Hi from France ,i used to work for Blakiston's in Geelong,back in the 80's, i was based in Melbourne, i use to tarp two,maybe three times a day,depending on the frieght, Melbourne-Geelong isn't that far. Back then it was a matter of pride,that front and back enveloppe had to be tighter than a guitar string,when you were finished there wouldn't be a single crease, looked as though it had been ironed.There was an art to folding your tarp,an art to unrolling it as well. I've even still have some photos. Your knots are called a half hitch and a clove hitch.Some times you'd have to splice the ends,even slice two ropes to make one or simply slice the ropes back onto to your tarp. But now some 34 years later,god knows how many miles,i now drive a petrol tanker local in and around Lyon. I really like your chanel,i enjoy all of your vidéos,i honestly can't fault any of them. Have a great day.
I’ve always called the knots with the loops in them a Sheepshank & a 1/2 hitch on the tie rail. And how you’ve tarped that trailer is absolutely exactly the way I was taught 40 years ago & was still using them when I was last on the Darwin run in 2016
There's a vid on UA-cam from a training school that shows the way I was taught. They call it a Beehive, I call it a Truckies Hitch: ua-cam.com/video/73hHtb_if1g/v-deo.html If you've got rings like that on the tarp you don't need to use them anyhow since the rings are the pulley blocks, but the ropes have an advantage when using a Truckies Hitch and that's they lock in better.
Plenty of half hitch & dbl clove hitch anchor knots there, with a few decent sheepshank truckies knots, old school, nice. i knew i was forced to go to boy scouts for a reason, just didnt realize way back then
Hi! I am writing to you from Poland, I am also a truck driver, but I drive on a walking floor. Your videos are very interesting, I can see the hardships of working in Australia, the climate is different in Europe and work seems to be easier on a refrigerated trailer, curtainsider or flatbed. I have a little dream to visit Australia. Greetings, wide road John! ;)
I vividly remember my first ever tarping on my own. Loaded at the old Clyde Oil Refinery in Sydney. Forkie put top tarp on top for me. Put the gates on. Got the curtains on. Spread out the top tarp, then ... a bloody gale whipped up! Lost the tarp twice before I finally got the job done. Gave the forkies some entertainment
Hi Johno Good meeting you at the BP at Kewdale today, having a bit of a look at your channel, some great info. Saying that I'll stick with my box, no tarping for this old boy Say hi to Ken for me and the Lindsay Mob Cheers Pete
We always called them sheepshanks. Tarping with wet muddy ropes in winter was always great fun, dry, cracked skin wasn't sore at all... The quality of the tarp job showed the quality of the operator.
The "trucks hitch" or "pulleys" you tied into the rope are typically called sheep shanks. It's the name for the knot. Used by sailors and boy scouts the world over!
Back in the 70s in Yorkshire UK we used to not only tie down the tarp but secure the load using ropes. We used to call it a "twitch". It allowed you to double the leverage you could put on the rope. 😂😂😂 Brings back memories of working with my Dad. Thank you.
Johnno, double wrap the top knot of the sheep shank and it will NEVER slip when tightening ( Give it plenty of back 😂) Also unwraps easily when undoing wet ropes. Keep up the good work mate.
Love watching your tarp job. Everyone does it different. In the states i pulled a single 48 foot flat trailer,i had 4 tarps. We rolled them out from back to front depending on the size of the load,sometimes I'd use all 4 sometimes not. But still like watching others tarp jobs.
I started tarping in London '75 for Lucas Industries, (The Man Who Invented Darkness), and did heaps more for Layton-Kirkman doing steel and soda ash, ( middle of summer, long sleeve overalls ). I always called those rope hitches 'dollies'. The earlier commenter was right. All the London loads were held down with ropes, usually old weather beaten ropes that you could snap with a double dolly. All the trailers had open hooks along the side. Made it easy to loop the load and tarp ropes; you didn't have to feed through a combing rail. Power steering was only for new trucks, the rest had 'Armstrong' steering. Tautliners were only just coming in. When I got back to Oz in 78 there wasn't a tautliner to be seen. We was men then indeed! Nearly a half century since then of the road. Sunrises, diesel, dust and dead roos. Going back to flatbed and tarping this year. 70? Too old? I'll soon find out :)
You got it. There are many bands for those knots. The truck drivers today have it too easy.. Not many even change a tyre. This is mainly due to companies not allowing them to.
More traditional way of doing it. I was watching a trucking show from Canada. They use rubber stretch hook straps. Not ropes on the tarps. Or at least the one I was watching did. That seemed weird to me. When I first got to Oz from UK and went to tie anything to a truck I was lost. On all the trailers I had worked with they had hook tie offs. Not rails. Did the truckie hitch pulled the loop down to hook off. No hook. Had to get someone to show me. Go behind the rail up and across. Then pull the loop up and make the hitch. I had always made the hitch first. My brain just got cross wired. Now after 25 years of rails. That seems the norm. Still annoys me a bit having to keep feeding the rope behind a rail all the time. It is easier to tie to a hook. But both systems have their benefits and faults. Very true. If they flap, they tear.
New subscriber and a old man that used to drive big trucks single trailers tankers and flatbeds I don't anything wrong with the way you tie your tarp keep on keeping on from USA
Way back when, in the UK, I used to drive much smaller trucks than you do, but I really enjoyed roping and tarping. The systems were different, no bars to rope to, but numerous welded hooks under the flat. Anyway, then straps took over and the art seemed to go out of it! I still love rope though - maybe that's why I now live on a boat 🙂.
Another way of putting the 1/2 hitch is to wrap the rope behind it self before you reef down on it and it’s easier to undo when you want to undo the rope, hard to explain here , but something an old truckie showed me 40 years ago, cheers,
What a great job tarping. In my country flatbeds are common used by truckers and they tarp with ropes too, the method is the same but they ties the ropes all around over the tarp from side to side to secure it, as well with some loads too. I hope to buy my truck to start in the industry😄 Cheers from Venezuela👋
I recently quit a job where I was doing multi drop steel deliveries and tarping. Earlier on this year, I was standing on top of the load after completing the first drop of 5 and pulling the tarp back across (one side was still tied off) and as I was pulling it over a gust of wind ballooned the tarp, a rope wrapped around my ankle and knocked me over. Luckily I'm fit and strong and all that happened was I fell on my back on top of a pack of steel. Big tarps are bloody dangerous in windy conditions. Freaky shit like this happens. After that I was so over multi drop steel deliveries I looked for a tanker job. I like hard work but a time comes where you realize for the degree of effort and experience you have they aren't paying you enough and it starts eating at you. Tarp, untarp, retarp, repeat in the rain is hard yakka. They make you tarp when it's 40deg C or raining, it doesn't matter. I was getting reasonable not great money as a company driver say $75k a year for 40 hours with holiday and sick pay. So I looked and found a tanker job and I now get paid $9 an hour more for doing one or two pickups and one delivery (which I'm not required to unload) with overtime and penalty rates. The only hard work in this job is sometimes I have to break up the trailers to load and I always have to break them up at the end of each shift for unloading which means the set has to be assembled at the start of the shift too. I'm never in the same truck in this job though and they're all lowish power and I drive in hilly country so they're slow when loaded, like really slow - 25kmh slow many times. Crappy 425hp auto Macks... I miss my 600hp Cummins in the K104 from the steel job but that's about all I miss. When it was slow it was still doing 70kmh LOL.
