Lunentucker
Well-Known Member
Years ago my FIL worked as a machinist/mechanic at a local hydroelectric dam.
He routinely hauled various parts and pieces for his personal projects to and from work for machining, etc.
One January morning he was driving his single cab Chevy pickup to work, with a large and heavy piece of solid round bar stock on the seat beside him. Maybe 3" x 8".
He hit a patch of black ice and the truck went off the side of the road and rolled about 3 times.
He was wearing his seatbelt and was uninjured, but he said he remembers watching that several pounds of solid steel fly by his head a couple of times, totally helpless as to whether or not it was going crack his head open.
Ever since then I am very conscious of what's in my vehicles loose and what it could become in a similar incident.
We never plan or expect to be in a violent crash. Nobody does. But I do think about what if and try to not have something in there that could become a major problem if it starts flying around.
He routinely hauled various parts and pieces for his personal projects to and from work for machining, etc.
One January morning he was driving his single cab Chevy pickup to work, with a large and heavy piece of solid round bar stock on the seat beside him. Maybe 3" x 8".
He hit a patch of black ice and the truck went off the side of the road and rolled about 3 times.
He was wearing his seatbelt and was uninjured, but he said he remembers watching that several pounds of solid steel fly by his head a couple of times, totally helpless as to whether or not it was going crack his head open.
Ever since then I am very conscious of what's in my vehicles loose and what it could become in a similar incident.
We never plan or expect to be in a violent crash. Nobody does. But I do think about what if and try to not have something in there that could become a major problem if it starts flying around.
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