I have had co workers jam the brakes and have to go into the intersection to retrieve their ladder. HahaI saw this today while parked next to this van. Probably secure enough but using romex to tie down a ladder would get people fired by many companies in todays world.
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First pic looks like rolls to me.We never used romex but just #12 AWG. The biggest force is if you stop. Some racks have a bracket for preventing that and the wire is just to hold it down.
I have never seen sod shipped that way. Here is it only in rolls. It doesn't dry out that way.
Los Angeles commuter traffic reporters include their daily 'ladder report' of tradesmen's ladders - chewed up into unrecognizable snarls - as hazards to avoid in the congested, fast, freeways.I have had co workers jam the brakes and have to go into the intersection to retrieve their ladder. Haha
I saw this today while parked next to this van. Probably secure enough but using romex to tie down a ladder would get people fired by many companies in todays world.
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Our traffic reports too, often have the ladder in the center lane warning. It always crosses my mind if I can get there quick enough to score a nice ladder. Probably cause an 80 car pile up the way people drive. Probably just a cheap ladder off the roof of some house inspectors Dodge Neon.