Jump to content

Operating metal tracked vehicles on the public highway


ack-ack
 Share

Recommended Posts

I believe that if the steel tracked vehicle is less than 4 Ton then it can be driven on the road, as long as the appropriate license 'category H' and insurance is held and the vehicle is registered to be driven on the road. This is from memory though and I can't find the actual legislation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

you can only go a very short distance from the site where you are working you cant just track where you like with one and any damage they do you have to put right as it is criminal damage and also you need a banksman when on public areas i.e roads footpaths and the like i use a 360 digger and thats what we have to abide by and a lot more other rubbish

Link to comment
Share on other sites

you can only go a very short distance from the site where you are working you cant just track where you like with one and any damage they do you have to put right as it is criminal damage and also you need a banksman when on public areas i.e roads footpaths and the like i use a 360 digger and thats what we have to abide by and a lot more other rubbish

They never have that problem when they are nicking them....!!......... :oops:

 

TEH

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I believe that if the steel tracked vehicle is less than 4 Ton then it can be driven on the road, as long as the appropriate license 'category H' and insurance is held and the vehicle is registered to be driven on the road. This is from memory though and I can't find the actual legislation.

You can drive a challenger tank on the road,from memory i think it is just over 4 tons :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It all depends on the type of metal track, if you have purely metal track like on most earth movers caterpillars etc then they are just metal with raised edges for grip,on a highway they would damage the road so they cannot be driven on the road.Other tracked vehicles have metal tracks with rubber pads fitted (tanks etc) and these do not cut up the highway so can be driven on the road.

You need a tracks licence (H) to legally drive a tracked vehicle.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i know of one lad doing his tank test in the army drove through a mac donalds drive through for the instructor to get his dinner

 

colin

When i was instructing in Germany we quite often would mysteriously end up in the village i lived in around lunch time :)

 

Two of my vehicles

 

IMAG0349-L.jpg

 

IMAG0346-L.jpg

Edited by welsh1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

When i worked on pipelines we used to regularly track diggers up/down and over roads, we used to use tyres to stop the diggers from wrecking the tar.

 

Best thing we found was motor bike tyres as ur men at the back could lift them and place them on the tracks and they were narrow enough to pass under digger body and just dropped off the front usually exactly where u wanted them if not tracking to fast.

Saved constantly shuttling back and forward moving tyres in front of the machines.

 

No idea about rules and reg's in those days we didnae bother much with rules

Link to comment
Share on other sites

'eres one for you then.

 

 

Does anybody know what the law is regarding the movement of tracked plant on the Highway? I've been through the Highways Act 1980 and can't find anything applicable. Any leads greatly appreciated.

 

Boomshanka.

You say movement. If you mean track (drive) the plant on the highway then the above post have covered that. If you mean longer distances and haulage is involved then it would all depend on the weight and size of the plant being hauled.

A low loader would be capable of moving plant (machine + attachments) up to the gross vehicle weight (max 44 ton) without any movement orders providing the size of the plant isn't wider than 12 feet if my memory serves me right.

If over size or over weight then movement orders are required with road restrictions (M6 over the Thelwall in rush hours for example) & speed restrictions will apply. As long as the hauling vehicle has the relevant category then you can move most plant.

 

I enjoyed moving life size tonker toys when I did it all be it very challenging at times.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

hi mate my other half worked in haulage her job was to sorted loads out including firearms, wide loads all sorts of stuff. i asked her your question, she said all depends on size, weight etc, if its a big unit then low loader with pilot escorts, route has to planned and police poss informed.

 

she went on to say best people to talk to are abnormal loads ltd , they are based in hull

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for all your replies gents (and the pics Rob you action man you x). The low loaders used for big moves but For the most part its simply diving from one field to another across the highway. They are not cleated tracks.

 

Can the rubber cleats be retro fitted to any track?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When i worked on pipelines we used to regularly track diggers up/down and over roads, we used to use tyres to stop the diggers from wrecking the tar.

 

Best thing we found was motor bike tyres as ur men at the back could lift them and place them on the tracks and they were narrow enough to pass under digger body and just dropped off the front usually exactly where u wanted them if not tracking to fast.

Saved constantly shuttling back and forward moving tyres in front of the machines.

 

No idea about rules and reg's in those days we didnae bother much with rules

Top tip that.

 

We tracked a fully rigged BG30 in Large diameter auger mode between sites on CTRL (with fuzz escort) in 2001. There were five lads on each track hay making tyres back to front. Would have worked a treat dumping the tyres on the top of the tracks but we'd risk assessed it and decided the men had to be 2m clear at all times.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Aye been there and done that, seen tyres flying all roads, even when u try and roll them they get a wobble on and head into oncoming traffic :no: seen us tracking diiggers for some quite long distances sometimes 100+m.

Finding enough motor bike tyres was the problem and we only discovered that as i finished up with them. U could probably just about (or claim u did :whistling: ) toss a bike tyre 2m onto the tracks with practice

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When i was instructing in Germany we quite often would mysteriously end up in the village i lived in around lunch time :)

 

Two of my vehicles

 

IMAG0349-L.jpg

 

IMAG0346-L.jpg

Now thats taking your shooting seriously whats the one with it's head down the hole a terrier!! must have bloody big fox in Germany

Edited by pistolgrip
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Now thats taking your shooting seriously whats the one with it's head down the hole a terrier!! must have bloody big fox in Germany

That one was an APC (armoured personnel carrier) and i was demonstrating how if a tank trap(big ditch) is dug properly how it is impossible for a tank to get over it by it's self or reverse out,i was trying to reverse it out and failed and had to be towed out,and i managed to smash my headlights when i drove in :lol:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That one was an APC (armoured personnel carrier) and i was demonstrating how if a tank trap(big ditch) is dug properly how it is impossible for a tank to get over it by it's self or reverse out,i was trying to reverse it out and failed and had to be towed out,and i managed to smash my headlights when i drove in :lol:

Lucky you didnt reverse in or you could have got your back doors smashed in.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...