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View Full Version : Confession is good for the soul...


digger242j
02-24-2006, 12:15 AM
Cat420 commented in another thread that he hoped he didn't sound arrogant at age 22, but he felt he was better able to figure out some things than people who've been "trained".

My reply was essentially that if there was any arrogance in there, it'll get beat out of him soon enough anyway, because all it takes is one moment of inattention to really foul things up.

I'd typed the following up, as an example, but decided not to hijack that thread with tales of my own stupidity, but it's too good (or bad, as the case may be), a story to waste.

If anybody else has a story of something really stupid they've done, feel free to share it. I'd hate feeling like the only idiot here.

Besides, putting it here may keep somebody else from making the same stupid mistake, and that's what the saftey forum is for.

Lemme tell you what I did one day...

We were on a job, and I needed to chase after a load of 15" corrugated plastic pipe, 20' lengths. For this, we wanted to hook the tagalong trailer to the dump truck. Just because of the way things were situated, it took a lot of messing around to get hooked up, and just when we finally got the trailer onto the pintle hook, something else (I don't recall what), came up. Twenty minutes later, I'm on my way, and about a mile down the road it occurred to me... I got out and looked, and sure enough, I'd never closed the hook, plugged in the lights, or connected the saftey chains.

At the time, I had about 15 years of experience, and the guy helping me had about 40, so this wasn't from lack of experience. When I got back with the pipe, I told him I was firing us both.

stuvecorp
02-24-2006, 01:13 AM
I'll share also. When I was first starting out I worked for landscaper and he was getting some equipment that we didn't use ready to sell. We had this big old soil pulverizer that was to be hauled up by the road, the Pete was gone so I was told to pull it up with the 621 loader. I hooked the tongue to the bucket with chains and started to pull it up. We had a railroad crossing that we had to cross over, small rise up and small rise down. The pulverizer passed me in the loader in a flash and I don't know how it stopped but it was about 12" from taking out the row of employee parking. It still gives me a shudder when I think about it because it could have taken out a bunch of trucks and if anyone would have been around.
Unfortunatly that wasn't the last stupid thing but I always try to be safer/smarter now.

Squizzy246B
02-24-2006, 03:21 AM
Now this is a thread I can get into:

I was leaving early for a job 2 hours drive away so it was dark when I opened the gates and backed the truck in to hook up the trailer. As I was just about to hook up my 2 year old wanders out..so I'm well distracted, take him back inside and put him back to bed.

I come out and the phone rings..its the guys in the other truck, am I ready yet?. So I jump in the truck, take off and rip the electrical wires out of the plug:mad:

Try to hold torch in dark so I can see the colour of the wires and wire the plug back up. Finally get going across to a site where the other truck is waiting with the excavator to put the rock breaker in the back of my truck for the trip. To do this I need to unhook the trailer out on the road. I do that then swing the truck into the access road in reverse. As I come around the front bumper clips the tools trailer where I unhooked it on the side of the road and didn't put the brakes on.

I sit there, helpless, watching the tandem axle trailer rocket off down the hill in reverse, mixer and wheelbarrows bouncing up in the air, shovels going everywhere. I didn't know wether to laugh or cry:Banghead . Luckily for me the trailer ran off with the camber in the road and stopped in a chain link fence. No damage. On the other side of the road was residences, cars etc.

So when your in a hurry, try slowing down and getting it right, or you'll end up in more trouble than its worth.

I've got more of these....

RonG
02-24-2006, 04:41 AM
In 45+ years I never made a mistake!!!!!!RON G:laugh :laugh :laugh

Cat420
02-24-2006, 12:29 PM
I suppose it's only right that I add to this one.

I once broke a small dead tree off and it fell the wrong way and ripped to phone and cable wires off the neighbors house.

Our driveway was pitched the wrong way and my dad set up pins and told me to dig it to those points. Somehow by the time I got to the pins, I had dug almost 2 feet too deep:eek: . That was 2 years ago and now I check my measurements often.

My dad has some good ones from the 70's when they did work in Jersey. I honestly don't know how people didn't die from the mistakes that some of the hired help made.

Dozerboy
02-24-2006, 10:03 PM
I got two off the top of my head.

The first on I was within 6 months 18 birthday and of working for the first company I had work for besides my dad. We where putting in a water line and had to go through a creek. The creek was 10' down from the elevation we where running our pipe at, so we had to 45 down and under the creek bed 11'. The creek banks where steep and about 15' tall. Everything went fine until we had to star going back up the other side of the creek. I had my self benched into the bank so I had enough reach, but not well enough. After getting to big of bucket of wet sand to bed the pipe and reaching out to far, over I went. I looked almost like that pic Pullpan posted of that hoe over the side of that building. Lucky for me I got my feet up against the cad to hold myself in, because I didn't have my seatbelt on and the front window was open. And yet even more luck yet I was still swinging when I went and I didn't hit our pipe layers or the pipe they where standing on.

This was my last bit of luck about 6 months ago.

I was pulling a water buffalo full of water chained to my backhoe, like I have done several times down a flat road. But this time the road wasn't flat in fact I was going up a 7% or 8% grade and I heard a load pop. I tuned in time to see the chain coming undone. There just happened to be no traffic right behind me, I threw it in reverse got along side the trailer and swung my boom over in behind the trailer and stopped it, before it really got going and hit all of the cars at the 4 way stop behind me.

D10N
02-24-2006, 11:00 PM
I've done a few memorable ones - most I'd not care to admit:angel

Funniest was about 10 years ago - tramming a D11 between jobs, stopped to get fueled and just kind of forgot something.......there's STILL a beautiful set of ripper marks in that road.

Most memorable as a learning experience involved a homegrown towing setup. Tried using 5/16" hardware chain double wrapped around the drawpin on a 988 loader to pull a slag kettle - only problem was pulling the kettle onto the tail of the loader prior to breaking the chain.....bad idea hall of fame there:thumbsup

rino1494
02-24-2006, 11:11 PM
When I was 16, I was backfilling a 4ft trench with a PC150. I backed up and one side of the tracks went right in the trench. The rear of the machine was partly in the trench, so I couldn't swing around and boom myself out. My dad had to push me out with the 955 whileI drove it out at the same time. Needless to say, it never happened again :wink2

JimBruce42
02-25-2006, 12:51 AM
This is my first claim to making an opps and probably not my last. At our school's training site everyone (technican, landscaper, and operator students) digs trenchs, mock basements, or just down right big holes. The bigger holes get filled in lifts, but nothing ususally gets compacted back in (except for any roads or "grading pads" we might be actually making). That being said, this whole field is nothing but red clay, and it LOVES to hold water, so between that and lack of compaction you can get a soft spot real quick. I had three passes left before i'd graded almost the whole field, and to this point had navigated around any wet spots, when I did this...:Banghead I guess it's also a good lesson on watching for color changes in the soil too. :thumbsup

-Jim

Dusty
02-25-2006, 11:52 AM
it happens sometimes

littledenny
02-25-2006, 01:41 PM
I had one just the other day-

I'm a volunteer with the local EMA/Fire Dept. In my position, I have my own emergency vehicle at home, an older S-10 blazer. Took it to the pumps early one morn and filled it with diesel. (Didn't know it at the time, but someone was working on the pumps, and reinstalled the system with gas and diesel signs reversed. ) Figured out the mistake in about one minute, when the truck simply quit.

Called in the shop super, who confirmed the reversal of the pump signs, then we started to figure out who else might have pumped either fuel, since the reversal. We had visions of half the cop car/highway dept vehicles/ ambulance fleet being cross-contaminated.

Turns out one of the two front line, brand new, fire engines now had 20 gals of gas in a 50 gallon diesel system. :eek:

To shorten the long story, we managed to cure the fire engine problem with no major mishaps, or serious damage, and after a new set of plugs, and a few other things, I've got a vehicle that now actually runs decently.

Still, the pump repair guy is paying for the serious damage caused to one of the highway dept trucks, that basically blew up because of gas in the diesel system.

(Now ask yorself, how many of you guys carry diesel in red cans? ) :nono

Dusty
02-25-2006, 01:55 PM
not me yellow all the way

Electra_Glide
02-27-2006, 08:59 AM
So when your in a hurry, try slowing down and getting it right, or you'll end up in more trouble than its worth.

I'll second that...

Last fall I was scheduled to put in a storm water management system for a guy remodelling a doctor's office. Had to trench down the side of the existing parking lot to the back of the property where a large drywell was to be built.

Went ahead and scheduled the job and set the start date. A few days prior to the start, I'm driving home from another job, and realize I forgot to place the "one-call" for the utility markout. Make the call and hurry over to the site to do the mark-out before going to my next appointment.

I jump out of the truck and grab my can of marking paint. Take a few quick measurments, and get ready to mark it when I realize the paint can is clogged. Turn the can over to unclog it, and in the process manage to spray some paint, which promtly lands all over the side of a car parked in the lot...:Banghead .

Cost me a couple-hundred bucks for the lady to get it buffed out...

Grader4me
02-27-2006, 02:04 PM
Might as well add one to this as well...we were out patching one day and me and another guy was going ahead spraying a tack coat on the road for the asphalt. We had a 1/2 ton truck (new) with a barrel of colas and a pump on the back. On the spray wand there was a handle to shut off the spray. I noticed at one point it stopped spraying and I seen that there was a kink in the hose. Instead of shutting off the handle, then take the kink out.....you guessed it, I gave the hose a twist around and sprayed the whole side of the truck with tar and what was worse...the window was down:Banghead dam that stuff comes off hard :yup I still remember the look on my Superviors face :laugh

Jeff D.
03-05-2006, 12:59 AM
I pulled a couple of real boners just this winter.:thumbsup

The first: We had a snowstorm,and after trucking most the day,I made it home and proceeded to plow snow.I'll usually do my driveway last,and get to the rest of them straight away.It was getting late,and I finally got everything else plowed out,and had only to do my own.I was getting tired,and cold(cuz I ain't got the enclosed cab like Squizzy do!)and was in reverse full tilt in the Bobcat,when WHAM,I smashed right into the side of my semi.I'd forgotton that I'd left it pulled ahead,as I didn't want to back all the way up flush with the pole barn,incase I needed to get it rocking back and forth if it was stuck in the snow.It doesn't help that my truck is white either.That split second of forgetfullness and inattention cost me alot.:crying

The second: I live on a rural dirt road,and they(The township) take a day or so before they'll get around to plowing it.I end up plowing it with my dumptruck,just so I can get out with the semi when I need too.I'm usually careful not to get to close to the ditches when I plow so I won't get sucked in,but we'de had an 18"er,and it was hard to tell where the edges were.I had the truck scootin' along around 25mph,when the right steer suddenly dropped in the ditch.Not wanting to pay an enormous tow bill,I pushed it on the floor,tried steering left as much as possible,and was able to get it back on the road after about 50ft.What a ride that 50ft was though.I had the seat sucked up my rear,all the way to the pedistal.

