Friday, Jul 14, 2017 at 00:23
Only just found out, day before yesterday, when reading the Northern Telegraph in
Port Hedland, as to the exact circumstances of this dreadful crash that claimed a
Tom Price couples life.
They had apparently left
Tom Price, heading North with their Landcruiser and caravan, and had come up behind a quad road train that was approaching the
bridge.
There was a triple-trailer cattle roadtrain coming up behind the Landcruiser and 'van, as the quad road train and Landcruiser slowed at the
bridge.
The cattle road train then ran into the back of the 'van that the Landcruiser was towing, shoving the Landcruiser to the right, out across the centreline, and into the path of an oncoming Prado and 'van.
The Landcruiser and Prado collided virtually head-on, and the Landcruiser rolled off the road and down an
embankment.
The couple in the Landcruiser were both killed, while the Prado's occupants were seriously injured.
I'd have to say one cattle road train driver is going to be undergoing some major interrogation as to why he didn't stop in time.
Yes, I know big rigs take a long distance to pull up (I've owned a 100-tonne Drake float), and cars braking heavily in front of trucks is a known source of accidents - but regardless, I'd tend to think this cattle road train driver could be guilty of driving too hard and fast, and not looking far enough ahead.
The only other situation that I could see, that could have caused the crash would be if the Landcruiser overtook the cattle road train, slipped in between the quad and triple, then braked hard as he realised the quad was slowing down rapidly.
Cheers, Ron.
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