Thanks for sharing your story. It's not all tarping with us. Maybe every fifth load I might have to tarp and it's very rarely more than one drop on each trailer. Your job does sound like a lot of hard work. I've done pressurised tanker work. You didn't say which kind of tanker you had.
Wow, as a boilermaker on truck and trailer maintenance I love watching drivers and yardies busting their ass putting tarps on ,and wonder whether if they have heard of Tautliners. The two knots are clove hitch and sheepshank. I like your videos Johnno, regards steve
Thanks Steve. I'd still rather tarp every fifth load or so than have to open and close a tautliners to load or unload. Yes you're right with the name of the knot.
Hi mate, I used to tie my truckie knot the same way you do but I got sick of trying to push the knob end through the twist loop. Instead of twisting the loop with your fingers, I just wrap the knob end that's in your left, with a double wrap (use right hand and the rope that you would have twisted). Make sure the second wrap sits inside the first wrap and next to the strained rope so that it doesn't try to flip off. Hope that makes some sense.
The wind can be an opponent. The advantage of the heavy canvas,insteat of plastic tarp. I never done that. Whel just once.With a load of sugar carrots. Driving in the cold night. That tarps had to be against the frost. But it was that thin plastic orange tarp. With bungees. Totally worthless,But they wanted that. hahaha. You know as i what happend. On the road it was completely torn into pieces. Flapping among the truck. And then i have to clean it up in the cold dark,and put it away. Everything for nathing.and cold as a ice cube. So you made an other teaching video what we can learn from. Your vids are very good Johnno.Always different and there is everything in it. Education, the landscape even with a drone, what you are experiencing, the truck,the roads etc. You show it all calmly and in peace.Just like Tez and FreeBrisbane. You are not the ''show off type'' and ''look how good i am''. But you are. I dont know if every truckie or Aussie is like that.But it dos do good. Just normal people.Better than the bozo's over here.Overal, do not like it here. As someone already wrote, the operational areas for A-Doubles/triples and B-doubles and when to yuse them, and why and ,seems like a good topic too.intresting. Stay safe. Have a vrey nice time with your family at home.
We called it a truckers knot. It's used like a pully to add purchase on a rope when tightening. Some of the knots your using look like bowlines being used for the same reason.
@@RoadTrainAdventures The Tautliner or curtain-side Trailers have taken the place of all general freight that used to be loaded onto trailers with Gates Side curtains cap tarps and full trailer tarp (as you are using here) i was very happy to go from general freight to refrigerated freight Mostly fork on fork off but sometimes we would hand stack freight But no Tarps The rope pully knot we called a truckles hitch On line they refer to it as a truckers hitch
man didnt know this was so much work....really gratefull we have truck drivers doing this job all year round. as for future content: basically do what you enjoy doing for content, because this joy comes across in videos. I always liked the rather short videos driving through all the beautiful landscapes you go through, with or without music. Its always so relaxing and inspiring :)
Everyone has their own unique way or style or Tarping Johnno.. As long as the freights cover mate.. Most of our tarps had a 3rd row of shorteners.. My tarp even had extra ones to pull the flap out at each end.. Used to take me around 3hrs each end to tarp a bdouble lol.. Two of our tarps were 6ft drop 5ft gates they took some work to get right.. Good job mate! 👌
In answer to your question about what content you should post? Just keep doing what you’re doing mate, I’m 55 & was medically retired in 2016 when I broke my back, I now live vicariously through yours & other Aussie road train especially videos
Hi, most informative. Takes me back 40 plus years. I notice that your trailers do not have load scales, so it might help others if you can explain how you calculate where to place on your load on the trailers, for maximum loading on both the tri's, dolly and drive. Another topic that could be discussed is the operational areas for A-Doubles in Australia. This would help your overseas subscribers understand our many different regulations, both Federal and State.
Yeah for sure. Many videos to come. How do I know how much to put on? I use the Force... Ha ha. No I do have scales in my truck and also on the trailers but I went over a weighbridge on the way out of the place I got loaded.
You need to come over to the UK and give a few drivers a lesson on tarping loads. - The number of times I see tarps and ropes flapping in the breeze is scary, worst are when half the trap is dragging along the road surface, and a massive length of rope trailing behind....
North America we use either two piece or 3 piece tarps for a whole trailer the front and rear tarps will have a 10 by 10 flap at one end! We use rubber bungie cords or rubber rope to secure the tarps. When tarping we do the rear tarp first an work our way forward!
@@RoadTrainAdventuresbecause our tarps our in either two or three pieces you put one or two bungee cords pulling the rear tarp forward then you secure the rear flap as fast as possible. then you use bungee cords to quickly secure it in place and secure the front, then you go back down the sides for the final securing of putting a bungee in every d ring nice and tight!
As 76 yo I learnt from a older man in my early teens and have always called it a hitch and the second one a half hitch I still to this day if I see a nice neat tarp job I will call on uhf and comment
A well tarped load always looks good. It is half a sheep shank, the other half is the rail. Clove hitch on the rail as everyone has pointed out. You only really need 2 knots to tie anything on. You are doubling the mechanical advantage and halving the effort by putting the rope through the ring or you can put another shank in and do the same thing as you know. Just like a pulley block and tackle but with more friction. Can you show us how you roll the excess strap up and loop it up? I wonder if the American bloke in the other comment with his rubber straps has ever worn a ring in the face when something broke? Jeff
I am on flatbed here in Canada and our trailers are 53’ but I often do super B’s too. I always have to use at least 2 tarps to cover the load, sometimes even 4🙄. Tarping is hard work. In the summer you are sweating like ….. and in proper Canadian winter the tarps don’t fold too much😁. I use bungees not ropes to tie the tarps down. I’m planning to move to Australia next year and drive there so I’m glad I found your channel. You got so many interesting and valuable things here. You just got another subscriber mate!
Thanks JM. It's great to have you along and no doubt I'll bump into you next year when you're here. Ha ha. Australia is a big page but if you get a job driving around here then it's quite possible. Let us know when you get here.
