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Really stupid moves

Kevin54

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Jan 12, 2005
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29,341
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Urbana, Ohio
Has anyone done something really stupid that all you can do is laugh about it? :lol_hitti

I have two different vehicles I drive. A Blazer Xtreme and a GMC Jimmy. '01 and an '00. Both basically the same identical vehicle other than the interior color and the Xtreme has a center console shifter and the Jimmy has a column shifter. See where this is going?
I drive my Jimmy to a doctors appointment today and it is the first time I have drove it in two weeks. I have been driving the Xtreme lately but yesterday I cleaned the Jimmy up. I come home, grab something off of the console, get out to open the garage door and hear "CRUNCH" :wtf: I forgot to put the SOB in Park. I have been used to putting the Xtreme in Park with the console shifter that when I grabbed something from the Jimmy console, I automatically thought my deed was done.
My new deed for tomorrow.........call the insurance company and see about a new garage door. Frickin' stupid, but all I could do was laugh about it. The garage door will still open and close but it is bowed pretty good. I'll snap some pics when I get off work tomorrow. What a dumbazz :withstupi (I am Stupid)
 
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Shadowdog500

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Dec 7, 2009
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Down the shore
Years ago I put a new exhaust in my truck and the last clamp was defective so I drove it to the auto supply to get a new clamp, hoping that the tailpipe didn't come loose during the ride. When I got to the auto supply, I decided to grab the tailpipe to see if it was still tight. The first thing through my mind when I grabbed the hot exhaust pipe was "that was friggin stupid"


Chris
 

crewchief888

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Dec 3, 2009
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13,741
Location
NW indiana
Has anyone done something really stupid that all you can do is laugh about it? :lol_hitti

I have two different vehicles I drive. A Blazer Xtreme and a GMC Jimmy. '01 and an '00. Both basically the same identical vehicle other than the interior color and the Xtreme has a center console shifter and the Jimmy has a column shifter. See where this is going?
I drive my Jimmy to a doctors appointment today and it is the first time I have drove it in two weeks. I have been driving the Xtreme lately but yesterday I cleaned the Jimmy up. I come home, grab something off of the console, get out to open the garage door and hear "CRUNCH" :wtf: I forgot to put the SOB in Park. I have been used to putting the Xtreme in Park with the console shifter that when I grabbed something from the Jimmy console, I automatically thought my deed was done.
My new deed for tomorrow.........call the insurance company and see about a new garage door. Frickin' stupid, but all I could do was laugh about it. The garage door will still open and close but it is bowed pretty good. I'll snap some pics when I get off work tomorrow. What a dumbazz :withstupi (I am Stupid)

i remember back in the mid 70's my dad had a maverick with 3 on the tree that he drove back and forth to work. we went out to eat one night, dad was driving their brand new granada.
as we took off down the street i hear <thump> dads foot hitting the imaginary clutch/floor and the grinding of the trans as he threw it up into park :confused:

more than one time over the last 35 years or so i've left automatic cars in gear, just got used to driving a stick all the time. i started driving sticks in '76 and never had anything with an auto trans till about 1998.

:beer:
 

fatboy99

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Joined
Apr 23, 2009
Messages
908
Location
Indiana
Did something like that my Contour was down with a bad water pump so i drove my van for a couple of day's. The van has the shifter on the column got the car done jumped in to go to work and proceded to pull the windsheild wiper switch off trying to shift into drive DUHHH
 

fatboy99

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Apr 23, 2009
Messages
908
Location
Indiana
Years ago I put a new exhaust in my truck and the last clamp was defective so I drove it to the auto supply to get a new clamp, hoping that the tailpipe didn't come loose during the ride. When I got to the auto supply, I decided to grab the tailpipe to see if it was still tight. The first thing through my mind when I grabbed the hot exhaust pipe was "that was friggin stupid"


Chris

It's amazing how the sight of the smoke from the burning skin reaches your brain FASTER than the burning pain :shocking:
 

ovilla

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Dec 18, 2005
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2,342
Location
Plainfield, IL
At my old house our driveway was really steep so if you were in a car, in the garage, chances are that you wouldn't be able to see what was behind you PARKED in the driveway. Anyway, woke up late one morning, running late for a meeting at work. I jumped in my van, opened the garage door, and immediately crashed really hard into our other car that was parked in the driveway. Surprisingly, not much damage to either vehicle.

