Drive through Detroit.South Carolina Interstates have literally turned into dumpsters. There is debris everywhere. It’s never been this bad in the past.
Glad you’re ok.
Drive through Detroit.South Carolina Interstates have literally turned into dumpsters. There is debris everywhere. It’s never been this bad in the past.
Glad you’re ok.
I have see 5 semi tire explosions/disintegrations in my decades of driving. I was close enough to all of them to get some tire pieces on the windshield or grill. A couple of them I saw small pieces of rubber start flying off the tire along with a bit of smoke, so I backed off and avoided the large chunks.
Never camp beside trucks and never follow them close.
I had a sheetmetal panel fly off a Winnebango that was oncoming traffic and sail through my windshield like a giant guillotine. Luckily it hit the passengers side and my dog was laying down so went over top of him.
Guy in the Winniebango didn't even stop. Only damage was a $300 windshield and tore the seat a little. (beat up bench seat in a square body Chevy).
Couple years back a lady was killed near my house when a rock from a gravel truck bounced off the road and went through the windshield and hit her. She hit the gravel conveyor at about 55mph.
https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/mat...25-year-old-woman-on-glenn-highway-last-year/
Yikes. One evening in the rain my stepfather ran over a large pipe laying in the middle of the highway. It did a number on the front suspension of his 500 SL.When I was a kid, my dad was driving to work early (around 4am) one morning, when maybe 100 yards ahead a Semi kicked something up into the air. My dad saw it as it was a lighted section of Interstate. He said it looked like a piece of cardboard spinning in the air. It came down right in front of him and went under the car with a bang. He pulled over as quickly as possible, and checked the car over. It was running fine, and wasn't leaking anything, so he drove on to work. When He got to work in the lighted parking garage he noticed something in the rearview mirror. He turned around to find a 4" wide, 3/4 inch thick piece of steel of around 3' in length.
It turned out to be part of the sacrificial edge of a snowplow, from one of the State DOT snowplows. Apparently it had come off a plow at some point. Anyway after the semi kicked it into the air, and it came down right in front of my dad's car and then went under with a bang, it came up through the bottom of the car right behind the drivers seat. Maybe 4" further forward, and it would have impaled and killed my dad instantly.
The State denied any responsibility, and ultimately we had to be satisfied with just being very lucky to not lose my dad.
Road debris and roadside trash has increased over the last few years …
There is no doubt there, but truck “gators” are older news often from recaps …
Some people came up like that - was behind a guy (not in US) when the checker asked if he wanted a receipt - yes … I had one item and just left cash - so was right on his heels … He makes the most deliberate toss of that receipt on the roadway … He’d never even looked at it …Says something about society . Very depressingand aggravating
to see all the garbage ( plastics , etc. ) along the roads and in parking lots . Walmart parking lots are the worst . Was taught by grandparents to respect the environment , people and their belongings . All these plastics degrade and get into the ground , air and nearby water ( springs , brooks , creeks , rivers , etc. ) . Not good for people and all other living things .
I think Discount Tire secretly owns roofing companiesSeems you take your life (and your property) into your own hands when driving on the roads these days. One of the biggest issues we have around the Upstate are the armies of container trucks (intermodal shipping type) mixing it up with us everyday. Quite a few of them are real sketchy with maintenance, especially the tires. Seen lots of them blow tires, lose tread recaps, and generally disintegrate at speed, spreading shrapnel and tire carcass across all lanes of traffic. Another fun bunch to deal with are the dump trucks. Not like we have a shortage of these either with all of the building and growth around here. Unsecured loads leave just about everything imaginable on the roads. And I love those little stickers they put on the back about not being responsible for broken windshields from debris kicked up. What about the stuff coming off the truck itself?![]()
Worked so many wrecks where folks have hit all manner of trash/objects in the roadway. One of the most memorable was a ladder that miraculously most were able to avoid. One poor soul ran over it at full highway speed and tore out his oil pan. Not only did he crash, but also 7 others that lost control on ensuing oil slick behind his car. No one seriously hurt, but lots of bent sheet metal. And I could literally furnish a small house with all the furniture I've seen on/had to move off the roadways. Amazing.
Did you choose the insurance coverage? I did not and damaged the 22 inch LF wheel/tire and popped the lower ball joint on a Jeep Grand Cherokee by hitting a median curb I did not see. Rain/dark/dirty windshield. Note: these things pop ball joints at any impact, weak design.In a rental car, I hit a piece of debris near St. Augustine FL in the pre-dawn darkness, and it shredded two tires. I felt a little bad because the car had less than 3000 miles on it and I'd ruined two tires. Annoying because I had to wait four hours for them to come pick up my car on a flatbed, haul it up to the Jacksonville airport, and then bring me a replacement. Especially annoying because the replacement car was a bit of a downgrade and very high in mileage. At least they never charged me a dime for all their troubles.
I've never actually read the fine print of a car rental agreement, do they prohibit you just getting the vehicle fixed? Especially for a couple tires, just go to the nearest used tire place and get a couple put on.Did you choose the insurance coverage? I did not and damaged the 22 inch LF wheel/tire and popped the lower ball joint on a Jeep Grand Cherokee by hitting a median curb I did not see. Rain/dark/dirty windshield. Note: these things pop ball joints at any impact, weak design.
Hertz charged me $22K. My CC paid about half. YIKES!!!!
Anyway, it is a good idea to do what you can to avoid running over debris. Following close has it's risks, and it's generally not to the vehicle in front. Ya never know what that little dark spec on the road will do.
For just a couple of tires, I'd be willing to just have the car towed to a tire shop and I'd eat the cost of the tires; much faster that waiting for the rental company to dispatch a tow and then wait for them to bring a replacement car. At the time, I didn't have AAA, but now I do.I've never actually read the fine print of a car rental agreement, do they prohibit you just getting the vehicle fixed? Especially for a couple tires, just go to the nearest used tire place and get a couple put on.