I'm STILL suprised it drove itself out.The plow wanting to push the front of the truck left and the momentum of 34,000lbs must have kept it moving.Whew!!:cool:

Squizzy246B
03-05-2006, 05:03 AM
It was getting late,and I finally got everything else plowed out,and had only to do my own.I was getting tired,and cold(cuz I ain't got the enclosed cab like Squizzy do!)and was in reverse full tilt in the Bobcat,when WHAM,I smashed right into the side of my semi.I'd forgotton that I'd left it pulled ahead,as I didn't want to back all the way up flush with the pole barn,incase I needed to get it rocking back and forth if it was stuck in the snow.It doesn't help that my truck is white either.That split second of forgetfullness and inattention cost me alot.:crying


I'm sorry Jeff but I p*ssed myself laughing at that one:)

Steve Frazier
03-05-2006, 11:14 AM
My worst came just the other night and is similar to Jeff's story. We got 8" of snow and I was plowing a client's driveway at 11:30 pm. She had parked her minivan in an unusual spot instead of in front of her garage as is the usual practice. While clearing the area in front of the garage, I backed into the minivan with my truck which sports a flatbed. I was barely going 5mph and was a foot from coming to a complete stop, but I tapped the rear quarter panel of the minivan and stoved it in. The force blew both side windows out, the back of my truck is now covered with tiny pieces of privacy glass. Turned out to be $3300 in damage. Fortunately this is my first claim in 8 years, so it shouldn't hurt too bad. The customer is being understanding too, so it's working out OK, but I sure did feel stupid when it happened.:beatsme

jmac
03-09-2006, 07:33 PM
Thank god for insurance, as long as they don't drop ya:cryin
I to backed into my wife's new trailblazer this year plowing $2000. No insurance claims because I just changed companies and would hate to put in claim so soon, I would have no insurance.
Then backed into a truck in lot I was plowing at 6 am about a week ago when he pulled behind just after I made a pass and I didin't see him. I have to use mirrors only because of salter and fuel tank in back. Still waiting for that bill.
Then my snowmobile crapped out 4 miles in the woods two days ago. I have lots of storys to tell. Lets just say that I don't win at poker with my freinds every week. I do have some bad luck. Cup is 1/2 full !!
John

V10Fordman
03-22-2006, 09:02 PM
Greetings everyone. New to the forum here, been over at the LTS forum for about 6 or 8 months now.

I had to share this gem with everyone.. even though it has little to do with the heavy equipment side of things, still qualifies on my Top 10 stupid moments.

About a year ago, late at night, around midnight or so, me and the little woman were in my truck leaving the local Wal-Mart. I passed a large Ryder moving van that was out in the boonies of the lot. Right next to it was a small car.. as I glanced over to the right, I saw two people in the back seat.. :bouncegri Well I stopped a few feet past and started to back up real slow to see if they were doin what I think thought they were doin.. Next thing. Smash. Right into the front end of the moving truck. A tweaked bumper and cracked passenger taillight was my reward, along with a hefty bill to fix the front bumper and replace the steering components I snapped when I hit the front wheel of the truck.

Just goes to show.. the thought of a nude female will time and time again suck all the intelligence right out of a man. :Banghead

Jeff D.
03-22-2006, 09:16 PM
Hee-hee!!:bouncegri

Well,did they atleast get to finish up??:rolleyes:

Welcome to the forum fellow Minnesotan!!

Dozerboy
03-22-2006, 10:18 PM
I've had accidents for less.

Jeff D.
03-23-2006, 12:01 AM
Well,if we're allowed to fess up to non heavy equipment boo-boo's,I'll add this one.(although the securing load part would apply to HE)

When I was 16 my dad bought an Arctic Cat El-tigre snowmobile.He asked me too pick it up for him,since he had to work,and I had a Toyota flatbed pick-up.

I picked it up,but decided it didn't need to be strapped down,I'd just set the little parking brake lever(and I knew EVERYTHING when I was 16,you just had too ask me!)I drove home like I always did,and turned the corners like I always did,as fast as you could go without tipping over,when whoosh the sled slid off the side off the bed,and rolled several times,flinging windshield,hood,and handlebar pieces with every flip,until it ended up in the ditch.

I then loaded it back up,piece by piece,and brought it home.My old man was not impressed.He hadn't even ridden the sled once,and it already looked like it went through a car crusher.Luckily he was way more understanding than I had any right to expect.

xkvator
03-23-2006, 10:48 AM
...me and the little woman were in my truck leaving the local Wal-Mart.

...couldn't even make somethin' up..........and what did the little woman have to say?

Grader4me
04-02-2006, 06:56 AM
Maybe we can get this one going again as I am sure there are lots of storys(confessions) out there.
Here is a story that happened to one of my co-workers....

We were laying down asphalt and I was leveling it with the grader. We rented a double drum walk behind roller.
My co-worker was rolling on the edge of the mat that was about 6 inches thick. He lost control and the roller flipped over in the ditch. Of course we all had a good laugh (you would have to know this guy) then we lifted it out of the ditch with the backhoe. A few dents but otherwise okay.
Now you would think that this would be a learning experience for this guy right? Nope! fired her back up and rolled the exact same place and....you guessed it ..over she went again! The whole crew went down on all fours from laughing so hard with the exception of the Supervisor!
So...we picked it out of the ditch again and loaded it onto the Supervisors pickup as it never survived the second flip unscathed.
The Supervisor was in a hurry to get it back and get another one so that we could finish the job. He forgot to block the drums on each end...took off fast and the roller shot off the back, hit the road and into the ditch again!! The poor roller was tore all to pieces. I think this had to be the most comical thing that I have ever experienced on a job site :laugh

Squizzy246B
04-02-2006, 08:58 AM
My co-worker was rolling on the edge of the mat that was about 6 inches thick. He lost control and the roller flipped over in the ditch. Of course we all had a good laugh (you would have to know this guy) then we lifted it out of the ditch with the backhoe. A few dents but otherwise okay.
Now you would think that this would be a learning experience for this guy right? Nope! fired her back up and rolled the exact same place and....you guessed it ..over she went again! The whole crew went down on all fours from laughing so hard with the exception of the Supervisor!
So...we picked it out of the ditch again and loaded it onto the Supervisors pickup as it never survived the second flip unscathed.
The Supervisor was in a hurry to get it back and get another one so that we could finish the job. He forgot to block the drums on each end...took off fast and the roller shot off the back, hit the road and into the ditch again!! The poor roller was tore all to pieces. I think this had to be the most comical thing that I have ever experienced on a job site :laugh

That one takes the cake..:laugh I'd have like to have seen the hire guy's face when the sup get the roller back:)

Jeff D.
04-02-2006, 09:35 PM
That one takes the cake..:laugh

That's going to be a tough one too top,alright!!:bouncegri

Dozerboy
04-04-2006, 10:26 PM
X3:notworthy :roll

Cat420
04-04-2006, 10:51 PM
I don't intend to top that one, but my dad was telling me about this one the other day.

Years ago when he drove trucks, they sent him to go somewhere with the dump truck and trailer. The problem was that the ramps got left down and were shooting sparks everywhere. One of the guys went running between houses and caught him about half way around the block. The helper then proceeded to go to the back and attempt to pick up the now very hot ramps. Needless to say his hands hurt for a while.

Jeff D.
05-13-2006, 01:13 PM
I was reminded while reading other post concerning safety and the unintentional movement of equipment,about a situation that happened to me on my backhoe,which would fit into this post.

It was in the spring,and I'd put the battery back in,and was getting the backhoe ready for summer.I'd parked it fairly close to the wall in front inside the barn,and after starting and warming up a few minutes I decided I'd put it in gear,and back it out.When I tried to put it into reverse it would just grind.The clutch doesn't seem to release correctly after sittting for an extented period,for some reason.It's a two stage clutch,and I'm not up on the principles of it's design,but it is slow to disengage initially,but after will work normally until sitting for months again.

I decided I'd shut it down,apply the brakes,put it in gear,and restart while in gear with the clutch depressed to break it free.I made the mistake of putting it in first gear instead of reverse(as if that was my only mistake),and when it started it moved forward far enough to put the front end nearly through the wall,before the clutch finally let go.I ended up replacing a few studs,and straightening some sheet metal before it was over.

Obviously there are plenty of oversights I made that led to this(maintenance,safety)and I'm aware of that.It still doesn't stop the fact that people do stupid things,myself included.

PSDF350
05-13-2006, 07:44 PM
I had one this winter (if you can call it that) with my truck and plow.

I was readjusting plow becuase blade was sinking in mud. Got it hooked up and was trying to posistion it so I could just pull into it. Anyway I am in and out of truck raising and lowering to make sure it is right (driveway not the flatest). Well I get out forget to put in park:Banghead :Banghead It is still in reverse I go to plow and raise it with manifold switch (blizzard) and as soon as it is up off ground there goes truck like bat out of hell backwards. I run jump in truck slam on brake and becuase I am standing in door as truck stops dead I fall on ground and truck shoots back again even faster. I need to duck so as to not get hit by door then plow. Well she goes off edge of driveway into a whole in woods I had made to put a crap truck I have. But when made hole it was to muddy for it. Anyway she goes in there and by pure luck door missed the phone poll that was there. When she came to rest door was actually past where pole (If you drew a line) is. Had to get tow truck up to pull me out. Only damage was to my pride. I actually laughed. I quess it's true small things amuse small minds. But then again if I couldn't luagh at my dumb mistakes I would always be crying becuase I seem to make a few.