Anyway, we've all been there. Just live and learn from it.
 

ujmchris

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Jun 6, 2009
Messages
53
Location
Central MN
We have a spot in the driveway referred to as the "Dead Zone." The driveway is an L shape so you pull into the driveway, and then turn left into 1 of 4 parking spots. Lots of visitors don't understand this and just drive strait in and park. Call it instinct, inattentive driving, habit, or whatever you want, but no one who lives here ever thinks to look behind them when backing out. The first time dad backed into a friends van out of sheer carelessness. The second time my grandfather had left his Lincoln at our place for some service work, and my dad (volunteer fireman) got a call in the middle of the night and smashed that up pretty good. The most recent accident occurred when a friend parked his ranger in the dead zone. I hopped in my 86 Chevy K10 (slightly lifted) and glanced behind me before backing up, but the roof line of his ranger was below my tailgate and I never saw it coming. Pushed his door in against the seat with the corner of my bumper (which got the chrome scratched on it :) ). I seriously thought about putting that door on a fence post and painting "park at your own risk" on the side.

Oh well I guess, not much you can do after the fact in situations like that, cept break out the body work tools and start mixin some paint.
 

nissan_crawler

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Jan 12, 2008
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9,638
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Wichita, KS
I learned to keep my foot on the brake when starting a vehicle with a manual. I stepped on the clutch in our p.o.s. ranger, the cylinder blew (apparently this is quite common for them to fail when it's cold. The first the ****** shop asked when I called about it was if it was a ford), the neutral switch was made, it started, drove it right into the back wall of our garage. Luckily, it's 2x6 construction and didn't do much.
 

Daniel Dudley

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Sep 4, 2009
Messages
3,546
I did leave my van in reverse once, and it rolled down the drive and across the street, hopping the curb. Ran right into the neighbor's house, which I had to fix.

Later on I had to get a new tire, as I bubbled the sidewall... I was driving down the highway and thump, thump, thump... Pulled over and saw the BIG bubble. Drove very slowly for the rest of that ride, with the blinkers on.
 

ItBurnsWhenIPee

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Jun 14, 2007
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174
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Choctaw, OK
Mine is here: http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?p=477337#post477337

From this thread: http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=35113

You guys are complete morons.




Yeah...I've done that particular move myself as well. Followed shortly thereafter with what I'm sure is a similar roll-hop-run-pirroute-into-the-cab-and-hope-the-door-isn't-locked maneuver to what you had to do. . :bounce:

I've also picked up the small bottle (acetylene?) for a cutting torch setup by the transport bottle cap. Two-handed, elbows straight out, lifted it about 6" off the floor to move it to it's station. Yeah, that cap? Well...It wasn't screwed on all the way. Cap came off, bottle dropped, and my arms -which were previously holding what...50-100 lbs? No idea- came straight at my face in rapid fashion, still holding that couple of pounds of heavy steel cap. Smashed me right in the kisser like I was going for a Tyson payday. By the time my riverdance of pain was in it's last throws and people around me had stopped laughing when they saw the blood spewing forth from my face amidst a technicolor fountain of spit, blood, and profanity...I pulled my hands away from my mouth...I had knocked two slivers off the bottom edge of my front teeth (still can't notice it by looking at them, but they've been wicked sharp ever since), cracked the front four bottom teeth, and knocked all of my front bottom teeth clean through my lower lip. Pulling THAT off was pretty fun. I looked like Bubba from Forrest Gump until the swelling started to subside. 7 stitches on the outside, 9 on the inside, and a decent scar, adding to the other scar where I'd had my teeth knocked through my lip once before (but that's another story).

*note to self*

USE A DOLLY *******.
 

adam728

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Joined
Aug 9, 2009
Messages
2,900
Location
Michigan
I've got a truck with a column shift and a Jeep with a console shift. A few weeks ago I had been driving the truck for a while and hopped in the Jeep that morning. Damn near tore the windshield wiper stalk off the column trying to shift out of park with it. Opps.


