A slightly odd lorry.

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Cock Womble 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

231 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
This is a spot-hire 7.5 tonner that turned up at work today:



A fairly normal, boxed 7.5 tonner.

But let's look at the other side:



A curtain-sider.

Box on one side, curtain on the other. Whisky Tango Foxtrot?

Turn7

23,645 posts

222 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
Bizaare, but very handy I would say.

PH lurker

1,301 posts

158 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
I can't really see it being worth having one box side as surely the offside curtain is handy at least occasionally.

confused

Cock Womble 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

231 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
Turn7 said:
Bizarre, but very handy I would say.
Totally and utterly useless in our line of work.

Turn7

23,645 posts

222 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
Cock Womble 7 said:
Turn7 said:
Bizarre, but very handy I would say.
Totally and utterly useless in our line of work.
You dont do multi drop tho do you ?

And I mean MULTI drop in a DHL 130 drops/day stylee, not 3/4 kitchens.

Cock Womble 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

231 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
Turn7 said:
And I mean MULTI drop in a DHL 130 drops/day stylee, not 3/4 kitchens.
Still completely useless for what we do and the way we do it.

stevenr

915 posts

195 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
Cock Womble 7 said:
Still completely useless for what we do and the way we do it.
Well then you need to talk to whoever hired it,no?

Cock Womble 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

231 months

Wednesday 28th March 2012
quotequote all
stevenr said:
Well then you need to talk to whoever hired it,no?
"It's all we had left mate."

GC8

19,910 posts

191 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
Cock Womble 7 said:
Turn7 said:
Bizarre, but very handy I would say.
Totally and utterly useless in our line of work.
Really? Ive only ever been able to load on one side (Easysheet on the NS), and thats never caused a problem.

Surely its only a matter of habit?

Justayellowbadge

37,057 posts

243 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
Ye gods, how have I missed the excitement of this forum up till now?

Cock Womble 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

231 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
GC8 said:
Really? I've only ever been able to load on one side (Easysheet on the NS), and that's never caused a problem.

Surely its only a matter of habit?
And a matter of evenly distributing the load. The kitchens need to be on the side with the curtain, because they're hand-balled off (and we're talking on average around 100 components per stillage). Having them on the other side would mean getting on the back of the lorry and passing them over. A right ball ache.

So, you would end up having all the bulk of the weight along one side of the lorry. I wouldn't fancy driving that with (say) three one tonne kitchens loaded along the same side.

GTIR

24,741 posts

267 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
Justayellowbadge said:
Ye gods, how have I missed the excitement of this forum up till now?
Oh god.

We're all fked now.


All hail etc

GC8

19,910 posts

191 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
Cock Womble 7 said:
And a matter of evenly distributing the load. The kitchens need to be on the side with the curtain, because they're hand-balled off (and we're talking on average around 100 components per stillage). Having them on the other side would mean getting on the back of the lorry and passing them over. A right ball ache.

So, you would end up having all the bulk of the weight along one side of the lorry. I wouldn't fancy driving that with (say) three one tonne kitchens loaded along the same side.
I see. If that had happened with twenty tonnes of red hot coated stone, then a dab on the brakes evens it all out... biggrin

Cock Womble 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

231 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
Justayellowbadge said:
Ye gods, how have I missed the excitement of this forum up till now?
Listen, Captain Sarcasm, if it wasn't for the likes of us lot, how do you think your quail's eggs and tweed underpants would get delivered to Fortnum and Masons?


pidsy

8,012 posts

158 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
we had one of those for an outdoor function - it was used as a makeshift stage for a band. curtain open, looked just like a normal stage (and kept the rain out on all other sides)

speedchick

5,181 posts

223 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
The company that himself works for has one of those, used for general stuff I think.

Cock Womble 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

231 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
It would be like having a four-door saloon with only two doors on one side.

Odie

4,187 posts

183 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
Cock Womble 7 said:
It would be like having a four-door saloon with only two doors on one side.
you mean like a hyundai veloster....

iva cosworth

44,044 posts

164 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
GC8 said:
Cock Womble 7 said:
Turn7 said:
Bizarre, but very handy I would say.
Totally and utterly useless in our line of work.
Really? Ive only ever been able to load on one side (Easysheet on the NS), and thats never caused a problem.

Surely its only a matter of habit?
When delivering to random houses,you are never going to know which side of the road you

are going to stop on unless you fancy driving further on to turn around to stop on

your preffered side.


Or reversing into a tiny alley where unloading is only available from one side ,unless you fancy

driving in forwards and a completely blind reverse back out.

Conclusion as per CW7......one side curtain = useless tongue out

FunBusMk2

17,911 posts

219 months

Thursday 29th March 2012
quotequote all
It's used for carrying glass.

The solid side can be used for securing the sheets or bars to keep the load central if not a full load.