Grader4me
05-13-2006, 08:52 PM
I have another one that I can share, seeing we are talking about backhoes. I am going to pick on my buddy again (same guy that flipped the roller).
I was trying to teach him how to operate a backhoe but you know some people just can't seem to catch on no matter how hard you try.
This was in the winter and we had a frozen culvert (under the road) and water was backed up and running into a residents basement. The lower end of the culvert had to be cleaned out so we could get the steamer into the pipe to unthaw it.
My buddy thought this would be a good place to show his stuff. Keep in mind that it was approx. 8 to 10 feet from the top of the road to bottom of the culvert and pretty much straight down and he had to clean a lot of heavy snow away from the pipe. We set the machine up cross ways and at a slight angle up on the shoulder(some ice) of the road. He scooped his first bucket and instead of bringing in his boom and dipper then swing and dump, he fully extended his dipper and boom then made the swing to dump his bucket. The backhoe came very close to going down into the hole as his bucket was filled with heavy wet snow and fully extended when he swung it around. I stopped him and told him that he was very lucky and explained the proper way to do this task. Yes, he said that a person has to learn from his mistakes and this was a learning experience for him.
Okay..his next bucket full...fully extended his boom and dipper, made the swing and away went the backhoe down in the hole...front bucket looking at the sky:Banghead He was not hurt except for his feelings.
Its nice to be able to look back and tell some of the stupid things that we all do once in a while, and its also nice to say that no one got hurt:yup

tylermckee
05-13-2006, 09:42 PM
So did you have to hop on the hoe and push it up out of the hole or did you let him try to fix it himself.

Grader4me
05-14-2006, 06:41 AM
I had seen enough, also he was pretty rattled so I got it out for him. I shouldn't be telling so many stories about this guy but he is just so dam comical. He wants to operate machinery but he just doesn't have what it takes and he has proved it over and over again.
Just like the old saying for truck drivers that can also be applied to backhoe operators..."there are backhoe operators and there are people that drive backhoes"
He would qualifiy in the latter:yup

murray83
05-22-2006, 03:38 PM
stupid things operators do thread yay...

doing a sewer job in town and let the new guy run the breaker never ran an excavator before forman says what the heck lets have some fun i basically went :confused: and this outta be fun so off he went decided he'd break rock around a fully charged watermain beside it so he put the bit on the ledge and let her rip,but woopsie he lost control and drove it into the watermain in no time flash the was water spraying no less than 20 feet in the air i started laughing and looked at my forman and told him we found our new operator.

first ever construction job i worked on we were pulling tanks out of an old gas station was on a small hill and ramped down towards the street,we had a operator that was kinda forgetfull at times so these guys we outta towners and rented the areas largest contractor to use 2 brand new mack CH 613's just off the lot even the owner was there and smiling like he just won the lottery anyways the backhoe was on the top of the hill pointing downward towards the truck.....the excavator operator asked if he set the parking brake on the hoe? he swore up and down he did even got kinda ticked we kept asking....all of a sudden the hoe started rolling and smash right into the side of that brand new truck the owner was almost in tears and the old operator walked over and playfully joked he guess he didn't pull the parking brake.

hmmm dump truck drivers not locking their gates and half the load on the streets,an operator releasing the Q/C bucket while dumping into a triaxle dump trailer couple operators falling into raw sewage its just another day in paradise.

digger242j
05-25-2006, 11:09 AM
Murray83, you had to mention a water main, didn't you? :Banghead

This one's gonna take some detailed explanation.

A picture is worth a thousand words.

The projest originally consisted of 79 townhouses, and 5 condo buildings. Condo #1 was three stories, but the two intended to be built where #4 and #5 are located were to be six stories.

The townhouses sold well, but the condos sold really slowly. The developer decided to cancel the larger condos and finish up with more townhouses--buildings #3, 4, and 5, in the picture.

We'd already installed sewer, shown in green, to service condo building #3. It was supposed to simply be a lateral, directly to the building. When the change was made to townhouses, it was necessary to add a manhole at the end of our existing pipe, and run across the frontage of #3, with seperate sewers for each house. This shouldn't have been a big deal... :rolleyes:

The condos required a sprinkler system. In the basement of building #1, they built a pump room, and ran 8" ductile iron out of the building, and around to where the other buildings would later be tied on. Building #2 was built and tied on prior to the decision to switch to townhouses. I was busy on the site at the time that sprinkler system was being installed, but it was done by others.

When the time came to start the sewers for building #3, I asked the developer if he had a location of the 8" sprinkler system pipe. (It was privately owned, and on private property, so it wouldn't have been identified by a one call locate anyway.) The developer said, in no uncertain terms, that the 8" pipe ended in front of building #2, just beyond where it entered the building. (Indicated be the yellow arrow.) I said my recollection was that it was a looped system, and ran the entire perimeter of that center area. I was told I was mistaken.

Well, I was, but so was he.

Understand, that this was an urban site, and had been built up, and torn down many years prior to our work. There was plenty of buried rubble, and old stone and concrete foundation work still left in place.

I began to excavate for the proposed manhole. At about 4 feet deep, I scratched across a piece of concrete. This was not at all unusual. I grabbed onto it and yanked it out. The amount of water that followed it out of the ground was highly unusual. :eek:

That concrete was a thrust block at the end of the 8" ductile iron sprinkler line...

It gets worse...

digger242j
05-25-2006, 11:47 AM
One stroke of good luck that day, was the fact that there was a technician on site, doing routine maintenance work on the sprinkler system. In fact, the system was under only static pressure--the pressure of the city water main that fed the site. Also, since he was working on the system, the alarm system was disabled--otherwise, we'd have had firetrucks rolling as soon as the water started moving through the sprinkler system.

One of the guys went running to find the fellow in charge of grounds maintenance, so we could get in and shut off the water. (There was no valve outside the building--a wise precaution against somebody inadvertantly shutting down the sprinklers while trying to shut down something else.) The guy looking for the mauntenacne man was met at the door by the sprinkler tech, who expressed surprise at the fact that, as he worked, all of a sudden the pump started turning as if by magic. (Our opening of the pipe had allowed the water to run through, spinning the pump.) Once he understood what had happened, he shut the whole mess down pretty quickly.

We dug around the end of the 8" pipe, and found a bell, with about a 2 foot piece coming out of it, and a cap on the end. Since it would've been in the way of the future manhole, we took the piece out, and put a plug in the bell. This was secured by a retaining clamp, behind the bell, with two pieces of threaded rod holding a bar across the plug. All bolted up nice and tight, there was no way that plug was going to push out of there, even without a thrust block. Right?

Now, the sprinkler system had a "jockey pump" that kept it charged at whatever its specified operating pressure was. (I'm thinking 190 PSI, but it's been a few years.) Keep in mind, that this system was designed to be able to push water up to the top of a six story condo building.

The tech put the system back online, and came back outside. We all stood and watched... Ever so slowly, the threaded rods began to bend, and the plug backed out of the bell, maybe half an inch, and then stopped. Everyone began to breath again. Until we watched the entire end of the pipe move six inches...

Just about that time, we were interupted by a roar, from the side of building #1, and a puff of black diesel exhaust. Had I mentioned that this whole system was powered by a 6 cylinder Cummins?

About 18 feet back (the length of a section of ductile iron pipe), a geyser erupted from the lawn. :eek:

That Cummins had been patiently waiting for the chance to do what God had intended it to do, and it wasn't going to be denied. The jockey pump had pushed the next joint back right apart, and the diesel took over from there.

The tech took off at a dead run for the pump room, and by the time he got it shut off there was two feet of water against the basement garage door of building #2.

We dug that section of pipe out, and re-installed our plug assembley, but this time we poured a yard of concrete against it, and left the backhoe bucket pushing against it all night til the concrete was hard enough....


:o

tylermckee
05-25-2006, 09:05 PM
One stroke of good luck that day, was the fact that there was a technician on site, doing routine maintenance work on the sprinkler system. In fact, the system was under only static pressure--the pressure of the city water main that fed the site. Also, since he was working on the system, the alarm system was disabled--otherwise, we'd have had firetrucks rolling as soon as the water started moving through the sprinkler system.

One of the guys went running to find the fellow in charge of grounds maintenance, so we could get in and shut off the water. (There was no valve outside the building--a wise precaution against somebody inadvertantly shutting down the sprinklers while trying to shut down something else.) The guy looking for the mauntenacne man was met at the door by the sprinkler tech, who expressed surprise at the fact that, as he worked, all of a sudden the pump started turning as if by magic. (Our opening of the pipe had allowed the water to run through, spinning the pump.) Once he understood what had happened, he shut the whole mess down pretty quickly.

We dug around the end of the 8" pipe, and found a bell, with about a 2 foot piece coming out of it, and a cap on the end. Since it would've been in the way of the future manhole, we took the piece out, and put a plug in the bell. This was secured by a retaining clamp, behind the bell, with two pieces of threaded rod holding a bar across the plug. All bolted up nice and tight, there was no way that plug was going to push out of there, even without a thrust block. Right?

Now, the sprinkler system had a "jockey pump" that kept it charged at whatever its specified operating pressure was. (I'm thinking 190 PSI, but it's been a few years.) Keep in mind, that this system was designed to be able to push water up to the top of a six story condo building.

The tech put the system back online, and came back outside. We all stood and watched... Ever so slowly, the threaded rods began to bend, and the plug backed out of the bell, maybe half an inch, and then stopped. Everyone began to breath again. Until we watched the entire end of the pipe move six inches...

Just about that time, we were interupted by a roar, from the side of building #1, and a puff of black diesel exhaust. Had I mentioned that this whole system was powered by a 6 cylinder Cummins?

About 18 feet back (the length of a section of ductile iron pipe), a geyser erupted from the lawn. :eek:

That Cummins had been patiently waiting for the chance to do what God had intended it to do, and it wasn't going to be denied. The jockey pump had pushed the next joint back right apart, and the diesel took over from there.

The tech took off at a dead run for the pump room, and by the time he got it shut off there was two feet of water against the basement garage door of building #2.

We dug that section of pipe out, and re-installed our plug assembley, but this time we poured a yard of concrete against it, and left the backhoe bucket pushing against it all night til the concrete was hard enough....


