greg334
Veteran Expediter
I ended up being stuck at the scales coming into Colorado today for a while and I got a chance to talk to one of the Colorado’s safety people while they search a couple trucks in front of me for drugs (pretty cool show I must add and the guys got pinched).
We were talking about bridges, mainly the ones in Utah that scared the h*ll out of me going over and I mentioned the I35 bridge. He told me that they had a big meeting about the bridge and it was pointed out that the thing was designed and built during a time where the weight of the trucks were less than what they are today and with the four major revisions of the laws governing the weight limits on interstate highways, the chances are that the bridge was never properly updated structurally. He also mentioned that with higher traffic volumes, there is a chance that the harmonics of the traffic actually did the damage to collapse the bridge but the NTSB hasn’t ruled that out.
We were talking about bridges, mainly the ones in Utah that scared the h*ll out of me going over and I mentioned the I35 bridge. He told me that they had a big meeting about the bridge and it was pointed out that the thing was designed and built during a time where the weight of the trucks were less than what they are today and with the four major revisions of the laws governing the weight limits on interstate highways, the chances are that the bridge was never properly updated structurally. He also mentioned that with higher traffic volumes, there is a chance that the harmonics of the traffic actually did the damage to collapse the bridge but the NTSB hasn’t ruled that out.