles, the state moved to tighten up laws regarding how the recycling centers received metal: photo ID and vehicle license plate submission was required and it helped tremendously. Pawn shops had similar requirements already but they were sloppy so they got tightened up as well.
The town that I worked for in No. CA had a 10 acre public park had pathway lighting consisting of about 25 decorative lighting poles of 12 feet in height; all the #8 copper conductors were in PVC conduit underground with in-ground concrete pull boxes about every 100 feet and one at the base of the pole. There were 3 conductors, two for 240 VAC and a grounding conductor. The thieves came at night when the conductors were "hot" from a central service pedestal with a photo-electric cell that provided dusk-to-dawn control. They cut the hot conductors and stole about half of what was in-service at the time.
IMO, there's still a few metal re-cyclers and pawn shop operators across the U.S. that should spend a few nights at the Graybar Hotel. You close the market, the suppliers dry up...in theory, at least.