:o
Had a similar problem once but wasnt as bad as yours. We had just finished putting in the 8" ductil iron water main and all the services for a 9 lot development, we backfilled everything except the services because those are usually where the system will leak. So we get the test pump hooked up, fire it up, pressure starts climbing, hits 150psi then drops to about 5 and keeps bouncing around. so we go through and check all the saddles for the services and re tourqe them. still only 5 pounds. the main was a straight shot at the end and dead ended with a hydrant with a thrust block behind it. Turns out that at only 150 psi it pushed about 40 feet of halway burried pipe and our thrust block apart. You should see the thrust block we have now, 2 ecology blocks and about a yard of concrete.

digger242j
05-27-2006, 11:03 PM
Yeah, you don't appreciate what that water pressure can do until you've seen it at work...

dayexco
05-27-2006, 11:07 PM
mega-lugs

tylermckee
05-28-2006, 02:46 AM
mega-lugs
We would have, but the plans didnt call for them, just the thrust block. Our pipe supplier said that it would be fine. What do you guys have to test your water line at? we have to pump it up to 225PSI and it cannot drop more than 5psi in a two hour period.

Grader4me
02-13-2007, 05:33 AM
I am bringing this subject up again as there has been a lot of new members lately. This is a chance to share some of your stories of comical or maybe not so comical things that you have done, or witnessed on the job.
I for one enjoy reading the stories, and I'm sure everyone else would to. So fess up guy's...what story would you like to share??:Pointhead

Depending on the response, I could probably think of a few more "stupid" things that I have done over the years and be willing to share:Banghead

Bob Horrell
02-13-2007, 11:07 PM
I once read somewhere that the number one cause of injury in construction was falls getting on or off equipment. I proved that point today. I was loading my dump truck all day with the bobcat. I got out of the bobcat to check on something when the bucket was full of rocks. As I exited, I used a rock as a step (dumb mistake) and it spun sending me off balance. As I went to step back off the side of the bucket to regain my balance, my heel caught the edge of the bucket and I fell on my left shoulder from the rear. It popped loud enough I could hear it distinctly over the sound of the running bobcat. I either separated my shoulder or tore my rotator cuff.
I am not new to this kind of injury as it has happened to me several times during my bull riding and motorcycle racing stints. I know I am in for some sleepless nights and painful days for a while to come.
You would think I would know better since it wasn't that long ago that I took a similar spill right in front of a customer. I was getting out of the bobcat on the top of a steep hill and caught my toe on a rock in the bucket which got me running down the hill to try to regain my balance. I was a sight like you see on America's Funniest Videos with me running down the hill with my upper body going faster than my legs could unitl I finally hit the ground. I was going so fast I must have rolled for 10 yard before I finally came to a stop. It was pretty embarassing but I didn't get hurt. Just looked stupid. I think the customer wanted to laugh but was afraid to.

OzDozer
02-14-2007, 10:27 AM
I could fill ten pages of this BB with embarrassing things I've done .. embarrassing things other work associates have done .. and embarrassing things I've seen, or had to fix ..

However, seeing as this is a confessional thread .. I guess I'll have to stick with my personally embarrassing moments.
One of the most memorable, would have to be .. dropping a fully-equipped, 25 tonne (55,000lb) D7F Cat dozer off the lowbed .. at 70 kmh (about 45 mph) .. about 30 years ago .. :(

Now, the advantages in this confession, are .. it was on a dirt back road .. no-one saw anything .. the damage was minimal .. and I couldn't be fired for this piece of stupidity .. because it was MY machine, and MY truck and lowbed .. :rolleyes:

It all started, when as an agricultural earthmoving contractor, in the wheatbelt of West Oz .. with three dozers .. I would engage in a large number of dam (pond) enlargements every Summer, as a large % of my annual work.
I'd often work the tractors together, or close together, on adjoining farms .. so I could keep costs down, and keep better control of what was going on.
Enlargements are always lousy jobs. You generally have 3-4 feet of mud to work around, that you had to avoid getting bogged in, as you widened the dam on either three or four sides.
Sometimes, the inevitable happened, and the mud got too deep .. you accidentally slipped into it .. or you misread the depth ..

On this day, I was working away, on one D7F .. about 3/4 of the way towards completion of one dam enlargement .. and I got a visit from one of my operators, saying he'd bogged the other D7F, on an enlargement he'd been doing, about 6-8 km (4-5 miles) away.

Annoyed that I'd have to stop work on this enlargement, and take my tractor over to the operators job, to haul him out .. I threw the D7F on the back of the Mack and tandem lowbed, and roared off .. taking a little-used back road, and one I hadn't driven on a lot, to get to the other machine.

The trailer was a dropdeck style, about a 1M (3') deck height with 10.00 x 20 wheels .. a full-height deck over the tandem assembly .. and a beavertail with ramps, to load up. The truck was an early 70's, F-700 Cabover Mack.

Now, in those days, we NEVER chained the tractors on. It just wasn't worth the effort, we reckoned .. because the roads we travelled were mostly back country roads, with little traffic .. and the time taken to chain tractors on, was regarded as a nuisance .. and we always reckoned, if a tractor was going to fall off, it would bust any chains, anyway .. or take the truck and trailer with it.

Anyway, I set off .. at speed .. because there was rain forecast within 12 hours, and time was the essence of everything we were doing .. and I wanted to get back and finish my enlargement, ASAP ..

On this little-used, dirt back road, there was .. unbeknowns to me .. one of those wondrous pieces of local Shire Council (county) works of unprofessional road art .. called a variable-radius curve ..
These variable-radius curves are caused by someone not surveying a curve properly .. but by 'roughing' the curve in, with a grader, by eye .. with the result, that if you travel one direction around the curve .. it starts off tight .. then gets easier .. but travelling the other direction .. it starts off, a wide easy curve .. then suddenly gets tighter and tighter .. :rolleyes:

I guess you're starting to see the next stage of the story here?? .. Yep .. I came into this R/H curve, with the Mack and lowbed, at about 90 kmh (55 mph) .. from the easy end .. then all of a sudden .. HOLY MOLY! .. this bend is getting tighter and tighter!! .. :eek:

I backed off the loud pedal, but I was just a little too late. I couldn't wash off enough speed .. all I could do, was steer into the curve .. and hope like hell, the D7F stayed on.
I dropped back to 70 kmh, and hanging onto the wheel like grim death, I thought I'd made it .. but I forgot one thing. Those track shoes on the D7F were coated in nice greasy clayey mud .. and she took off .. right over the L/H/S of the trailer, blade first (we always loaded up, blade forward) .. :(

Now comes the amazing part. I watched in horror, in the L/H mirror, as the L/H corner of the blade gouged into the dirt road .. and the D7F stood up .. almost vertical .. rotated 180° .. and bounced, BACK UP INTO THE AIR! .. above the trailer .. while the truck and trailer shot out from underneath .. !!

However, the D7F wasn't to be airborne for too long .. no sirreee .. she came back down again .. facing the opposite direction (backwards) .. and landed on the beavertail of the trailer, with 2 of the 3 ripper shanks, ripping straight through the 5/16" plate on the beaver tail .. and bringing me to a VERY rapid halt!! .. :(

Climbing out of the truck, somewhat shook up .. I carefully inspected the damage .. and was amazed to find that the D7F was undamaged .. and the only casualty, was the ripper holes in the beavertail of the lowbed!!

I started the tractor up, backed it up the beavertail, and extracted the ripper shanks .. drove it forward off the trailer .. levelled off, the almighty great gouge in the road .. :rolleyes: .. loaded up again .. and took off for my original destination .. :)

Despite a careful inspection, I could not find one single piece of damage to the dozer .. possibly due to the dirt road gouge slowing a lot of the impact .. and the holes in the beaver tail were repaired within the next month, to avoid answering any embarrassing questions .. :D

I can honestly say, this is the only time I have known a large dozer to fall off a trailer .. do a full 180° flip in mid-air .. and land facing back the other way, with minimal damage.
It's not something I'd ever wish to repeat .. and if an operator had done it, he'd probably have been fired, unless he was a particularly good operator ..

I must admit, the crux of the accident resulted from excessive speed, for the conditions .. however, the bottom line is .. that some proper road engineering, with a constant radius curve .. would have not added to the problem .. and most likely would not have resulted, in the tractor falling off.
As always, I was young and over-enthusiastic, and the years have seen caution come to the fore. One thing I am particularly wary of nowadays, is travelling with great care, on roads I'm not fully familiar with .. :cool:

alan627b
02-14-2007, 04:07 PM
I don't think I can top that one, but here goes...
I personally have
1) Taken out a set of temporary traffic lights,over a 4 lane city street at lunchtime, with a 613B paddle scraper, by trying to cut a roadbed for a highway exit ramp. We needed a loader but didn't have one...snagged a guywire with the draft arm. Did this deed, then left for another job. Sorry, gotta go!
2) Found out a Raygo Rascal roller, in high gear, will do 0-30 mph down a 3-1 slope in about 3 seconds....
3)Had to road a brand new 613C off of a flooded jobsite. The only way out was ramp built over a curb. Who knew someone else was stupid enough to build a ramp over a water main? The water poured out, the formean had dropped me at the scraper and had already left, and there was no one around to tell...and I had no cell phone then...
The site was really flooded after that...
4) Roaded a tractor and disc with a low tire, through rush hour traffic. Nerve racking, but no problem. Diced up a bloated dead Raccoon all over the front of a white car, that was tailgating me:D ..still no problem.
Went over a couple of wooden decked bridges, on a closed county road, being used as a haul road for bottom dump trucks. Took 2 planks out of each one. Big problem.
5) My crowning achievement. As a first year apprentice, I was running a JD 700 (industrial 5020) 2wd tractor with a pull sheepsfoot roller. A very used piece of equipment. This thing had a bad electrical system. Wouldn't charge the battery, so we had to pull start it. I had a cable slung across the nose for this purpose, and fiqured out that if I parked in back of a scraper at night, I didn't have to drag the cable so far in the morning.
So, one morning, i walked past the 627E that Ralph ran, as I did every morning. I waved at Ralph, and I THOUGHT he acknowledged me. Looped the free end of the cable over a hook on the rear of the scraper, hopped on board, put it in gear, opened the throttle a little, and waited for Ralph to pull me.
He started off, I started the tractor, and it was then I realized Ralph did not know I was back there! He set off at a slow pace, headed for a 3 foot vertical drop off! Fortunately, he broke that off as he went over it, so the path was clear. Then the ejector slid back and I figured out that he was loading. I start thinking it's gonna be real bad if he makes it to the haul road, as the old JD didn't usually travel at 23 mph!
Fortunately for me, a dozer was heading the other direction, I flagged him and got him to stop Ralph, and I got a stinging lecture for that one.
But, the story ain't over yet.....
About 3 weeks later, it's getting cold in the mornings, and the old JD still hasn't been fixed yet. We are still pull starting it in the mornings. I am now running this things bundled up in coveralls and winter gear. I have the throttle held open with a bungie cord, since the linkage is worn out, and otherwise you'd spend an entire shift with one hand holding it open. Not practical. But important to the story, as you'll soon see.
My boss comes up to me and hands me a can of ether to help start the JD.
This thing has a flat deck, no toolbox, and there isn't room in my pockets, so
where to put the ether? I look around, and spy this hole in the dash, where the tach once was...dead center in the dash, about a foot or so in front of my face.
And since the electrical system is dead, and I have the master switched off, all the wiring is dead, right?
Wrong.
A couple of hours later, I am rolling the fill, in 4th or 5th gear, wide open, and I came up to the end and make a right to go back the other way.
I see the nozzle of the ether can pop off, and WHOOSH! There is a huge fireball, point blank in my face! The can is spouting fire like a blowtorch!
I smell burning hair, I can't lean back, so I thought, F*CK THIS!!!! and over the side of the tractor I went, jumping hard so the roller wouldn't get me!
My boss looks over and sees the tractor going full tilt in a circle, nobody on it, and me nowhere to be seen! He and one of the mechanics, set a new speed record, coming across the fill in the boss' truck, mostly airborne.
Meanwhile, I'm on the inside if the circle, warily watching the tractor in case it hits a clod and comes after me. They arrive, and the mechanic blasts the tractor with an extinguisher, and manages to put the fire out, but by now the fire has eaten through the oil line, and oil is spraying all over the cab.
I am wondering how we are gonna stop this thing? Maybe ram it with a scraper?
My boss wound up getting a shovel out of his truck, and speared the bungee cord, which allowed the tracor to idle down to where I could jump back on and kill it. It turned out, that in the past someone had put a jump wire across the disconnect switch, so the system was live all the time, regardless of where the switch was set. A bare wire had shorted against the side of the can, and set it afire. I'm lucky it burned, and didn't just explode.
At the end of the whole thing, my boss didn't blame me, he said if the tractor hadn't been such a POS, it wouldn't have happened! Then they fixed the starting problem! Turned out to be dead batteries.
I had one hell of a first year.
alan627b