Another problem I've had is going from a stick to an auto. Back in high school, I drove a stick. I'd back down the drive way and push the cluch and coast while turning out into the road. Dad's truck was an auto. More than one occasion I'd borrow it and lock the brakes in the gravel about 20 feet from the end of the drive way because I'd instinctively push in the "clutch", which happened to be the brake pedal.
 

z28snksknr

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Jul 8, 2009
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Location
Turnersville, NJ
When I was a kid, my mom would let me driver her '90 Honda Accord around the driveway (long and with a seperate parking area from the garage). We were leaving one day and I went to drive the car from the parking area to the garage. As I was turning towards the garage, I was coming in too fast and I froze, pushed the CLUTCH pedal instead of the brake pedal, and proceeded to make a new window in the garage door which then promptly came off the tracks and flipped up into the garage, missing my stepdad's ALL ORIGINAL '34 ford by about 1/2". Oh, and my mom, stepdad, and brother were 3 ft. from the garage when it happened.

I wanted to crawl into a cave and die. The only thing that pulled me out of it was that my older brother was laughing at me so hard I had no choice but get out of the car and pummel him.
 

s_morrison57

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Mar 16, 2009
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354
Location
Vancouver BC
I have a 1980 Camino with the v6 and a 3 speed manual floor shift, can't count the times I've put that thing in Reverse thinking first gear, never hit anything .... YET !!! It seems that the older I get the more I say to myself "That was stupid" or my favorite
" size yourself up for a bra-you idiot " If no one see's me doing dumb things it's kinda OK but to be seen and caught is really embarrasing.
 

Rolling_Thunder

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Aug 8, 2008
Messages
468
Location
Port Republic MD
1. Two days ago. I had my lawn tractor with the Snow Thrower attached sitting right outside my attached garage. I went out to start it but the battery was dead. When I tried to start it of course I pushed in on the clutch which released the brake and I didnt reset the brake when it didnt start. Well I went back inside to do a fee things and came out later and the Tractor was GONE! What the Hell?!?!? The tractor was sitting on the edge of a hill that leads down to my backyard and my detached garage. Well I look down the hill and there sits my tractor in the parking area in front of the garage. It missed the garage by about 5'. And if it would of rolled another 20' backward it would of hit the 2nd hill which is a 80' drop into a stream in the woods!

2. About 3 months ago I was in my lower garage changing some tires around. I had 2 tires sitting inside the garage. When I went to grab the first one there was only one tire there! What the Hell? (I say that alot) I looked all over the garage outside in the driveway, down beside the garage. Not to be seen no where. I looked down the hill and nothing. then my mom who lives in an apartment in our basement can out and said she thought she saw a tire roll across the driveway and down the hill! she showed me where it went down which was a pretty good ways away from the garage and sure enuff it was about 30' down the hill laid up against a tree!

There have been a few other thing that have also ended up going down the hill since we'vew livedd here!!!
 

Nostraquedeo

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Oct 23, 2009
Messages
501
I remember when I was 16 and my dad and I restored his 1967 Chevy for me to drive. The thing was a tank. First gear was not even required. Anyway, while restoring it, I drove my parent's spare Mazda pick-up. Reverse was all the way to the right and down. The 67 Chevy was all the way to the left and down. I think I have that right, that was 17 years ago. Anyway, my dad hops in the 67 chevy pick-up, parked in front of the garage and sure enough, I put that thing in fourth gear and straight into the garage wall. Luckily, I hit the wall between the overhead door and standard door. I remember my dad looking at me like I was the stupidest SOB in the world. We ended up having to get the sledge hammer out and straighten that part of the wall back up. He never told my mom, but every time he rode with me he always questioned whether I was in reverse when backing up.

I went to friends house in that same truck one time. I parked in their driveway and then went inside an hung out. This particular friend used to come and pick me up, since he was a couple years older. I got done hanging out and went outside to leave. I walked out the door and the truck was gone. I thought to myslef, $hit did I drive here or not. I went in and got my buddy to drive me home. He looked at me all puzzled and told me I drove. Since the truck wasn't there, I told him he was wrong. He came outside and we both stood there puzzled. He grabbed his keys to take me home, as we drove down the street, we seen my truck backed in the creek about 1/2 mile down the road. We lived in the country. Turned out I left the truck in neutral and no parking brake. I quickly ran down there, as I thought the truck was going to be f#cked. After the garage thing a few months prior to that, I was sure my dad would kill me. Lucikly, it only had a few small little scratches from twigs.

I have so many stories with that truck. Like the time my brother and I were headed home from school in a blizzard, and the wipers quit working. We ended up taking our shoestrings out of our shoes tying them together and hooking them to the wipers and running the string through the little smoker's window. He pulled, then I pulled, he pulled, then I pulled........
 

