ultraclyde (Forum Supporter) said:Keith Tanner said:ultraclyde (Forum Supporter) said:When I was in the paving business road crews were hit regularly. Like once a month or so, usually at night. The giant, monster paving equipment surrounded by billions of flood lights, other dump trucks, guys with flashlights and flags...those things. The company started running a follow truck on each crew, usually an older F250 flat bed, that had giant plastic crush blocks hung off the back. They were probably a 24" tall and about 6' long and slightly wider than the truck. They were similar construction to the ones you see on bridge abutments sometimes. All the truck did was follow the equipment at about 2 car lengths back with a ton flashing lights and take the hit when someone drove up their ass. They had a couple get hit at over 60mph estimated.
That large a system isn't practical on anything else, but maybe someone makes a smaller absorbent system that would help minimize impact severity for your personnel
My wife is in the highway construction business and "bumper trucks" are a requirement for every job. They're a little bigger and further back than what you describe and usually placed at the start of the job. It's amazing how often people hit construction equipment. It really lowers your opinion of the average driver, and half of them are worse than average.
Georgia safety standards are somewhat lower than other states, as everyone is currently aware. LOL.
Burn!
I checked with Janel. On jobs where they close lanes, there's a row of water or sand filled barrels so the idiot never gets as far as the trucks. It's the mobile jobs where they use the trucks, and they're officially "impact attenuators". CDOT pays for them as it's a state requirement. However, they're not a requirement for striping crews but all the stripers run them because they're tired of losing half million dollar trucks.