CM1995
02-14-2007, 05:31 PM
alan627b-

:lmao :lmao :lmao Those little rascal Raygos! How many sets of underwear did you go through on those adventures?:D

alan627b
02-14-2007, 05:54 PM
Just the one pair! The one I had to run is a worn out POS, when I got on it none of the controls were marked, I kept fiddling with it until I could get it into a gear so it would move, and had to get it down a 30 or so foot 3-1 slope, to the bottom of a landfill cell we were building.
I got up to the edge of this thing, and I really did not want to go down it, but could see no other way. I knew I'd done the wrong thing, as soon as it nosed over...and the POS 4-71 Detroit died...it flew down the hill, did a jump over a windrow of dirt at the bottom, and rolled to a stop.
I bashed my knee into the windshield frame, and limped off, swearing I'd find a railroad flare to put into the fuel tank....or that i was going to quit!
This thing is still so worn out, you can watch bubbles leak from under the head gasket, it leaks oil from every pore, and the center pin is toast, so the steering valve turns the wheel if it hits a bump, and will rip the wheel out of your hand. It's a joy to maneuver in a tight spot, and will cheerfully gas you to death...they put a tall stack on the muffler. to get the fumes up higher...thank God I very seldom have to run it.
The laborers thought it was funny, and wanted me to do it again.
Out of consideration for my fellow man, I got a paint pen and marked all the controls.
I also painted "Death From Above" on one side....
alan627b

alan627b
02-14-2007, 05:58 PM
I think, in times of extreme stress, the ol' spincter tends to slam shut, preventing leakage. Pulling the seat cushion out of your @ss is usually the problem.....:D

CM1995
02-14-2007, 06:01 PM
OK here is a few-

1 - It was a cold Feb. day and I pulled the T250 bobcat up to the truck to get some fuel. Like any wannabe operator I first opened the rear door to check the oil, etc. I went to get the hose to fuel the bobcat and realized the fuel fill is on the opposite side. So I hop into the machine to turn it around and unfortunately I didn't realize that the back door was still open. Bobcat orange steel door 1, white sheet metal ford right rear corner panel 0. $4000 and a body shop later you couldn't tell a thing.:Banghead

2- I was using a 420D to install a section of corrugated pipe on a lot we were filling. The existing pipe was as deep as an extendahoe would reach. Got the pipe in and hooked and proceeded to backfill. Everything was going well until I decided to reach out a little farther and pad the end of the pipe. The outrigger gave way - since I was sitting on a soft fill slope at the top- and over the machine goes down a step bank, into the woods and a brush pile. When the machine stopped moving, I was standing on the right side glass, still in the seat, with the machine on its side. All I could think about was not letting the limbs and logs break through the glass and rob my family jewels. I figured I could do without my feet.:rolleyes:

3- As a youngster getting use to running a skid steer, I was backfilling topsoil around a new house for the landscaping. I am dumping dirt with the bucket and sort of shaking the bucket to somewhat spread it behind the sidewalk. I do this with about 2 buckets, come back with the 3rd bucket to repeat the process. As I am marvelling in my operator skills I back up to reveal the 4 tooth holes with insulation hanging out of them in the side of the new house - you could see inside on one of them. To make matters worse the house was set to close later that week.:Pointhead

Later
CM

OzDozer
02-14-2007, 07:00 PM
Talking about open doors and disasters .. I knew a farmer who had a 5000 gallon, ground level, fibreglass water tank, for stock water, set up in the field. It was mounted on a sand pad, on a slight slope.

He drove into the field one day, in his 1970's model Landrover, to check the water level in the tank .. and pulled up fairly close to the tank, facing uphill. He threw the drivers door wide open, towards the tank .. started to get out .. but had forgotten to set the brake.

The Landrover started rolling backwards .. the door is still wide open, remember? .. and as he reaches for the brake, the edge of the door comes into contact with the fibreglass tank .. at just the right angle for it to commence digging in ..

The Landrover continues to roll back for another 3 to 4 feet, as he commences to apply the brake .. but meanwhile, the sharp edge of the door is being forced into the tank, further and further .. with excellent leverage from a rolling 1½ ton 4WD .. :eek: .. until something has to give .. :(

And something DID give .. and it wasn't the door! .. :eek: .. the tank split open .. a full 6' high split .. and 5000 gallons of water said .. "Hey! .. we're outta here, guys!!! .. :( .. right through the cab of the Landrover!!! .. :eek:

He reckoned, it was bad enough getting wet .. and getting the interior of the Landrover flooded .. but he said, the worst part .. was getting hurled against the passenger side door by 5000 gallons of escaping water .. and thinking he was going to drown like a rat, in a sinking ship .. :(

He managed to find the door handle on the passenger side, and open it, within seconds .. to release the substantial water pressure on him.
However, by that time, the pressure was subsiding, as the bulk of the water found its easiest path to ground, and cascaded off down the slope.

He had unwittingly .. ruined and almost emptied .. a 5000 gallon tank, in probably just over 15 seconds, by a simple error of judgement .. coupled with an amazing alignment of the door with the tank, that you probably could not have done again, in 200 purposeful tries ..

Grader4me
02-14-2007, 07:01 PM
lol..I knew you guy's would have some stories to tell...geez alan...you should write a book:lmao Great stories everyone!

Dozerboy
02-14-2007, 09:44 PM
I ran over 2 stakes today and took out one of the hubs I haven't hit 2 stakes in the the past 2 years.

Countryboy
02-14-2007, 09:48 PM
I ran over 2 stakes today and took out one of the hubs I haven't hit 2 stakes in the the past 2 years.

:eek: Truck driver. :bouncegri

alan627b
02-15-2007, 03:26 PM
If I was gonna write it, I think I'd use an alias.....:cool:

mflah87
02-15-2007, 10:54 PM
I'd have to say one of the worst things i did was one week we had a blizzard. I went in the shop after plowing for god knows how many hours and I got in one of the ten wheelers, started it up and walked over to the next one, I was sitting there and out of nowhere the first truck started moving forward right towards my 1000 gallon waste oil heater. I ran over jumped in the passengar seat and pulled the engine cut out cord just in time. The truck was in first gear when i started it and had like 30 pounds of pressure, so once it warmed up and built up air it had taken off because the brakes werent applied. Taht was one scary night.

jimmyjack
02-21-2007, 09:07 PM
never seen a truck stay running in gear with the brakes on :beatsme ,not saying its a story but thats just me:confused:

Lashlander
02-21-2007, 10:38 PM
I'm thinking Allison.

komatsukid
02-22-2007, 10:59 AM
two years i was in a hurry to get to my wifes college graduation. i finished fueling my loader jumped in and took off ripping the fuel hose right off the pump!!! yeah i forgot to hang the nozzel up. man i still have not lived that down.

mflah87
02-24-2007, 03:02 PM
it was an old mack with a allison automatic. I bought it from the city of cambridge as a dump truck then turned it into a sander

Grader4me
02-28-2007, 07:52 PM
Okay, As some more of you stepped up to the plate with more "confession's" I will tell another story.
This story is not funny or something stupid that happened...well...maybe a little, but it's kinda weird.
Years ago I was plowing one of our back roads and at the end of this road was a bad overflow of ice that needed cut out. As I was making my cuts and pushing the material back, I got over to far and slide into the ditch(stupid thing). There was no frost under the snow in the ditch and I was sunk into the mud. Usually I could get out of a pretty bad hole using my moldboard etc. but with this I was down so far that it was hopeless.

I was out of radio contact and this was before the age of cell phones(I think as I never had one anyway). I was about 15 miles from civilization. It was colder than blazes out as well. The old grader (77 Champion piece of...) was laying over quite well making sitting there quite uncomfortable.

