SbTeAeTrE All American 1409 Posts user info edit post |
I took this while driving over spring break, and I'm just now getting around to posting it. This thing was huge, 96 wheels If I counted right. I dont know how it got on or off the interstate because it seems like turning would be a problem.
Anyone else ever seen anything like this actually rolling down the road? 3/22/2007 11:20:04 PM |
BigBlueRam All American 16852 Posts user info edit post |
was that in nc?? i know things like that are somewhat common in other areas of the country and in canada, but i've never seen anything like that here. 3/22/2007 11:21:57 PM |
JBaz All American 16764 Posts user info edit post |
wtf is that? looks like deployable steel bridges for ice roads in canada... 3/22/2007 11:25:11 PM |
SbTeAeTrE All American 1409 Posts user info edit post |
it was in WV, and dont say... oh yea, thats backwards just like the rest of WV. It was on I-68 right outside of Morgantown. 3/22/2007 11:26:38 PM |
richthofen All American 15758 Posts user info edit post |
what the bloody hell is that thing??
Also note that it seems to have a pusher engine on the back end of it. Nice. 3/22/2007 11:28:14 PM |
BigBlueRam All American 16852 Posts user info edit post |
ah. i would guess it's possibly something mining related being in wv, but i don't know.
it's not backwards at all... it's a very common way to transport really large stuff in certain areas.
[Edited on March 22, 2007 at 11:31 PM. Reason : .] 3/22/2007 11:31:31 PM |
JBaz All American 16764 Posts user info edit post |
too bad you didn't have a cb radio, could have asked the trucker directly... 3/22/2007 11:31:32 PM |
SbTeAeTrE All American 1409 Posts user info edit post |
yea that would have been nice 3/22/2007 11:38:48 PM |
JBaz All American 16764 Posts user info edit post |
"breaker breaker niner niner four two one, what cargo are you hauling, over" 3/22/2007 11:40:49 PM |
Mindstorm All American 15858 Posts user info edit post |
It looks like a trailer they'd use to haul massive equipment around on. Maybe two or three hooked together.
I've seen ones similar to just the part of the trailer closest to the cab hauling around very large excavators while working at the DOT, so maybe this is for hauling a shit ton of mining equipment. 3/22/2007 11:49:49 PM |
BigBlueRam All American 16852 Posts user info edit post |
yeah, after looking at it some more it appears those are just the trailers, and it's actually empty.
they are somewhat similar to a typical lowboy type trailer, especially the front one. 3/23/2007 12:02:59 AM |
JBaz All American 16764 Posts user info edit post |
empty you say? still seems overwhelmingly huge for being empty... 3/23/2007 12:28:55 AM |
BigBlueRam All American 16852 Posts user info edit post |
yep. everything appears to just be part of the trailers and dollys after looking at it closer... 3/23/2007 12:38:31 AM |
IcedFire Veteran 440 Posts user info edit post |
74 tires btw...thats a shitload and i think its complete awesomeness 3/23/2007 1:01:09 AM |
BigBlueRam All American 16852 Posts user info edit post |
i'm seeing 78... assuming all are duals except the steering wheels. 3/23/2007 1:09:24 AM |
69 Suspended 15861 Posts user info edit post |
thats actually 4 trailers, when tranporting large equipment, the first and third trailer are side by side in the front, the second and fourth are side by side in the rear, and the engine and control station is for the load leveling jacks and rear steer, its just a giant hydrualic pump, i've seen them move everything from rediculously large turbine generators to houses 3/23/2007 7:53:23 AM |
zxappeal All American 26824 Posts user info edit post |
This kind of setup is very common in mining regions. As a matter of fact, I've seen a couple of shows on Discovery Channel that had this kinda hauling setup, both out west here and in Australia, for hauling ore (I think it was a bauxite operation I saw on Discovery).