May I have a question? Is your “road ranger” manual the same as “eaton fuller” here in Canada and US? Can you float the gears without a clutch on your road ranger gearbox? Just wondering if it allows you to do it too.
Music vs. engine noise vs. talk? Do what you want, in the end it's your channel not anyone else's. Content - more important. Not having followed you for very long (time) it's just fascinating to see where you go and how long it takes (fuel burn would be interesting every now and then). I do like the little maps you chuck in as they put your journey into context, and as for you food breaks - it's entertaining and fascinating to see the variety and price differences.
Thanks Rob. I realise it's my channel but I also have to consider what my audience wants. I do this on balance too what I want though. Thanks for your ideas. I just have to remember to put these into action.
Yeah that knot is a truckers knot. My whole life around trucks and my whole family drives trucks my favorite is the KW AND Pete 379 Well the one that is done on your trailer is a hitch and the one on the tarp is a truckers knot
Good day Johno, The art of tarping it is certainly a lost art these days of tautliners etc. Like you I occasionally have to tarp up my load of timber for local work here in Melbourne, our company doesn’t own a tautliner trailer everything flat bed trailers all 45 ft long. Dangerous walking on a tarp whilst it is windy on your own. Back in the 90’s whilst working at NTFS in Adelaide everyday tarp at least 5 trailers to go piggy back on the Alice train on the way to Darwin. If you didn’t know how to tarp no start & being the new fella always up the top at 4.6 metres rolling out the tarp so many times I came very close to falling over the side & the wind used to pick up the tarp used to scare the shit out of you. Count it as rest time or work time on the book. Could be worse doing it in the rain. Great video you do admire looking at a tarp load these days when ever you come across one on the road. Safe driving. Cheers Louis Kats 👍 😊 🇦🇺
Hi Johnno ..loved the video. My dad taught me to do the 2nd loop you do then the half hitch. Not sure what it’s called the 2nd loop you do, I also taught my boys. As you can imagine many not know how to tie down these days, as every one has straps.great video mate.
Hello Johno, could you do a segment about the log book please, how to fill it out, and the history of it. Do you have a central office that books your trips or do you do you do it yourself? Cheers. Love the channel... by the way easy going about the chatter or the music but love the views of the landscapes while you are driving.
I like your attitude. It doesn't matter how much you know, if you keep your eyes open (and your mind) you can ALWAYS learn new ways of doing stuff. LOVE how you show bits of our country most people never get to see. Keep doing what you are doing! Cheers and G'day from Tasmania
Love the content. Sit watching for hours even thou I don't drive big rigs. Learn loads and just love the way you go thru things and explain things in a carlm way. Give me a shout out Ady from Lincoln in the UK
Another good one johno i learned off my old man who has been doing it for 45 years tarping aint a bad skill to learn i like physical side to it like to keep active tighter the better when i pull up for a break set the alarm for 10 mins no more
After watching a little longer, I believe your truckers knot is not a true sheep shank, sheep shanks are double looped (each end) their old time use was to shorten a rope. Excellent and entertaining video. Regards Ray
You said like a crane driver, but the word you were looking for is a double hitch, you don’t see as many fully tarped loads anymore, mostly see pantech trailers, on national highways, tarpping is very labour intensive, but good to watch an expert, cheers from Downunder ❤️🦘🦘🦘🇦🇺
G'day my name's Andrew from Tasmania I've been watching your tracking you top up your trailer down you are doing an absolute one question could you please take a video of inside your truck and your tiny bit about the inside of your truck if you could please the moving your GoPro so we can see more of the road thank you very much for preso appreciate everything you are doing on your show keep it up and Andrew from Tasmania Launceston
Another great video. I never appreciated the effort and skill it requires to tie a tarp into place properly let alone fold the ends neatly. I will never look at a well tarped trailer the same way again. I have no doubt you make you bed every morning with the same techniques and care😂😂😂😂
We have a variation of the truckers knot here in the UK . Take the rope coming from over the load , pull tight making a loop and placing across the rope wrap around twisting and placing the loose around a hook ( we have hooks on UK trailers ) pulling tight , double up or even triple to pull really tight ...good for cabins and portable buildings . As for climbing on the trailer ...not a chance , on most sites here you would be banned from site because of health and safety regulations . Drive safely .
Tarping wasn’t my favourite part. Try to tarp and untarp in Canada at - 20 C. The tarp is hard as a rock. Sometimes, sticking on the load, so you have to climb on it… Tarping keeps you fit. You’ve got another subscriber 😀
Nice one Johnno. More long form videos. Thanks for the tip on the 15 min power naps rather than a half hour one. Maybe do a run down on all the guages and dials etc in the cab. What's your fave wok in a box. Never had one but might get one tomorrow. Maybe you should get them to sponsor you. Cheers!
Thanks Mike. I intend on showing you around the truck one day. It would be nice to show your around a new truck when I get one. I used to get Nasi seafood Goreng but they don't do that one anymore so I get the combination but I modify a little. I take it the oyster sugar and replace with Nasi sause.
I've always called em a truckies knot,I use to do tarps back in the mid 90''s after 3 years I had the biggest kalis on the side of my right hand which was atleast 10mm thick of hard skin and when it cracked now and then was very annoying and painful,joys of tarping.
When you start your hitch if you put the rope the other way you will not have to pull the rope through behind the knot. So start the hitch with the rope going from left to right. Just a thought. But whatever works.
Brings back memories watching you tarp. The wind was always a bugger lol. You did a fantastic job. Great video love the way you interact with your viewers with the talking. Have watched a few American truck drivers and one guy used the black rubber bungee straps to hold his his tarp down. To be honest I would not thought that was legal.
@RoadTrainAdventures no the bungee straps were used to hold down the tarp, no ropes involved that I saw. The youtube channel was Call The Mall. He is a young Canadian Bdouble driver.
@@onedayatatime4232 I love call the mall. I saw that video, it was a recent one. call the mall backs his b-double more than drives it forward. He would drive adelaide to darwin, then put it in reverse and back it back to adelaide ;)
I have to be completely honest here, I am so glad tautliners exist 😂Although I know some loads just have to go on flat tops like long steel and such. I love looking at peoples tarp jobs, it's so fascinating because I know how much of an art there is to is. I was watching some American truck vloggers, Big Rig Becca was one and I noticed on her tarps they only use bungee cords instead of ropes. Interesting how different places use different things. What's your thoughts on their style of tarping with bungees? Great video once again mate, love your work.
Yeah there is the occasion when I wish I had tautliners, not many though. Some other people were telling me about the bungee straps. I watch Big Rigs Bec too. Wow just to pull one trailer around everywhere looks so easy.