I sat there for about 2 hours trying everything to get it out of the hole, only to keep getting myself in worse and tipping over more to the side. Then the strange thing happened...I was wishing so hard that the dam thing would just come out of there so I could go home...I put it in gear, let out the clutch and it came out of the hole, and I felt that something was pushing me. Never spun a wheel.
How do I explain it? I can't :beatsme but I will never forget it....stayed tuned for more tales from the dark side.....:wierd

jmac
02-28-2007, 09:17 PM
Grader4me, maybe the ground froze up enough for you to get some traction, or something else? ;)
I will add one for you guys. I was loading my dozer on to my tag trailer one day and was using a GMC C6500 dump truck for the pull truck (sold truck). The truck was parked on a side road facing a busy intersection and the road was wet. As I drove the dozer on to the trailer the trailer lifted the back axle of the dump truck off the road and me, dozer, trailer, and dump truck went for a ride down the hill towards the intersection and house at the end of the road. I am still sitting in the dozer just waiting for the big bang! At the end of the road was a planter with dirt and trees and as the truck ran over trees and started to tip over the weight on the trailer kept it from going over and everything came to a stop before it all went into the intersection and house. Had to drive dozer off of trailer and pull truck and trailer back onto the road and reload using wheel chocks this time.

Dirtman2007
11-30-2007, 04:31 PM
I just took over an hour to read all the posts on this topic and all the problems that people had. Guess I have a few to share too.

1. Landed the kobota tractor into a drained (thank god) pond. It was the hydrostatic style so you just push the pedal down to go forward or reverse. Well I managed to hit the "gas" instead of the brake, sending the tractor over the 30 degree edge. I managed to keep rolling the bucket and sticking rocks under the tires to get out.
2. Went over a bump on the 955 track loader and smashed my head into the windsheild causing several spider web cracks to form :eek:
3. rode the trailer down the hill with the mini excavator on the trailor until the bucket hit a tree and stopped. Chock those wheels !!!
4. Almost got my legs pinned between a backhoe and a fuel tank. Managed to jump in the bucket out of danger, roll kinda slow, but still would have screwed me up.
5. Best of all, there was a phone line in an area that I had to dig. I dug down with the shovel to find it. After I find it I dig around it witht eh excavator and get the trench dug. Dug around it for well over an hour with the excavator on never touched it. I get off and walk in the trench to check the grade and I tripped over the line an broke it:Banghead :Banghead man was I pissed.
6. more to come when I do some more thinking!!

digger242j
11-30-2007, 06:14 PM
6. more to come when I do some more thinking!!

No. When you start to do thinking, these sorts of things are supposed to stop. ;)

PSDF350
11-30-2007, 07:48 PM
2. Went over a bump on the 955 track loader and smashed my head into the windsheild causing several spider web cracks to form Hope the windshied. But if not, would explain 3-5;)

Dirtman2007
11-30-2007, 08:54 PM
Thanks, I do the best I can. :thumbsup :thumbsup

Countryboy
11-30-2007, 09:23 PM
Well, its kinda funny how this thread came back to the top after what happened to me yesterday. I wasn't gonna talk about this with anyone because I'm the only person that knew about it but hey....my soul could use a little help. :D

So anywayz, I had my Stihl weedeater out in the woods yesterday, clearing the trail to my deerstand. I've got a blade on it for taking down saplings and brush. I've found that the normal brush blades tend not to work so well or get dull rather quickly so I bought a DeWalt carbide tipped plywood blade and drilled the hole to 1". I've been using it since the beginning of summer and it works awesome. No sharpening, less wear on the weedeater because of the smaller amount of cutting effort and it sounds cool....kinda like a Skil saw when its cutting sapplings down. I can cut saplings up to about 2" with no trouble. Doesn't even struggle a bit!

Back to clearing the trail.....

The trail is about 200 yards long and had overgrown to the point where my truck was barely fitting through. The trail comes off of the driveway at the in-laws house so I had backed truck and trailer in the mouth of the trail so as not to block the driveway. I had the 4-wheeler on the trailer because I was also going to move my stand while I was there.

I start right behind the trailer and go down the right side of the trail. When I make it to the end, I turn around and come back up the left side....Everything's still going good...:cool:

I considered myself finished with that little project so I figured I'd unload the 4-wheeler and move my stand. Then I noticed that I hadn't cut the 15-20' on either side of my truck. I pull my trusty weedeater back off the truck and fire it back up. Started at the front of my truck on the passenger side and worked my way to the back. Made it past the truck and was working beside the trailer when it happened....aw come on, you know what happened....:Banghead

There was a 1" sapling about 3' away from the front tandem tire. I was about half way through it when the blade grabbed ahold. I snatched it outta the groove and right into the trailer tire. So now I have a 3" gash in the sidewall and no spare in sight. It's amazing how fast the air leaves out of a tire with a cut that big in it. :D

So, after 10 minutes of taking the tire off and unhooking the trailer, 18 miles to town to get a new tire, 15 minutes and $30 at the tire shop, 18 miles back to the trailer, 10 minutes to put the tire back on and hook the trailer back up......I was back in business.

Had I not been lazy and taken the whole 30 seconds to move the trailer I would've saved alot of trouble. I'll move the stand tomorrow :rolleyes:.....

digger242j
11-30-2007, 09:34 PM
:roll ........{pause to catch breath}......

CB, I'm so sorry to hear of your misfortune. :(

{pause, to appear sincere}......
:lmao :lmao :lmao

Countryboy
11-30-2007, 09:42 PM
:roll ........{pause to catch breath}......

CB, I'm so sorry to hear of your misfortune. :(

{pause, to appear sincere}......
:lmao :lmao :lmao

After I kicked the flat tire countless times.......I couldn't help but laugh at what I had done too. :D

If anybody is looking at getting into the tire shredding business.....try the DeWalt carbide blades. Your productivity will skyrocket.....:bouncegri

fireman050
11-30-2007, 11:39 PM
After I kicked the flat tire countless times.......I couldn't help but laugh at what I had done too. :D

If anybody is looking at getting into the tire shredding business.....try the DeWalt carbide blades. Your productivity will skyrocket.....:bouncegri


at least you did not run your cell phone over with a bushhog like
i did:Banghead :Banghead

PSDF350
12-01-2007, 06:31 PM
Heck your lucky, if it have been me it would have been the truck tire. :Pointhead

dumptrucker
12-01-2007, 07:44 PM
I just took over an hour to read all the posts on this topic and all the problems that people had. Guess I have a few to share too.

1. Landed the kobota tractor into a drained (thank god) pond. It was the hydrostatic style so you just push the pedal down to go forward or reverse. Well I managed to hit the "gas" instead of the brake, sending the tractor over the 30 degree edge. I managed to keep rolling the bucket and sticking rocks under the tires to get out.
2. Went over a bump on the 955 track loader and smashed my head into the windsheild causing several spider web cracks to form :eek:
3. rode the trailer down the hill with the mini excavator on the trailor until the bucket hit a tree and stopped. Chock those wheels !!!
4. Almost got my legs pinned between a backhoe and a fuel tank. Managed to jump in the bucket out of danger, roll kinda slow, but still would have screwed me up.
5. Best of all, there was a phone line in an area that I had to dig. I dug down with the shovel to find it. After I find it I dig around it witht eh excavator and get the trench dug. Dug around it for well over an hour with the excavator on never touched it. I get off and walk in the trench to check the grade and I tripped over the line an broke it:Banghead :Banghead man was I pissed.


In the words of the Cable Guy, "That right there is funny I don't care who you are That's funny."

Dirtman2007
12-01-2007, 08:38 PM
In the words of the Cable Guy, "That right there is funny I don't care who you are That's funny."

Well I won't laughing at the time. Know Its cracks me up when I talk about it.

Thought of another funny one I did.

Last year we were finishing up the horse arena we just built. We had about 3 acres to seed and straw, so we rented one of those small straw blowers where you throw about 1/4 of the bale in at a time into the top of it. We sat the blower on the end of the 16' flatbed trailor and loaded about 30 bails on the front at a time. All being pulled by the 30 hp kobota tractor with a hitch attached to the box blade

Well we ran out of straw, so the boss and the helpers went to go get some more. I stayed behind to finish things up. I noticed that the tractor and made some ruts in the fresh ground so I decided to take the trailor off and drag the ruts out. the area had a slight hill so I stuck a rock or two behind the wheels. The tong of the trailor was facing up hill. When I go to unhook the trailor it did not occur to be that with no straw on the front of hte trailor and a blower on the back of it, it may become a little light in the front.

you guessed it, as soon as I unhooked it, there it went, tong up in the air and it jumped the rocks under the tires and down the hill it started. If it was not for it heading straight for my new truck I would have said the hell with it and hoped for the best, but instead I grabbed the hitch and pulled it back down but could not stop it. I decided real fast this was not going to work, so I started to steer the trailor so that it would go sideways on the hill and stop.

That work and it coasted to a stop. I looked down and saw well over a foot of fresh straw piled up beneath my feet from sliding down the hill on the straw. I did good though, Never fell, just did a very walk and slide. Boss returned and asked why that 150' long strip of fresh straw was disturbed and rutted up. Then I had to tell it all over again:o :o

Dozerboy
12-01-2007, 10:13 PM
:lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao these are some good ones.

Dirtman if it make you feel any better I once found a gas line with my hoe, but didn't break it. Just so my labor could through a spade down there and put a hole in it. :Pointhead

Hendrik
04-10-2009, 08:49 PM
That one takes the cake..:laugh I'd have like to have seen the hire guy's face when the sup get the roller back:)
"A flying saucer came out of no where and fired a death ray straight at it, we tried to get the rego number of the saucer but it was too fast."

N.CarolinaDozer
04-10-2009, 11:05 PM
Well I could tell you tons of screw ups I see each day at work. But like I tell all new guys that get hired. Everyone screws up, some are better covering them up, then others. And I also tell them if your not screwing up sometimes then that means your not doing any work! I think to myself sometimes when a "older" newly hired co-worker comes to a "young" long time employee to ask how to crank an A.D.T. or how to change out a bucket for forks on a loader. I believe they get p-oed when they have to come to me, but I never make them feel any lower than me. I started out the same way they did.

bill5362
04-11-2009, 09:25 AM
Jeremy well said with not making anyone feel small, I think some people forget they weren't born with all of this knowledge.