Art From De Leon

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Feb 28, 2009
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Location
De Leon, Texas
I walked over to the 2WD shop where they had a JD 4430 setting outside running after they had the hood and turbocharger air intake hose off, and put my hand over the intake of the compressor. The suction was tremendous, and the compressor wheel was probably about 3/4" from the palm of my hand, and yes, it did make the engine stumble, as it shut off the air.

It scares me to this day to think how close I came to loosing my hand.
 

Zrexxer

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Jan 23, 2007
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5,058
Location
Pflugerville, TX
Just this past week... GF's water heater took a monumental dump, so guess who gets tasked with its replacement. Anyway... she has this 20 yr old water softener that hasn't functioned in about... 18 years... and it's right in the way of getting the old water heater out, so I decide to wreck it out too.

Cut the stop off at the street, disconnected the supply lines from the softener, and screwed a 3/4" pipe cap on each one. Feeling pretty smug, I go back, cut the water on, and check for leaks. None. Good. Go and try to turn a faucet on, none. Uh Oh.

Now I spend 30 minutes running around trying to figure out how I managed to completely eliminate water service from this house... after which it eventually dawns on me that the water flows through a softener... and I'd just capped the service entry.:lol_hitti

Sheepishly I went back, cut the stop off again, and sweated together a bypass pipe for the softener connections so water could continue on into the house. Hell... I dunno, it was late, I'm old, pick an excuse. Had a red face after that one :p
 

rodnok1

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Jan 27, 2005
Messages
853
Location
NC
I was taking o2 and act tanks off my truck and setting them on a hand cart, I dropped one down and wammo. The cart wasn't sitting flat (stone driveway) and when I dropped the tank, it and the cart smashed my glasses into my eyebrow. Just about knocked me out, couldn't see from the blood and missing a lense from the glasses. I stood up and fell down almost knocking the stupid tank down on me...now that would have sucked.

I was torhing an old camaro in half to scrap. I was standing back and everyting going fine until I hit the body solder, it ran down inside the body and out a big rust hole and itno the hole in my jeans and preceded to tatoo me with a 2-3 inch cirlce of molten lead. I dropped the torch and went screaming for the hose I has standig by to put out any fires. My friends we all just standing there wondering what the hell I was doing, until I cut my jeans off and popped the lead off my leg...that one hurt for a long time.
 
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sc3013

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Jan 16, 2009
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213
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southern Indiana
I had to go to work 4 hours early one day, 3 am., instead of 7 am. Was sitting in lunch room getting ready when another guy, also in early, handed me my keys and said he shut my car off and locked it.
 

ZRX61

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Aug 15, 2006
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28,716
Location
Solar Blight Valley, SoCal
Last week:
Made a rather futile attempt to move a 4500lb aircraft tug sideways by using my shin bone against the tow hitch....

I leaked somewhat profusely...



Yesterday:
Rigging up a tarp to keep rain out of my garage during the big storms this week. I have a row of hooks above the door that leaks to hang the tarp from. Using a new (Horrible Fright) tarp so had to add some metal rings for the correct spacing.
While fighting the damn tarp against the wind it started to slip through my hand & one of the rings wasn't beaten into place quite enough & left a VERY sharp edge..

Sliced my fingers like I'd grabbed a running bandsaw by the blade... Claret everywhere, my kid freaking out & left a trail of blood from the garage to the kitchen sink where I managed to turn the entire sink bright red.
Was out shopping a bit later, SIX bandaids on my right hand & some women asked if I'd murdered someone owing to the amount of blood on my Levis (which I hadn't noticed until she mentioned it)....

Now I'm trying to do things with my left hand that I normally do with my right... which resulted in me almost falling off the crapper this morning during the paperwork stage :(
 
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Kevin54

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Jan 12, 2005
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Urbana, Ohio
Some of these stories are hilarious :lol_hitti I can't wait for my wife to read these. Then maybe she will realize I am not alone in this world :beer: Keep bringing on the stories. These are great.
 