Haven't read all the comments but in UK we call it a Dolly hitch and you can double them. Hope you like that. Also last night I watched the video with my friend Sherralin
Still watching your videos . In 1987 I went to Australia with the intent to emigrate but my paperwork was delayed and I was deported, even though Australian Government had my papers and proof of financial independence. I thoroughly enjoyed my time there but how things have changed. The roads etc are far superior in many areas, and now you have the superior Scanias and Volvo's as a common sight. My uncle was the head of Melbourne Port when I went. I persuaded him to import a Volvo F12 Globetrotter. I could go faster and further in a shift than others and he bought more Not everyone liked them but all admitted they were more comfortable to drive
No mate. Had a 10 year ban to come back. For the last 25 years or so have been transporting luxury yachts and boats by road all over Europe. Not easy and challenging but fun at times
(8:45) yep its all about the envelope Jonno,dont get that looking nice and square and pretty every fridge driver that's never tarped a load will be hanging it onya :).
Hey Johnno, finally got through the video (wow what a marathon) - how about a video on your drone ie how you go about it etc, I’m sure most of us average joes would be interested to see how it’s all done without you giving too many secrets away.👍
We call them a dolly knot here in the uk .nice job of that sheeting.
Thanks Stuart. Interesting name in the UK
Hi from France ,i used to work for Blakiston's in Geelong,back in the 80's,
i was based in Melbourne, i use to tarp two,maybe three times a day,depending on the frieght, Melbourne-Geelong isn't that far.
Back then it was a matter of pride,that front and back enveloppe had to be tighter than a guitar string,when you were finished there wouldn't be a single crease, looked as though it had been ironed.There was an art to folding your tarp,an art to unrolling it as well.
I've even still have some photos.
Your knots are called a half hitch and a clove hitch.Some times you'd have to splice the ends,even slice two ropes to make one or simply slice the ropes back onto to your tarp.
But now some 34 years later,god knows how many miles,i now drive a petrol tanker local in and around Lyon.
I really like your chanel,i enjoy all of your vidéos,i honestly can't fault any of them.
Have a great day.
Thanks heaps. I actually live in Point Cook so you might remember that near Werribee.
You dont see the need to double lock you hitch
No. I see some people do that as they were taught that way but this way works fine too or I definitely wouldn't keep doing it this way.
I’ve always called the knots with the loops in them a Sheepshank & a 1/2 hitch on the tie rail. And how you’ve tarped that trailer is absolutely exactly the way I was taught 40 years ago & was still using them when I was last on the Darwin run in 2016
Awesome. I was shown by the old school guys.
There's a vid on UA-cam from a training school that shows the way I was taught. They call it a Beehive, I call it a Truckies Hitch:
ua-cam.com/video/73hHtb_if1g/v-deo.html
If you've got rings like that on the tarp you don't need to use them anyhow since the rings are the pulley blocks, but the ropes have an advantage when using a Truckies Hitch and that's they lock in better.
Yes he did a very good job at explaining.
Plenty of half hitch & dbl clove hitch anchor knots there, with a few decent sheepshank truckies knots, old school, nice. i knew i was forced to go to boy scouts for a reason, just didnt realize way back then
Yes all the things we learn when we're young and we didn't realise why. Now it all makes sense.
Hi! I am writing to you from Poland, I am also a truck driver, but I drive on a walking floor. Your videos are very interesting, I can see the hardships of working in Australia, the climate is different in Europe and work seems to be easier on a refrigerated trailer, curtainsider or flatbed. I have a little dream to visit Australia. Greetings, wide road John! ;)
Yeah that would be great for you to come here. See all the big trucks. I'd love to go to Europe one day.
I vividly remember my first ever tarping on my own. Loaded at the old Clyde Oil Refinery in Sydney. Forkie put top tarp on top for me. Put the gates on. Got the curtains on. Spread out the top tarp, then ... a bloody gale whipped up! Lost the tarp twice before I finally got the job done. Gave the forkies some entertainment
Oh wow. Yeah I've nearly lost the tarp from the wind. Terrible stuff
Hi Johno
Good meeting you at the BP at Kewdale today, having a bit of a look at your channel, some great info. Saying that I'll stick with my box, no tarping for this old boy
Say hi to Ken for me and the Lindsay Mob
Cheers
Pete
Awesome Pete. Yeah you gotta work where you enjoy you job. I'll certainly say hi to Ken for you too.
We always called them sheepshanks. Tarping with wet muddy ropes in winter was always great fun, dry, cracked skin wasn't sore at all... The quality of the tarp job showed the quality of the operator.
Where do you call them sheepshanks? Yes a good tarp job looks good
@@RoadTrainAdventures Western Australia, up the coast and also across the paddock for many years, mainly to Melbourne.
The "trucks hitch" or "pulleys" you tied into the rope are typically called sheep shanks. It's the name for the knot. Used by sailors and boy scouts the world over!
Yes I'll remember that from now on. Thanks
I heard them called sheepshanks too, but it was back in NZ many years ago.
Back in the 70s in Yorkshire UK we used to not only tie down the tarp but secure the load using ropes. We used to call it a "twitch". It allowed you to double the leverage you could put on the rope. 😂😂😂 Brings back memories of working with my Dad. Thank you.
Thanks Dave. Yes I hear from other older drivers that before straps, everything had to be tied down with ropes.
I think in the UK the truckers would refer to them as "hitches". I.e. A truckers hitch. Enjoy the videos very informative, good drone shots.
Thanks Nigel. You may be right.
Johnno, double wrap the top knot of the sheep shank and it will NEVER slip when tightening ( Give it plenty of back 😂) Also unwraps easily when undoing wet ropes. Keep up the good work mate.
Thanks Steve. I see the very old school double wrap but that's not for me.
Hahaha, old school . Makes me sound old, but then again, I am!!!
Awesome
Love watching your tarp job. Everyone does it different. In the states i pulled a single 48 foot flat trailer,i had 4 tarps. We rolled them out from back to front depending on the size of the load,sometimes I'd use all 4 sometimes not. But still like watching others tarp jobs.
Thanks heaps
All of our trailers are 48 foot.
I started tarping in London '75 for Lucas Industries, (The Man Who Invented Darkness), and did heaps more for Layton-Kirkman doing steel and soda ash, ( middle of summer, long sleeve overalls ). I always called those rope hitches 'dollies'. The earlier commenter was right. All the London loads were held down with ropes, usually old weather beaten ropes that you could snap with a double dolly. All the trailers had open hooks along the side. Made it easy to loop the load and tarp ropes; you didn't have to feed through a combing rail. Power steering was only for new trucks, the rest had 'Armstrong' steering. Tautliners were only just coming in. When I got back to Oz in 78 there wasn't a tautliner to be seen. We was men then indeed! Nearly a half century since then of the road. Sunrises, diesel, dust and dead roos. Going back to flatbed and tarping this year. 70? Too old? I'll soon find out :)
You got it. There are many bands for those knots.