N.CarolinaDozer
04-11-2009, 09:29 AM
Yeah a good example for me was when they brought one of our new 12M Motorgraders out, and my boss expected me to just get up in it and put the building pad on grade. I was like a deer in headlights, but after 30 minutes of experimenting with the controls, I picked it right up.

therealjohnboy
04-11-2009, 09:41 AM
i was clearing a few acres of scrub for a cherry farmer and cleaning terraces in his orchard with my D20 dozer. i had the ROPS off so as not to damage the trees(bright I know). Anyway I had to open and shut gates all day so I got smart and worked out if I lined up the gates i could jump off while still running open the gate close it and jump back on increasing my efficiency. Right?
Well it was a miserable wet windy day so I had my new 3/4 length Drizabone jacket on. As I stepped off for the next gate the gear stick went right up the back of my jacket I was hung up feet off the ground arse on the track getting a serious beating starting to pull my jeans off gate getting closer starting to panic.Think John think . I had to sacrifice the jacket so I grabbed the side off the machine and pulled with all I had the jacket didn't even stretch the stitching but i bent the gear stick flat to the floor and just got clear before it went though the gate. the chain was off and it just sprung open i climbed back on and shut it down. collected my thoughts and finished the day wet, torn up butt cheeks and sore for a week. Now I stop the machine. Common sense really huh.
I sold that dozer and bought a JD 350c Ive put that on its side twice clearing in really steep country and once down an old mine shaft backwards lucky it was only about 10' deep. I run a mini ex, a skiddy, and a dozer and they require the most respect when worked to the limits.

John

Squizzy246B
04-11-2009, 10:28 AM
i was clearing a few acres of scrub for a cherry farmer and cleaning terraces in his orchard with my D20 dozer. i had the ROPS off so as not to damage the trees(bright I know). Anyway I had to open and shut gates all day so I got smart and worked out if I lined up the gates i could jump off while still running open the gate close it and jump back on increasing my efficiency. Right?

John

:lmao:lmao:falldownlaugh I'm thinkin how Australia's Funniest Home Videos has really missed the boat;)

therealjohnboy
04-11-2009, 11:00 AM
kind of my version of the landrover in GODS MUST BE CRAZY

stretch
04-11-2009, 11:14 PM
I'm in the local Agriculture program at my HS, so I get to deal with a bit of equipment. Earlier this year, we got tested on tractor startup procedures and brought out one of our Deere 870's into the parking lot. Eventually, my friend, who I will note is often cocky and full of himself, got his turn to be tested. After bragging about how great he would do to our teacher and the class, he climbs on it, puts his seatbelt on, turns it on, and puts it into 1st range. Good so far.

However, he slammed into 3rd gear, and hit the throttle as hard as it would go. The loader was still on the ground and the parking brake was on. :oops

Squizzy246B
04-12-2009, 09:15 AM
Stupid is not limited to equipment::o

http://www.heavyequipmentforums.com/Forum/showthread.php?t=3154

Savage
04-29-2009, 10:55 PM
Was putting bigger pipe for storm drains to add a sudivision in. Had most of the new pipe in was fixing some sewer sevice line we had to cut when changing the pipe. One of them needed to be dug back a little to put a clean cut on the end. So they call me over. I look for other services on the ground(paint lines). I see a blue one, no big deal. I start setting up backhoe setting outrigger getting it level, When the guys in the hole ask me where the water coming from. I look, the outrigger didn't break the surface of the ground, but there is water coming from the ground and i was a foot away from the blue line. I raise outrigger and move the machine go look. There's a clod of dirt on the ground where the outrigger was. So I move it to see what damage i did. Water Meter. When the trackhoe dug the old pie out this one clump of dirt fell in the right spot with my name on it. Did I mention I was the youngest operator for the company and took a lot of slask everyday.


3 days later finishing up backfill in the same area. Had the road blocked gradeing it off with CAT 307 trackhoe. Traffic building, so I go to move to the nearest drive way. Fold the boom up start tacking. All of the sudden, it looked like black rope fell on the boom. Nope, phone line to the same house I took the water meter out at.:Banghead

440chevy
05-01-2009, 09:25 PM
When I was 18 and first got my CDL I drove an International with a 10 ton tag with electric brakes. I towed the excavator to a job, and then unhooked the trailer on the hill to haul the dirt away. Well, I blocked up every tire on the trailer and unhooked. The truck had an allison that I wasn't quite used to yet and every once in awhile it would roll back on a hill if you don't hold the brake and really give her some gas.

Well I rolled back, hit the trailer and it took off down the hill. I'll tell you one thing, I have never been so scared in my life as that trailer headed down the hill and turned toward the other side of the street heading right for a house. But, I had left the ramps down and I'm pretty sure I used up all my luck that day because that trailer bounced off the curb went another 100ft or so down the road, crossed another road, and went into the woods on the other side. I was able to back the truck up to it and pull it back out. Scares me to think how lucky I was..deflected off a curb, crossed a busy street, and it just so happened that the other side of the road in only this 100ft stretch wasn't developed yet. Didn't sleep well after that one for a while.

Another one that someone that worked for us did is pretty bad too. He towed a bobcat to a job over the hill as we say in Duluth. Well all he had done is dropped it on the pintle and hooked the lights, never latched it or hooked the chains up. So, he gets up there see's that and then gets distracted with the work. Works all day and never does hook the trailer up, tows it back down the hill. He's just lucky we don't use ball hitches, he would've lost it on the first hill. Still scary though.

Forager41
05-01-2009, 10:00 PM
Back in the '80s when Kennecott Copper still owned Chino Mines I was a Mining Shift Foreman at the Santa Rita, NM open pit copper mine. After a year as a dispatcher, and another year out in the pit as a junior foreman they assigned me to a turn where I relieved the Dozer Foreman, the Drill Foreman, and the Blasting Foreman on their days off. (I might add that I'm not an "Engineer"--I was a History Major in college, and came up out of the ranks of the Haul Truck Drivers after leaving a career in education in my early 30's.)

One Sunday afternoon I had the Blasting Crew, and we were sent to shoot the oncoming Evening Shift's scheduled ore stations. The previous shifts had over-mined the area leaving a big "hard toe" sticking out that there was no way to get a rotary drill out on top off. I took one look at it and realized that we would be spending the rest of the week trying to get rid of it with secondary blasting every day. Then the light bulb went on in my head and I saw that, the way that rocky rib was sitting, it was right next to some drill holes in the pattern that we were shooting in the softer material next to it. I figured that if the reason to "Delay" a blast hole is to "Relieve" the ones behind it in the pattern, then the same thing could work in reverse to direct the energy back into the pattern (or beside it).

We were using down-the-hole delays on some interval of milliseconds that I've now long forgotten, loading ANFO or IREECO's aluminized slurries. I loaded the holes adjacent to the aforesaid rib "Hot" with a good dose of aluminum, and set them to shoot at an interval behind the ones next to them.

Well it worked like a charm. It knocked that rocky rib down like Joshua did the walls of Jericho! The only teeney-little problem was that I had forgotten Newton's Law of Physics..you know? The one about how "For every action there is an 'Equal' and 'Opposite' Reaction.. The shiock wave hit the rib and flattened it to smithereens. Then it bounced back into the adjacent ore body and scattered the next day's production out three feet deep for 100 yards!

As I was leaving with the "accolades" of my colleagues ringing in my ears, they had every rubber-tired dozer and front-end loader in camp down there trying to buck up a face for the shovel to dig in!

kyle82
05-31-2009, 03:46 AM
the reason why confession is good for the souls is it makes the person peaceful inside.. our conscience works automatic and sometimes when we are bothered about something.. the conscience makes us worry too much. :usa

SPAM REMOVED

Finish Blademan
05-31-2009, 07:59 AM
My worst one and most dangerous mistake.I was cleaning out silt from a dry stock tank with an 1150 Case dozer..The one with the safety levers ya have to push down to allow the machine to operate.I had the doors open and noticed a piece of weather stripping had come off and was on the ground.
Like a moron who knows better.I left the dozer wound out at high idle and jumped out to get the stripping.I am used to Cat dozers with a real parking brake.I had left those levers in the down position.
I start to get in the dozer and throw the stripping inside.
I hit the shifter and knocked it into reverse.
She took off in reverse in fifth gear while I`m on the tracks.It tried to pull me under the fuel tank.Somehow I managed to get onto the cab deck and get it stopped.
When I got in the seat it hit me what had almost happened.
I had to stop for about 10 minutes to get my composure back when I realized how close to getting killed I had came.
Stupid,stupid mistake for anyone,especially someone who has been on machinery for 20 plus years.
Use the parking brake on any machine,and idle one down..Just,'I`ll jump out for a second,I don`t need too"..almost killed me.

Hendrik
05-31-2009, 07:57 PM
My worst one and most dangerous mistake.I was cleaning out silt from a dry stock tank with an 1150 Case dozer..The one with the safety levers ya have to push down to allow the machine to operate.I had the doors open and noticed a piece of weather stripping had come off and was on the ground.
Like a moron who knows better.I left the dozer wound out at high idle and jumped out to get the stripping.I am used to Cat dozers with a real parking brake.I had left those levers in the down position.
I start to get in the dozer and throw the stripping inside.
I hit the shifter and knocked it into reverse.
She took off in reverse in fifth gear while I`m on the tracks.It tried to pull me under the fuel tank.Somehow I managed to get onto the cab deck and get it stopped.
When I got in the seat it hit me what had almost happened.
I had to stop for about 10 minutes to get my composure back when I realized how close to getting killed I had came.
Stupid,stupid mistake for anyone,especially someone who has been on machinery for 20 plus years.
Use the parking brake on any machine,and idle one down..Just,'I`ll jump out for a second,I don`t need too"..almost killed me.
My cousin had his legged ripped off by a dozer many years ago up in Cooper Pedy.
Stupid idiot left the machine pushing to get a pack of cigarettes out of the ute, this particular machine had a beam across the tracks and his foot slipped off that and was caught by the tracks, thus pulling his leg under this beam. Luckily there was Royal Flying Doctor plane in the area and got him down to Adelaide pretty quick.

Finish Blademan
06-01-2009, 06:11 AM
I hear ya Hendrik,lucky he is to be alive.
I have a friend who runs a crew in a landfill in Waco ,Texas.He showed me some pics he had taken last year.One of his operators on a D-7 ran over a man on the ground.He didn`t know it till he seen the mans arm come up on the track.
The fella had been warned about getting so close to where the dozer was working before.Supposedly he was squatted down unhooking a chain he had used to pull some trash off a trailer with.He was still there trying to free it from some garbage and the operator didn`t see him.
My buddy told me the operator knew he was in the vicinity and was looking for him ,but he had already pivot steered on the man.
He said the guy jumped out of his machine and took off running,then just sat down and started crying.Bad deal there,the guys family got a lot of money for that deal.

carlm933g
10-21-2009, 07:55 PM
Ok, I'll add one... I used to own a Deere 8875 skidloader. I had a 4n1 bucket on it, along with steel grouser tracks over the tires. I had a long driveway that sloped towards the house. One day I was clearing snow and was heading up the hill. Well somehow I managed to get sideways and let me tell you, that skid headed down the hill sideways faster than any sled that I can remember. I was getting set to clip all of my light posts and finish up in my garage. I kept trying to dig the bucket edge into the driveway to spin my self around and it finally worked. At that point, I decided that the drive was clean enough so I went inside and poured myself a stiff drink...