TA^Guy

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Jan 4, 2010
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205
Only thing I can think of off the top of my head was one night +I was working on my old motorcycle in my garage. I had the back wheel off and the bike was supported on a Handy Industries swingarm stand. It was getting late and I wasn't finished yet and due to recent vandilisum in the neighborhood my wife wanted her car in the garage. So I figured I could slightly lift the rear of the stand and roll the bike forawrd on the stands casters into the back section of my garage. I lifted it and started pushing, the bike was almost into the back section of the garage when the casters caught the split in the floor. The bike didn't have spindles, just the pads to lift it by the swingarm, so when the stand stopped the bike slide right off and tipped over laying against the door frame. The first time my bike was ever on its side and leaving a nice mark in the fairing. So now on, even if I could fit a car in the garage now, the bike stays where it is until it's back together. lol
 

bazzateer

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Oct 8, 2009
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6,075
Location
Watford, Great Britain
A few years back I was pulling down a section of fencing. The fence panels removed and just needed to take out a 4x4 post. It was about 7' tall and was fixed in concrete. I thought I could loosen the concrete's hold by 'rocking' the post back and forth. This went fine for a few minutes until BANG! the rotten base snapped and the post came straight back into my forehead. I just managed to stay upright then staggered off to sit down. Boy did my head hurt!
 

Delo1605

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Nov 30, 2008
Messages
43
I had my brother in laws 65 Impala in my trailer for storage. Went to get it out and it wouldn't start, so we just pushed it. I climb in the car, put my foot on the brake and put it in neutral, he gives it a shove and it rolls out the trailer. Now my chevelle will bearly make it off the ramp, this thing starts gaining speed. i hit the breaks, straight to the floor, nothing. I through it in park, just as it hits my picnic table which went through my shed. Only tweaked the trim on the back of the car though. The wife came home and were standing in front of the shed so she couldn't see it, all with stoopid grins on our faces.
 

Jack Olsen

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Los Angeles
The most recent. :)

I get a great price on some used Strong Hold cabinets. If you're not familiar with them, they're advertised as the strongest cabinets you can buy. They're made in Wisconsin out of 12 gauge steel. They're rated to carry 1900 pounds per shelf. The ones I got are equipped for both shelving and plastic bins. They'll last forever. They weigh 760 pounds each.

So I win the Ebay auction, and the cabinets are 30 miles from my house. Genius that I am, I work out that U-Haul is going to cost me over a hundred bucks, but the local Home Depot (where I also want to buy an air compressor) will rent you their truck for $19 for 75 minutes and $10 an hour thereafter. I'm smart, so I go to Home Depot, get them to take my 20% Harbor Freight coupon on the compressor, have them load it up, figure out how to get the thing down off the 40"-high bed to my driveway, and then go to pick up the big cabinets.

When you're smart, the world is your oyster -- so it's no surprise that the place I'm buying the cabinets from waives their normal forklift fee. Pretty soon, I'm off and on my way home.

Okay, now I've got to figure out how to get these things 40" down and then up my driveway and back into my garage. They're heavy, and I'm doing this solo. But you know me -- I'm smart. So with a cheap come-along and a length of rope and some steel pieces to make a ramp, I actually dance these things around and down off the truck without breaking any bones or making loud noises. The key to lifting something heavy is to never have to lift it. I use a furniture dolly to move them along the driveway. Since they're made to be moved with a forklift, I flip them on their tops and leave them standing that way. I take the truck back and no one at Home Depot is the wiser about what I used it for.

Moving011263936317.jpg


Now, I've made the point about what a smart guy I am, right? But I'm no body builder. So let me make the point about how heavy and unwieldy these things are for a 160-pound weakling like me to move around. They're really freakin' heavy, even after a smart guy like me takes out the shelves and takes off the 85-pounds-each doors.

And I've got some clever ideas about how I'm going to never actually have to lift one of these as I move it, and that all I need are levers and wheels and some rope and a way to control something falling down and I could build the pyramids if I had to.

Moving021263936329.jpg


Can you see a fender and a headlight behind that one cabinet? That's my pride and joy -- my vintage race car:

Basic+Angle1142646249.jpg


I was raised by a smart father, so I'm good about always having an out -- that if I have to suddenly let go, the thing will fall to the ground and not under any circumstances on top of me.

Off I go. The next step is to get the cabinets down on their sides so I can cut their feet off.

Did I mention how smart I am? Did I? Even though I've parked my race car right behind them in the driveway, I've got it worked where I'll be able to slowly lower the first one down and be able to react if it slides in one direction or the other and be able to control it, more or less, as it goes down to rest on its side.

And now it's lowering, and it does slide a little. My driveway's not all perfectly even, and the big cabinet moves over a few feet as it lowers down.