The truck drivers today have it too easy.. Not many even change a tyre. This is mainly due to companies not allowing them to.
More traditional way of doing it. I was watching a trucking show from Canada. They use rubber stretch hook straps. Not ropes on the tarps. Or at least the one I was watching did. That seemed weird to me. When I first got to Oz from UK and went to tie anything to a truck I was lost. On all the trailers I had worked with they had hook tie offs. Not rails. Did the truckie hitch pulled the loop down to hook off. No hook. Had to get someone to show me. Go behind the rail up and across. Then pull the loop up and make the hitch. I had always made the hitch first. My brain just got cross wired. Now after 25 years of rails. That seems the norm. Still annoys me a bit having to keep feeding the rope behind a rail all the time. It is easier to tie to a hook. But both systems have their benefits and faults. Very true. If they flap, they tear.
Yes I've been told by others about this rubber strap. I just don't see how you could have a tight tarp using that method.
New subscriber and a old man that used to drive big trucks single trailers tankers and flatbeds I don't anything wrong with the way you tie your tarp keep on keeping on from USA
Awesome. Thanks Larry and it's great to have you along.
Way back when, in the UK, I used to drive much smaller trucks than you do, but I really enjoyed roping and tarping. The systems were different, no bars to rope to, but numerous welded hooks under the flat. Anyway, then straps took over and the art seemed to go out of it! I still love rope though - maybe that's why I now live on a boat 🙂.
Oh Malcolm. We only have to tarp every fifth load or so. I don't like it. It's just something we have to do sometimes.
Another way of putting the 1/2 hitch is to wrap the rope behind it self before you reef down on it and it’s easier to undo when you want to undo the rope, hard to explain here , but something an old truckie showed me 40 years ago, cheers,
Yes. The older truckies here do that.
We used to tarp our loads like that, but not in the UK now , it's more curtainsiders, or ratchet straps now.
Yes tautliners are the way more big we still need flat tops.
What a great job tarping. In my country flatbeds are common used by truckers and they tarp with ropes too, the method is the same but they ties the ropes all around over the tarp from side to side to secure it, as well with some loads too. I hope to buy my truck to start in the industry😄
Cheers from Venezuela👋
Awesome. Thanks. It's great to have your along
I recently quit a job where I was doing multi drop steel deliveries and tarping. Earlier on this year, I was standing on top of the load after completing the first drop of 5 and pulling the tarp back across (one side was still tied off) and as I was pulling it over a gust of wind ballooned the tarp, a rope wrapped around my ankle and knocked me over. Luckily I'm fit and strong and all that happened was I fell on my back on top of a pack of steel.
Big tarps are bloody dangerous in windy conditions. Freaky shit like this happens. After that I was so over multi drop steel deliveries I looked for a tanker job. I like hard work but a time comes where you realize for the degree of effort and experience you have they aren't paying you enough and it starts eating at you. Tarp, untarp, retarp, repeat in the rain is hard yakka. They make you tarp when it's 40deg C or raining, it doesn't matter. I was getting reasonable not great money as a company driver say $75k a year for 40 hours with holiday and sick pay.
So I looked and found a tanker job and I now get paid $9 an hour more for doing one or two pickups and one delivery (which I'm not required to unload) with overtime and penalty rates. The only hard work in this job is sometimes I have to break up the trailers to load and I always have to break them up at the end of each shift for unloading which means the set has to be assembled at the start of the shift too. I'm never in the same truck in this job though and they're all lowish power and I drive in hilly country so they're slow when loaded, like really slow - 25kmh slow many times. Crappy 425hp auto Macks...
I miss my 600hp Cummins in the K104 from the steel job but that's about all I miss. When it was slow it was still doing 70kmh LOL.
Thanks for sharing your story. It's not all tarping with us. Maybe every fifth load I might have to tarp and it's very rarely more than one drop on each trailer. Your job does sound like a lot of hard work. I've done pressurised tanker work. You didn't say which kind of tanker you had.
You're keeping it interesting and compare very well with our overseas friends digger.
Thanks David. I try to
@@RoadTrainAdventures You're most welcome.
Awesome
Wow, as a boilermaker on truck and trailer maintenance I love watching drivers and yardies busting their ass putting tarps on ,and wonder whether if they have heard of Tautliners. The two knots are clove hitch and sheepshank. I like your videos Johnno, regards steve
Thanks Steve. I'd still rather tarp every fifth load or so than have to open and close a tautliners to load or unload. Yes you're right with the name of the knot.
What an effort! Must add a couple of hours each way loading and unloading the tarp! Another great video Johno!
It's not that bad. We only have to tarp every fifth load or so. Undoing and rolling up a tarp doesn't take long either. All in a day's effort.
Awesome Jonno👍👍
Thanks Matthew.
Brings back memories,done it thousands of times back in the day,and the wind is a bugger
nice work !
You must be a good operator then.
Thanks heaps
Hi mate,
I used to tie my truckie knot the same way you do but I got sick of trying to push the knob end through the twist loop. Instead of twisting the loop with your fingers, I just wrap the knob end that's in your left, with a double wrap (use right hand and the rope that you would have twisted). Make sure the second wrap sits inside the first wrap and next to the strained rope so that it doesn't try to flip off.
Hope that makes some sense.
Thanks Brandon. Yes the older guys here do it that way. Maybe I'll try it when I can remember.
The wind can be an opponent. The advantage of the heavy canvas,insteat of plastic tarp. I never done that. Whel just once.With a load of sugar carrots. Driving in the cold night. That tarps had to be against the frost. But it was that thin plastic orange tarp. With bungees. Totally worthless,But they wanted that. hahaha. You know as i what happend. On the road it was completely torn into pieces. Flapping among the truck. And then i have to clean it up in the cold dark,and put it away. Everything for nathing.and cold as a ice cube. So you made an other teaching video what we can learn from. Your vids are very good Johnno.Always different and there is everything in it. Education, the landscape even with a drone, what you are experiencing, the truck,the roads etc. You show it all calmly and in peace.Just like Tez and FreeBrisbane. You are not the ''show off type'' and ''look how good i am''. But you are. I dont know if every truckie or Aussie is like that.But it dos do good. Just normal people.Better than the bozo's over here.Overal, do not like it here. As someone already wrote, the operational areas for A-Doubles/triples and B-doubles and when to yuse them, and why and ,seems like a good topic too.intresting. Stay safe. Have a vrey nice time with your family at home.
