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1 hour ago, Geoff Weeks said:

Reminds me of the old Bell helmet ads, "If you have $15 head buy a $15 helmet".

I used Bell helmets. The last bike I had was an LTD1000 Kawasaki. I sold it and bought a pickup truck, mainly because my wife wanted me to get rid of it, but I did need a pickup. I let the full face Bell helmet go with it and the guy that bought the bike only had it a week or 2 and wrecked it. Not his fault, a 4 wheeler made that left turn in front of him when he was coming from the opposite direction. The guy on the bike hit him right in the side. Put him in the hospital for weeks. My wife saw him somewhere after he got out of the hospital and he told her that the doctors told him that the fact that he had a good helmet was the only thing that saved his life.

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Producer of poorly photo-chopped pictures since 1999.

You know it was 54 years ago. I had a bad accident was nobody’s fault but my own I was speeding just got my learners permit car pulled out in front of me was not his fault. I tried to avoid the car. I ran into a three and got knocked out. Helmet was all scraped up when I came to completely ruined my 66 Honda 90 and I can still remember that car that turned in front of me don’t know how it was around  a 71 Ford wagon light  blue I don’t know how I remember that but I believe it was a bell since back then that’s what everybody  was buying hell it was so long ago. I’m surprised I even thought of that since I’m getting older and senile.

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2 hours ago, tjc transport said:

i still have my bell full face helmet around here somewhere. over 50 years old now. 

😉 they last a long time like that when you don't put them through the paces (and that's a good thing)  Back with the dirt bikes..... if you didn't have  a Bel Moto 3, you weren't cool.

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21 minutes ago, Mark T said:

😉 they last a long time like that when you don't put them through the paces (and that's a good thing)  Back with the dirt bikes..... if you didn't have  a Bel Moto 3, you weren't cool.

mine was well used and abused.

hit 3 trees with my honda 175 before i realized the points cover seal was bad leaking oil into the points housing. i would lean to make a right turn from the fields to the woods and loose one cylinder, just as i would get it straightened out, the second cylinder would come back.. and since i was still full throttle trying t keep it in the almost sugar sand, it would pull the front wheel up rite into a giant oak tree. 

fixed the point seal to keep from oiling the points, and about a month later i came through the woods the opposite direction and a friend was coming out of the field rite in front of me. so i turned the bars, rite into the same damn tree about 25 mph.

that was the end of the 175.

about three years later i was on a harley sportster, and a pickup ran a stop sigh rite in front of me. swerved to avoid him, laid it down, and slid rite into a telephone pole.  then the tumbling bike landed on top of me. 

i decided 5 trees was enough and have not rode a bike since 86 or so

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when you are up to your armpits in alligators,

it is hard to remember you only came in to drain the swamp..

10 hours ago, Geoff Weeks said:

The requirement for a headboard/headche rack went away with the newer securement  regulations. I don't agree with it, but the law is if you have two securement devices on the front of the load close together, each being capable of holding 1/2 the weight of the piece, then a headboard is no longer required. IIRC there is an exception to that for pipe, I think you still need it with pipe and may be beams. I never looked at it closely because I always ran a headache rack. 

I always had a headache rack on my tractors regardless. When a company is paying to outfit the truck, and extra strap is cheaper so that is all that is provided in most cases.

We see the result of that in those pictures. 

Hmmmm, the reliance on straps in the U.S. is very different than out here 

I was given a old Australian book while in the U.S. that shows the way to secure loads of every conceivable type 

I have noticed the U.S. don't wrap a chain around the load of wood to choke it on the front so it can't slide forward

I dunno that many people in Australia do that anymore either 

The harder it trys to slide forward the tighter it grips 

Hurdles (what we call your headache rack) on the front of the trailer are drop in and a sheet of form ply type of wood wood is leaned up against it and the stacked hard up against it 

All a bit different here though, different roads and weather conditions 

Loads like this I would expect a chain on each stack 

 

Paul

 

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