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Securing loads
Insecure loads are a danger to the public and overloading may make the vehicle difficult to control and therefore dangerous to road safety.
See The Safe Operator's Guide for more information on using goods vehicles safely and legally. This guide also provides suggestions about loading vehicles in a safe and secure manner, such as:
The Safe Operator’s Guide suggests following the advice in the code of practice Safety of Loads on Vehicles: this sizeable document includes detailed information on how to secure specific loads (see below).
There are journeys where an HGV driver is required to carry with them a considerable amount of detail regarding their load; this is certainly the case with Hazchem, for example.
However, the Vehicle and Operator Services Agency (VOSA) advises operators that, even when it is not mandatory, drivers should carry with them certain details, especially relating to:
This information will save time for a driver and the operation they work for if an incident happens during a journey or if the vehicle is the subject of an enforcement check.
The code of practice Safety of Loads on Vehicles is comprehensive, going from first principles to detailed descriptions and diagrams of how to secure specific types of load. For example:
The document can be ordered in hard copy from The Stationery Office.
For a more basic read, the LGV drivers’ manual Drive on Confidently includes sections on securing your load and roping and sheeting; the 2006/07 edition has been updated to include new regulations.
The FTA's Yearbook covers loading of vehicles and the RHA produces a guide to the haulage industry for members with relevant information.
The Health & Safety Executive (HSE) has a section on its website dedicated to haulage and a range of leaflets is available regarding workplace and vehicle safety and loads. See HSE leaflets.
There are also HSE sections on work related road safety and the carriage of dangerous goods.
A few years ago the HSE commissioned a study into the rolling over of lorries when cornering bends or roundabouts at relatively low speeds. These sorts of accidents are costly in property and injuries.
The study, Transport at Work: Rollover of Lorries Transporting Paper Reels, concluded by suggesting the installation of sensors into cabs that could inform drivers of lateral acceleration and proximity of rollover. It also noted that the use of low-loaders, or stacking heavy cylindrical objects such as paper reels horizontally rather than vertically, would significantly reduce the centre of gravity of the loaded vehicle and hence the risk of rollover.
The HSE also carried out a study into the Security of Cross Loaded Round Timber. Its testing found that loading to the industry code of practice is inadequate for securing the load.