Thanks again. I need to make a list of these requests so I don't forget them. I'm bad at that.
@@RoadTrainAdventures Whatever you want and like to show us..Its all good.
Awesome
We called it a truckers knot. It's used like a pully to add purchase on a rope when tightening. Some of the knots your using look like bowlines being used for the same reason.
You got it. Very good
Wow, I used to see heaps of trucks in the 70s and 80s with tarps on loads. Don't see a lot these days. Thank you for bringing back good memories . 👍
Yes it's a funny art. It's rather tarp my load than have to open curtains every time I wanted to get to my load.
I'll be sharing to my American mates.
@@RoadTrainAdventures The Tautliner or curtain-side Trailers have taken the place of all general freight that used to be loaded onto trailers with Gates Side curtains cap tarps and full trailer tarp (as you are using here) i was very happy to go from general freight to refrigerated freight Mostly fork on fork off but sometimes we would hand stack freight But no Tarps The rope pully knot we called a truckles hitch On line they refer to it as a truckers hitch
That's very good of you Warrick. Thank you very much
Even easier are side tippers. With automatic taps you never have to get it off the truck. Great when it's hot.
man didnt know this was so much work....really gratefull we have truck drivers doing this job all year round.
as for future content: basically do what you enjoy doing for content, because this joy comes across in videos. I always liked the rather short videos driving through all the beautiful landscapes you go through, with or without music. Its always so relaxing and inspiring :)
Thanks Jack. I try my best.
Everyone has their own unique way or style or Tarping Johnno..
As long as the freights cover mate..
Most of our tarps had a 3rd row of shorteners..
My tarp even had extra ones to pull the flap out at each end..
Used to take me around 3hrs each end to tarp a bdouble lol..
Two of our tarps were 6ft drop 5ft gates they took some work to get right..
Good job mate! 👌
Yes you're very right. All of our tarps are different in the ways you just described.
I agree with you about the talking mate.
Those yanks can talk a glass eye to sleep.
I’ve always been a watch and learn bloke.
That's very good.
My father taught me this knot, many decades ago...he called it a "Truckies Hitch".
Yeah it's probably the most popular name for it.
In answer to your question about what content you should post? Just keep doing what you’re doing mate, I’m 55 & was medically retired in 2016 when I broke my back, I now live vicariously through yours & other Aussie road train especially videos
Oh cool. Who else do you watch? Ken , Tez and I talk together a lot
What other road train videos are there?
Many on my channel.
@@RoadTrainAdventures your videos are great and I watch them all.
Awesome
Hi, most informative. Takes me back 40 plus years. I notice that your trailers do not have load scales, so it might help others if you can explain how you calculate where to place on your load on the trailers, for maximum loading on both the tri's, dolly and drive. Another topic that could be discussed is the operational areas for A-Doubles in Australia. This would help your overseas subscribers understand our many different regulations, both Federal and State.
Yeah for sure. Many videos to come. How do I know how much to put on? I use the Force... Ha ha. No I do have scales in my truck and also on the trailers but I went over a weighbridge on the way out of the place I got loaded.
You need to come over to the UK and give a few drivers a lesson on tarping loads. - The number of times I see tarps and ropes flapping in the breeze is scary, worst are when half the trap is dragging along the road surface, and a massive length of rope trailing behind....
Ha ha. Yeah some people don't check their loads much or at least look in the mirror. Do you think I'd got in there with my accent. Do I sound English?
@@RoadTrainAdventures I'm sure exceptions can be made for those rendering "essential educational services" ;-)
(Oh, nor am I English....)
For sure
Great job you doing. Stay safe. Love seeing your Kenworth. Beauty of a truck.👍
Thanks Justin. It's great to have your along.
Excellent work, here in the USA we use rubber rope and bungees.
Yes I've been hearing that through my other viewers. I'll have to see a video to see this in action.
I only know it as a "truckies knot".....comes in very handy.
For sure
North America we use either two piece or 3 piece tarps for a whole trailer the front and rear tarps will have a 10 by 10 flap at one end! We use rubber bungie cords or rubber rope to secure the tarps. When tarping we do the rear tarp first an work our way forward!
If you work from the rear first how doesn't the wind get under the back traps? That way doesn't sound very practical.
@@RoadTrainAdventuresbecause our tarps our in either two or three pieces you put one or two bungee cords pulling the rear tarp forward then you secure the rear flap as fast as possible. then you use bungee cords to quickly secure it in place and secure the front, then you go back down the sides for the final securing of putting a bungee in every d ring nice and tight!
I'll have to check this out on a video so I can see what you're talking about.
As 76 yo I learnt from a older man in my early teens and have always called it a hitch and the second one a half hitch I still to this day if I see a nice neat tarp job I will call on uhf and comment
Very good
After some years playing with tarps in all kinds of weather,I was glad to spend the last 10 years before retirement on curtain siders.
Yeah sometimes it's easier but only if you get a load that must keep dry. A lot of our loads don't matter if it gets wet.
Good demo mate lots of information mate.
Thanks Tez. Looking forward to your next episode.
A well tarped load always looks good. It is half a sheep shank, the other half is the rail. Clove hitch on the rail as everyone has pointed out. You only really need 2 knots to tie anything on. You are doubling the mechanical advantage and halving the effort by putting the rope through the ring or you can put another shank in and do the same thing as you know. Just like a pulley block and tackle but with more friction. Can you show us how you roll the excess strap up and loop it up? I wonder if the American bloke in the other comment with his rubber straps has ever worn a ring in the face when something broke? Jeff
Ha ha. Wow a ring in the face.. Or what about if the strap breaks?
That was hugely educating.
Awesome. Thanks Jessica
You have nice balance between talking, silence, music and engine noise!
Very nice. Thanks
I am on flatbed here in Canada and our trailers are 53’ but I often do super B’s too. I always have to use at least 2 tarps to cover the load, sometimes even 4🙄. Tarping is hard work. In the summer you are sweating like ….. and in proper Canadian winter the tarps don’t fold too much😁. I use bungees not ropes to tie the tarps down. I’m planning to move to Australia next year and drive there so I’m glad I found your channel. You got so many interesting and valuable things here. You just got another subscriber mate!
Thanks JM. It's great to have you along and no doubt I'll bump into you next year when you're here. Ha ha. Australia is a big page but if you get a job driving around here then it's quite possible. Let us know when you get here.
May I have a question? Is your “road ranger” manual the same as “eaton fuller” here in Canada and US? Can you float the gears without a clutch on your road ranger gearbox? Just wondering if it allows you to do it too.
If course they are the same Eaton Fuller. I never use the clutch except for putting it into gear.
