The "Oh, crap!" moment...
I'm watching the back of the trailer in the passenger mirror. Margaret is watching the front of the truck while I'm backing the trailer 90° to the passenger side. She got the trailer past a privacy fence on the blind side, the drivers side, and I told her to watch the front. I could not straighten the trailer out because I was tight on the front drivers side. The plan was to back as far as I could, the trailer getting close to a retaining wall drop at the edge of the drive on the passenger side. Then pull ahead to straighten, then back further. Well.. backing on an arch, I got the beautiful, seven foot tall, Cedar privacy screen between the truck and trailer, and I wasn't watching it.
Homeowner said stop!!! Just as I touched it... No damage, but lesson learned.
I assumed the trailer cleared and all was good there. Just a quick look in the review would have prevented that.
I would have caught 6" of it with the corner of the box.
Beautiful modern custom house (a whole neighborhood full of them), but the driveway was not designed to be functional, for trucks and trailers, or plowing. The home owner commented to Margaret that his wife would love to see the privacy screen come down. He had driveway markers for the plow truck, which I did not want to take out, because the ground is freezing and would be hard to get back in. They were also a good indication of where not to be, landscaping wise as well. We squeaked out. Margaret bent a couple small 1" tree stems over near the front bumper.
That "opps!" could have cost thousands between the cost of the custom privacy screen and the damage to the truck box.
16' of trailer, plus the tongue, and regular cab w/8' box. This is when it was new, it's a year old this month.
Edit:
The customer was very nice.
Margaret just told me something funny.
He told her (and I missed it when we were there), he's an architect.
I'm watching the back of the trailer in the passenger mirror. Margaret is watching the front of the truck while I'm backing the trailer 90° to the passenger side. She got the trailer past a privacy fence on the blind side, the drivers side, and I told her to watch the front. I could not straighten the trailer out because I was tight on the front drivers side. The plan was to back as far as I could, the trailer getting close to a retaining wall drop at the edge of the drive on the passenger side. Then pull ahead to straighten, then back further. Well.. backing on an arch, I got the beautiful, seven foot tall, Cedar privacy screen between the truck and trailer, and I wasn't watching it.
Homeowner said stop!!! Just as I touched it... No damage, but lesson learned.
I assumed the trailer cleared and all was good there. Just a quick look in the review would have prevented that.
I would have caught 6" of it with the corner of the box.
Beautiful modern custom house (a whole neighborhood full of them), but the driveway was not designed to be functional, for trucks and trailers, or plowing. The home owner commented to Margaret that his wife would love to see the privacy screen come down. He had driveway markers for the plow truck, which I did not want to take out, because the ground is freezing and would be hard to get back in. They were also a good indication of where not to be, landscaping wise as well. We squeaked out. Margaret bent a couple small 1" tree stems over near the front bumper.
That "opps!" could have cost thousands between the cost of the custom privacy screen and the damage to the truck box.
16' of trailer, plus the tongue, and regular cab w/8' box. This is when it was new, it's a year old this month.
Edit:
The customer was very nice.
Margaret just told me something funny.
He told her (and I missed it when we were there), he's an architect.