The Aussies use huge setups like this all the time, as they don't have a big established railroad system across their outback regions. They run not just conventional double trailer setups, but sometimes more like 5 or 6 trailers in what they call road trains. 3/23/2007 8:03:09 AM |
Aficionado Suspended 22518 Posts user info edit post |
large industrial equipment is delivered with this setup
but i dont see how those individual components could go side-by-side
ive only seen them hauling in that configuration with the load in the center 3/23/2007 9:06:51 AM |
MattJM321 All American 4003 Posts user info edit post |
I got 78 also, fucking awesome 3/23/2007 11:38:55 AM |
toyotafj40s All American 8649 Posts user info edit post |
that must be one hell of a turbo diesel 3/23/2007 11:58:43 AM |
southpaw All American 502 Posts user info edit post |
Moving a heavy transformer in Wake Co.
3/23/2007 12:41:37 PM |
Arab13 Art Vandelay 45180 Posts user info edit post |
aha, i like how they pretty much just use I-beams and stick what amounts to dollys under them to move something like that 3/23/2007 12:42:35 PM |
BigBlueRam All American 16852 Posts user info edit post |
3/23/2007 2:17:36 PM |
willyummm Veteran 431 Posts user info edit post |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_train might help 3/23/2007 2:20:43 PM |
69 Suspended 15861 Posts user info edit post |
^ thats for enclosed trailers and shit
^^^^ thats what i was talkin about side by side, except the curved pieces on the first one join the front and rear dollies on the sides 3/23/2007 2:56:07 PM |
God All American 28747 Posts user info edit post |
What I want to know is, how the hell do you turn on a normal street with something that long? 3/23/2007 3:47:39 PM |
gephelps All American 2369 Posts user info edit post |
Unless they changed it, Oregon used to be one of the only states where "normal" trucks could run triples. It is kinda scary when it is windy. Not uncommon for the back two to get out of the lane during large gusts.
[Edited on March 23, 2007 at 5:00 PM. Reason : illustration] 3/23/2007 4:49:25 PM |
pcmsurf All American 7033 Posts user info edit post |
I wish i could put my picture of them moving a historic church through downtown raleigh about 9 months ago
it took them all day to move it about 7 blocks they had to take down the stop lights at each intersection they passed and anything else that was in the way
The truck that moved it was one huge truck with 4 trailers that branched off into 4 rows
looked like it was going to fall at any moment
[Edited on March 23, 2007 at 4:55 PM. Reason : f] 3/23/2007 4:54:44 PM |
underPSI tillerman 14085 Posts user info edit post |
a similar truck was just here. it too was carrying a transformer. they carried to rdu where they loaded it onto an Antonov AN-225 which is the world's largest airplane. damn i wish i knew that thing had came into rdu. i would have loved to watch it land and take-off.
http://www.kenworth.com/6100_pre_mor.asp?file=2062 3/23/2007 10:00:29 PM |
richthofen All American 15758 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "I wish i could put my picture of them moving a historic church through downtown raleigh about 9 months ago" |
All Saints' Chapel? I heard it had to be moved to save it from demolition, but never heard that it was successfully done. Where did they end up putting it?3/23/2007 11:32:17 PM |
pcmsurf All American 7033 Posts user info edit post |
I dont remember many details
I think it was on the corner of morgan and mcdowell
and they moved it to somewhere behind the salvation army on person street 3/24/2007 1:09:30 AM |
Pyro Suspended 4836 Posts user info edit post |
They're called road trains, and they're often used in Australia(the country is basically only populated on the coast, with long desolate 'interstates' connecting radially across the inland area.) I don't think they're legal in NC. They'd be disasters waiting to happen in urban areas like this.
[Edited on March 24, 2007 at 10:30 AM. Reason : The cow catcher is evidently standard equipment...] 3/24/2007 10:29:31 AM |
bcvaugha All American 2587 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "It looks like a trailer they'd use to haul massive equipment around on" |
you'd be right, this rig is actually used to hauld massively heavythings. notice the one flat part, this is where the load goes. the other "trailers" simply distribute the load (notice that it hinges that the flat part is floating midways on the two trailers front and back)3/24/2007 3:07:44 PM |