Same here👍. Good to know. Thanks
Awesome
David Hunn
Ah, fond memories of ropes, especially when new, ripping my lower fingers to shreds on a wet day when I started my driving life. 🙂
Oh yeah. That's why I have to wear one glove. My hands get blisters all over them.
Just like clutches and stick shift, tarping loads is a dying trade. Great video mate.
Thanks Craig. Yeah the aren't too many old school operators left anymore.
I really enjoy watching your videos .love Australia ! Would love too visit someday. Ron from Maine USA
Thanks Ron. Well come on down. We need some more good operators.
Hi over here in the uk the knot with a loop is called a dolly 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
Thanks Drew. A dolly you say. OK thanks
I think you are doing just fine doing what you have been doing, please keep it up if you can. Thx
Sure thing
Greetings from bernie from hamburg germany
Hello Germany. Great to have you along.
Music vs. engine noise vs. talk? Do what you want, in the end it's your channel not anyone else's.
Content - more important. Not having followed you for very long (time) it's just fascinating to see where you go and how long it takes (fuel burn would be interesting every now and then). I do like the little maps you chuck in as they put your journey into context, and as for you food breaks - it's entertaining and fascinating to see the variety and price differences.
Thanks Rob. I realise it's my channel but I also have to consider what my audience wants. I do this on balance too what I want though.
Thanks for your ideas. I just have to remember to put these into action.
Enjoyed the video thanks
Thanks Darren
Makes me appreciate the fridge trailers!
Nice job by the way mate. Can tell you’ve done that once or twice before 👍🏻
Thanks heaps
Yeah that knot is a truckers knot. My whole life around trucks and my whole family drives trucks my favorite is the KW AND Pete 379
Well the one that is done on your trailer is a hitch and the one on the tarp is a truckers knot
Very good. You know your stuff
Nice job bloke👌
Thanks again Les
Good job on the tarp l liked how you tied your tarp down, nice and neat.
Thanks Steve
@@RoadTrainAdventures no prob. l enjoy your videos.
Awesome. Thanks for watching
Good day Johno,
The art of tarping it is certainly a lost art these days of tautliners etc.
Like you I occasionally have to tarp up my load of timber for local work here in Melbourne, our company doesn’t own a tautliner trailer everything flat bed trailers all 45 ft long.
Dangerous walking on a tarp whilst it is windy on your own. Back in the 90’s whilst working at NTFS in Adelaide everyday tarp at least 5 trailers to go piggy back on the Alice train on the way to Darwin.
If you didn’t know how to tarp no start & being the new fella always up the top at 4.6 metres rolling out the tarp so many times I came very close to falling over the side & the wind used to pick up the tarp used to scare the shit out of you.
Count it as rest time or work time on the book.
Could be worse doing it in the rain.
Great video you do admire looking at a tarp load these days when ever you come across one on the road.
Safe driving.
Cheers
Louis Kats 👍 😊 🇦🇺
Thanks Louis. Yeah it's not always windy. Like for the first trailer there was no wind.
I reckon that drone footage was done at Mount Compass???😉👌👍
You know your stuff well.
Hi Johnno ..loved the video. My dad taught me to do the 2nd loop you do then the half hitch.
Not sure what it’s called the 2nd loop you do, I also taught my boys. As you can imagine many not know how to tie down these days, as every one has straps.great video mate.
Thanks Mark. Yes it's certainly good to know.
He mate i try watch all your videos i live in Tailem Bend you would of driven straight past my front door. Keep up the good work
I didn't see you wave when I passed by. Ha ha. I don't pass by Tailem Bend much so it will probably be a long time before I go through there again.
Hello Johno, could you do a segment about the log book please, how to fill it out, and the history of it. Do you have a central office that books your trips or do you do you do it yourself? Cheers. Love the channel... by the way easy going about the chatter or the music but love the views of the landscapes while you are driving.
Thanks Julie. I'll keep that in mind for a video. For sure.
Great work John thanks for sharing 🦘
Awesome. Thanks again Kerry
I like your attitude. It doesn't matter how much you know, if you keep your eyes open (and your mind) you can ALWAYS learn new ways of doing stuff. LOVE how you show bits of our country most people never get to see. Keep doing what you are doing! Cheers and G'day from Tasmania
Thanks Glenn. We are coming to Tasmania for Christmas so no doubt I'll bump in to you at the shops. Ha ha
Love the content. Sit watching for hours even thou I don't drive big rigs. Learn loads and just love the way you go thru things and explain things in a carlm way. Give me a shout out Ady from Lincoln in the UK
Thanks Andy.it's great to have some more followers from the UK.
@@RoadTrainAdventures no n in Ady lol. Great stuff to watch. And you talking thru it is like a friend teaching how to do stuff it's ace
👍
Another good one johno i learned off my old man who has been doing it for 45 years tarping aint a bad skill to learn i like physical side to it like to keep active tighter the better when i pull up for a break set the alarm for 10 mins no more
Very good
Love your tarp job, we had to do all our loads like that, can appreciate your effort.
Good stuff. Thanks John.
Well done Johno, you made an excellent Job, you are an artist ☺👌👍
Ha ha. Thanks very much
@@RoadTrainAdventures very welcome mate 😃
👍
I used to like tarping making them nice and tight and straight but I definitely don't miss it now that I'm a tanker driver now.
Yes no strapping down liquids.
After watching a little longer, I believe your truckers knot is not a true sheep shank, sheep shanks are double looped (each end) their old time use was to shorten a rope. Excellent and entertaining video. Regards Ray
Thanks Ray. Yeah I see some of our older drivers do those double loops.
You said like a crane driver, but the word you were looking for is a double hitch, you don’t see as many fully tarped loads anymore, mostly see pantech trailers, on national highways, tarpping is very labour intensive, but good to watch an expert, cheers from Downunder ❤️🦘🦘🦘🇦🇺
A good tarped trailer looks great
Thank you for another awesome video.
I’ve just got myself a DJI Mavic 2 Pro, so love watching the drone footage too.
Oh wow. You'll have lots of fun with that
Gee i really enjoy your video's and your presenting style. Keep going. Well done
Thanks heaps for that. I'll certainly press on
G'day my name's Andrew from Tasmania I've been watching your tracking you top up your trailer down you are doing an absolute one question could you please take a video of inside your truck and your tiny bit about the inside of your truck if you could please the moving your GoPro so we can see more of the road thank you very much for preso appreciate everything you are doing on your show keep it up and Andrew from Tasmania Launceston
Thanks Andrew. I'll do an episode one day off my truck. I thought that might be boring for others but apparently not.
Hi mate I love your channel as it is
Thanks Kevin. It's great to have you along.