Grader4me
10-21-2009, 08:05 PM
Ha Ha..thats a good one carlm933g! Did ya have to change your underwear as well??
Welcome to the forum and what a way to come in! :D

carlm933g
10-21-2009, 08:11 PM
Thanks for the welcome. That one shook me up a little - mostly because I kept thinking how much $$ this was going to cost to fix. Been lurking here for a while... I got a few more stories that I've experienced over the years - all in due time.

Grader4me
10-21-2009, 08:25 PM
Okay, I just noticed your join date. You must be a shy little fella :) Look forward to your stories..

carlm933g
10-21-2009, 08:41 PM
Not really shy, my friends think that I'm sort of a loud mouth...
Anyway, I was grading crushed asphalt around my shop with a small utility tractor with a loader and a rear blade. I was running parallel with the shop and grading right against the foundation with the rear blade. I was watching the rear blade when all of a sudden I heard a loud cracking noise so I stopped, only to see that the front bucket caught the wood sheathing on the corner of my shop and ripped several boards off. I was able to see into my shop around the corner stud. Luckily, I didn't even touch the studs or the foundation. A couple of replacement boards, a little caulk, some nails and it was as good as new (my pride was hurt more)...

hooklifttrucks
10-21-2009, 09:15 PM
Here's one . . .Always check ALL OF your mirrors!!!! I pulled my Expedition into our commercial property driveway up behind my husband's '05 pretty white 350 dually - one of our employees was parked in the other front spot. My husband was in and out of the back yard a lot as I was working in the office. Suddenly, he came in and with a tone I'm not fond of said, "Get your car OFF my truck!" I (being a true ever-inquisitive woman) asked, "What do you mean?" Again, "Come and get your car OFF my truck!" I walked outside and saw that in his hurry to go put out some "fire" somewhere, he had backed up and lodged his pintle hitch into my bumper and grill. It took multiple employees, hammers, yelling, and many minutes to separate the two vehicles! While the vehicles are no longer together, my husband and I still are - and I NEVER park behind his truck : )

hooklifttrucks
10-21-2009, 09:20 PM
Haven't laughed that hard in awhile - THANKS FOR SHARING!

carlm933g
10-21-2009, 09:23 PM
Yeah, they are never funny when they happen but sometimes make for very funny stories...

pigpen60
10-22-2009, 08:00 PM
in my days as a dumptruck op. my boss was the tightest fella id ever met. id come home at everynight tellin him we need a new tailgate as i was havin to hammer one corner shut and it still leaked. he'd tell me we didnt have the money. so one day im cranked about poundin every dump and i wacked the gate as hard as i could with a 32 oz. plumb sledge. well all the world got fuzzy suddenly and i had this pain tween my eyes. seems i had hit the gate and it bounced and hit me tween the eyes! quick as i defuzzed i looked around for witnesses to kill! the next day we got the material for the new gate.

grandpa
10-22-2009, 08:09 PM
Well poop......When i first start on a backhoe my first job with a 1010 john deere was digging a footing for a fireplace alongside an existing house. I

grandpa
10-22-2009, 08:12 PM
POOP AGAIN.....i was so careful when i got down to the bottom of the basement as not to bust the footing that when i came up with a bucket full i stuck the boom right thru the eve of the house.. good thing i was the bosses son of he,d a fired me ha ha.

grandpa
10-22-2009, 09:05 PM
Gotta share this one. I was running a crusher crushing road base for a township road. After a couple hours one of the truck drivers that was hauling the base to the road got out of his truck and came over to me and said the grading forman said there wasnt enough binder in the material. I climb up the surge pile and tell the dozer operator what the truck driver said. About an hour later the same driver stops again and says the forman still says theres not enough binder in the material. I climb the pile again and tell the dozer operator that they still want more binder. He says so its binder they want huh! This operator grabs a shovel,, squats right there and poops in the shovel.... then walks over to the stockpile and sprinkles just a little gravel over the top of it. About the same time the same driver comes back into the pit and the operator takes the shovel over to him and says grab this and see if there is enough binder in it now. The driver did and he never ever stopped us again.........

pigpen60
10-22-2009, 09:18 PM
a fella i worked with told a story like that, said the carpenters would go to the basement and crap. well after repeted request not to they continued, so upon theyre leaving for lunch he opens theyre job box scoops about half the tools out and craps throwin the tools back in. when they got back one fella came up and said theyd do anything he wanted just dont crap in theyre box again!

pigpen60
10-22-2009, 09:26 PM
then a recent oops, i was hookin up to a trailer and didnt like the looks/feel so i was cranking the landing gear down to lower the trailer and then release the fifth wheel to rehitch. evidently didnt get the tractor brakes locked and while crankin i hear some noise, so i turn to see the tractor rolling down the drive towards the wharehouse! just as i get to the running board the wife had jumped over the stick and hit the brake saving the day and my job! and yes i thanked her repeatedly. and yes my gut was right on the hookup feelin/lookin off! and yes im more careful!

Deerehauler
10-22-2009, 10:35 PM
We had an old T-600 at the tire shop getting a flat fixed. My boss sent me down there to get the truck out of the tire shop's way, since it had been sitting there all morning. I hop in, fire up the engine, and release the brakes. I put my foot on the service brake and was fumbling around for the button to air up the seat, because the normal driver of the truck was 6'4 and I am only 5'8. I hear and feel a slight crash just as I find the elusive seat button. I look up and see that I coasted our truck into the side of a tire repair truck which started out about 20' ahead of my previous position.

Apparently I had not been pushing on the brake pedal hard enough while in quest of the seat button and the truck rolled ahead. After reading my incident report the next day my boss suggested that I get everything set how I wanted it BEFORE I released the brakes.

KW318
10-23-2009, 02:11 AM
When I was about 16, I was driving a straight truck delivering fruit and produce for a small company in Ct. As I was headed down Main St in my home town, there was a local cop standing right on the center line with his back facing me. I wasn't going more than 5 mph, as the traffic light had just changed from red to green. Well the west coast mirror on the drivers side whacked the poor guy in the back of his head - pretty good whack I might add. I kinda stopped and looked down at him, and I could tell he was seeing little birdies flying around his head, he looked mad but those birdies had the best of him :confused:. I gave it some quick thought, and realized I better be gone - before those birdies stopped flying. Being it was a small town, I would see him on the street every now and then, he never did figure out it was me:beatsme, and... he never did look quite right, but I never saw him standing on that white line again.

Arabhacks
11-12-2009, 01:05 AM
Hello.

What we need is an understanding for an emergency stop signal.
I was working as a driver in the Austin Texas area when a flatbed driver was getting cornered.
Another driver jumped on the flatbed and tried to signal a stop, nothing.
There was a binder tool on the flatbed so he threw this into the oncoming dozers door.
Only at this point did the operator stop, and he STILL wanted to move the machine!
That day only an operator was hurt, a bit of glass and no more.
The operator was a Mexican national not legally in the US, we found that bit out when the contractor called the police.
But language should not be an issue, the traffic stop sign is universal, even if you can not read it you know what it means.
The operator saw me and even made a gesture, so that was not the issue.
And it is getting worse, people are hiring off the street and putting them on the equipment, Texas has no requirements whatsoever for operator, the , number of accidents in Texas bare witness to this.
But, some minimum standard of training should be required, not just of operators but of everyone.
The CDL is the response to the troubles in the trucking industry, big brother at work.
We have things like the AGC that could help formulate training materials much like the ATA and JJ Keller do now.
And, speaking of Keller, I have seen most of the material they produce, good and to the point.
The last operator film I saw was "Shake hands with danger".
Do not get me wrong, I do NOT want to see more government regulations.
I want private industry to take the lead on this and make my jobsite a safer one for all, me the operator as well as everyone around me.
Rules of the road for construction if you will.

volvobl
01-02-2010, 11:09 AM
ok i have something to say i was taking a 20 ton excavator which was on hire at the time driving down to the next town picked up my girlfriend who was coming back to mine any way driving down the town you get all the people lokking at you going as you do truck with eminox exhaust stack make it go.

at the end of town there was a bridge id been under it before with machines on the back kept going and bang snapped the main dipper pin damaged the ram broke a couple of pipes you guessed it id hit the bridge for six what a bang or what i panicked out i came row of cars in front of me row of cars behind me all on stand still jumped in the machine to drop the arm down a bit soon as i started the machine put pressure on the boom oil came out everywhere naw id contaminated the streets with oil. I reversed the truck back past the traffic answered everything to the cops delayed the trains above the bridge cleared all the oil of the road what a night fareplay the girlfriend helped me though. Could bee worse i could of dealt with all that myself i was luckyof her.


worst of all had to tell the block of his 3 year old machine had been damaged

truecountry
01-06-2010, 10:14 PM
some of you probly heard of the trailer dumps where you back your trailer on and unhook truck pull up and it picks trailer up almost straight up to dump saw dust and wood chips.. well we had one at my last employer it ha a hydralic leak .. call me out to fix it and it was directly under the cement slab that picks up trailers so i think mmmmmmm this aint good i call the big boss in to tell him i got to block up the dump hig enough to get under and dig thou 10 years of dust to find leak.....he says hell no ill show you ... cranks motor to pick up dump and stands it straight up in air and cuts engine off and says start digging well i say hell no it pissing hydralic fluid out the ground from pressure,,, he yells u are fired its shut off valves in cylinders and proceded to show me by takeing a wrench to crake a hose and hose blew off 2 inch stream of hydralic fliud hitting him and cement slab coming down fast i grab him and pull him out as his sons pull up ............. i didnt get fired i quit

Dozerboy
01-14-2010, 06:53 PM
I got in trouble today we got rained out. I left the job fast to though the mud off my tires so I wasn't flinging off for a mile down the road. The job super was right there and got pissed off that I was "Hotrodding".