Good work. Tarps like that/Canvas are built to last. Have a hiking pack made from that which is 30 years old and still going strong!
Yeah for sure.
Another great video. I never appreciated the effort and skill it requires to tie a tarp into place properly let alone fold the ends neatly. I will never look at a well tarped trailer the same way again. I have no doubt you make you bed every morning with the same techniques and care😂😂😂😂
Ha ha. No I don't make my bed that tight.
We have a variation of the truckers knot here in the UK . Take the rope coming from over the load , pull tight making a loop and placing across the rope wrap around twisting and placing the loose around a hook ( we have hooks on UK trailers ) pulling tight , double up or even triple to pull really tight ...good for cabins and portable buildings . As for climbing on the trailer ...not a chance , on most sites here you would be banned from site because of health and safety regulations . Drive safely .
Yeah health and safety had gone overboard here too hence the reason I was doing that in a parking bay on the edge of the road.
Tarping wasn’t my favourite part. Try to tarp and untarp in Canada at - 20 C. The tarp is hard as a rock. Sometimes, sticking on the load, so you have to climb on it…
Tarping keeps you fit.
You’ve got another subscriber 😀
It doesn't get that cold but yes the taps get very stiff. It's great to have your along too.
Thanks for the informative and useful video 👍👍
Thanks again for watching
@@RoadTrainAdventures 🙏🙏🙏
👍
Nice one Johnno. More long form videos. Thanks for the tip on the 15 min power naps rather than a half hour one. Maybe do a run down on all the guages and dials etc in the cab. What's your fave wok in a box. Never had one but might get one tomorrow. Maybe you should get them to sponsor you. Cheers!
Thanks Mike. I intend on showing you around the truck one day. It would be nice to show your around a new truck when I get one.
I used to get Nasi seafood Goreng but they don't do that one anymore so I get the combination but I modify a little. I take it the oyster sugar and replace with Nasi sause.
I've always called em a truckies knot,I use to do tarps back in the mid 90''s after 3 years I had the biggest kalis on the side of my right hand which was atleast 10mm thick of hard skin and when it cracked now and then was very annoying and painful,joys of tarping.
Ha ha. Yeah I get those too hence the reason I use a glove of one hand otherwise I get blisters.
When you start your hitch if you put the rope the other way you will not have to pull the rope through behind the knot. So start the hitch with the rope going from left to right. Just a thought. But whatever works.
Yeah that Mount ne am idea. I'll try to remember that next time. I'm always looking for any better ideas.
As a non truck driver I'm enjoying watching your videos. Wow how may hours spent preparing befor the drive. Keep up the good work.
Awesome. It's great to have you along
Great vid very entertaining.
Oh great. Thanks Andrew
It's called a Half Sheepshank....but known as a "truckies knot"
That's the one. It's funny how I learn some things but never ask the name of it
Brings back memories watching you tarp. The wind was always a bugger lol. You did a fantastic job. Great video love the way you interact with your viewers with the talking.
Have watched a few American truck drivers and one guy used the black rubber bungee straps to hold his his tarp down. To be honest I would not thought that was legal.
Was the bungee straps just to hold it down while he uses the rope or just the bungee straps?
@RoadTrainAdventures no the bungee straps were used to hold down the tarp, no ropes involved that I saw. The youtube channel was Call The Mall. He is a young Canadian Bdouble driver.
@@onedayatatime4232 I love call the mall. I saw that video, it was a recent one. call the mall backs his b-double more than drives it forward. He would drive adelaide to darwin, then put it in reverse and back it back to adelaide ;)
Wow. How could you ever tighten the tarp like that. It would flap away.
Oh that would be interesting.
No wonder you are fighting the wind. Have you noticed how fast the traffic drives past you?
Ha ha. It's 110km/h zone on the Eastern Freeway so it has to be expected.
I have to be completely honest here, I am so glad tautliners exist 😂Although I know some loads just have to go on flat tops like long steel and such. I love looking at peoples tarp jobs, it's so fascinating because I know how much of an art there is to is. I was watching some American truck vloggers, Big Rig Becca was one and I noticed on her tarps they only use bungee cords instead of ropes. Interesting how different places use different things. What's your thoughts on their style of tarping with bungees? Great video once again mate, love your work.
Yeah there is the occasion when I wish I had tautliners, not many though. Some other people were telling me about the bungee straps. I watch Big Rigs Bec too. Wow just to pull one trailer around everywhere looks so easy.
Great job Jonno I really appreciate the time it takes to put these together. Love the sound of the Cummins Keep it safe mate.
Thanks heaps. I certainly will
❤
👍
@@RoadTrainAdventures yes boss
👍
Haven't read all the comments but in UK we call it a Dolly hitch and you can double them.
Hope you like that.
Also last night I watched the video with my friend Sherralin
Yes I've heard that name too. There are so many names for this.
Still watching your videos .
In 1987 I went to Australia with the intent to emigrate but my paperwork was delayed and I was deported, even though Australian Government had my papers and proof of financial independence.
I thoroughly enjoyed my time there but how things have changed.
The roads etc are far superior in many areas, and now you have the superior Scanias and Volvo's as a common sight.
My uncle was the head of Melbourne Port when I went.
I persuaded him to import a Volvo F12 Globetrotter.
I could go faster and further in a shift than others and he bought more
Not everyone liked them but all admitted they were more comfortable to drive
That's no good. Are you able to try again.
No mate. Had a 10 year ban to come back.
For the last 25 years or so have been transporting luxury yachts and boats by road all over Europe.
Not easy and challenging but fun at times
Sounds like you should have all the experience we need as this operators here.
I really enjoy your videos, as always great content keep it up mate! Watching from New Zealand.
Thanks Daniel
(8:45) yep its all about the envelope Jonno,dont get that looking nice and square and pretty every fridge driver that's never tarped a load will be hanging it onya :).
Ha ha. For sure
👍
Thanks Jonathan
Hey Johnno, finally got through the video (wow what a marathon) - how about a video on your drone ie how you go about it etc, I’m sure most of us average joes would be interested to see how it’s all done without you giving too many secrets away.👍
Yeah I can't show all my secrets but yes I'll try to do a drone video some time too
So good
Thanks Rachel
Just call them a hitch single double or triple usually the last one can break the rope, nice job Johno
Thanks Tony. Yeah 3 will really have it right.
I have always called them a truckies knot or truckies hitch tied off with 2 half hitches. Pretty much the only 2 knots you ever need on a truck.
Oh for sure
Hello, I'm watching an episode of Outback Trucker on TV. Were you there as a bumper and led a truck convoy with hay for Australian farmers?
No I wasn't there for that. That was before I had my channel.