And it's heavy -- heavier with each inch it lowers, since it's tilting, and I see that I'm going to have to hit the eject button, probably, and let it come down onto the cushiony stuff I've thought to put underneath it.

Not my best-case scenario, but still within what I foresaw as possible.

And then I see how smart I was to have the other bench be sitting between this one and the race car. If everything goes to hell, as it seems to be doing, now, the lowering bench will hit the other bench. Maybe a 'boom,' but no harm no foul. These things don't dent.

And it does. Kind of in slow motion, and kind of under control. 'Boom.' A low, booming kind of sound.

And that's fine. The cabinet is down on the ground, now.

But the part I didn't count on was what would happen when I let first cabinet impact the other, which was still standing on its head -- still a little, uh, top heavy.

:wtf:

It's like I'm seeing dominoes. But with big, heavy, Strong Hold cabinets as the dominoes.

And my race car was parked right there, behind the second domino.

Genius, like I said. :thumbup:

There was a moment where time stretched out. I saw the big cabinet tilting, starting to go. Then tipping. It moved really slow. Then I saw the front of the Porsche, right behind it. And in my mind, the figure of 760 pounds flashed like a neon sign. And I watched as the big thing fell back, blocking my view of the race car...

...making a really loud noise as it came down on the front of my car.

Boom.

'Oh... my... god...'

I just dropped a 760-pound weight on my race car.

(Because I'm so smart.)

It's one of those moments where you don't feel so great about yourself.

As it happened, I was really, really lucky. It came down on the front fender of the car, which is raised up above the hood. It broke the headlight lens, and bent the trim ring that goes around the headlight. But the fiberglass fender flexed and returned to its original shape when I got the big cabinet off of it a few minutes later. The paint got some light scratches, but it's a track car. It's got loads of stone chips already. As it happens, I had a spare lens and trim ring in the garage. In the end, I wasn't out anything for the repair. And the very light cracks in the clear coat of the paint will function as a good reminder of what a 'really smart' guy I am for years to come.

Moving031263936340.jpg


I got the cabinets in place later that day. This photo is from before they were cleaned up and re-painted.

I promise I will never attempt to move them again. Because -- smart as I might be -- I am not smart enough for that.

Moving041263936354.jpg


I'm lucky I still have a hood, fender, windshield and bumper. Fiberglass has pretty good memory, it turns out. I'll try to remember just how stupid it is not to move the race car out of the driveway the next time I decide to show off what a genius mover I am.
 
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Dan in Pasadena

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Feb 18, 2009
Messages
13,105
Location
Pasadena, CA
Hey, you still have all your fingers and toes....AND they're still ATTACHED!:bounce:

See, you ARE a smart guy. Seriously though, the car didn't look all that bad and no one was hurt. It could have been a LOT worse. Besides, your garage looks great so it was all worth it in the end.:)
 

SharkD

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Apr 6, 2008
Messages
68
Location
Durham, NC
Brilliant move number 1: I was 16 and living at the beach, by myself, for the summer, doing roofing work and playing casanova (ha!) to the girls staying in the weekly rentals. Late one afternoon, I was driving my 30-year-old Mustang during a sudden thunderstorm and the car started to cut in and out when the rain was blowing sideways, into the grille. I get it home and decide to leave it running in the garage, while I check the distributor and spark wires... while standing in a puddle. Suffice it to say, I learned the hard way that an idling 289 + wet wires + 12 volts is enough to make the right side of your body clench up at roughly 1.5Hz.

Brilliant move number 2: I woke up late for an HPDE day and practically raced to the track. I got to the paddock shortly before the drivers' meeting and was trying to rush through swapping my street tires for a set of race rains (I was still driving the E30 to the track; this was before I'd bought a trailer). Looking to save, oh, 15 seconds per wheel, I decided that, rather than finger-starting each nut on the studs that I had just installed the weekend before, that I'd use my 18v DeWalt impact gun. I made it through three wheels without trouble, and had already secured three nuts on the last wheel and was working on the final nut when I cross-threaded the stud. I slowly backed the nut off and the stud came with it, loctite and all. Thankfully, someone else in the paddock understood the importance of spares and I was able to borrow a lug bolt, for the drive home. I didn't make it onto the track at all that day. I learned the importance of: finger-threading, a speed brace, taking my time, and buying more than 16 lug studs.
 

Hardware

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Joined
May 12, 2008
Messages
337
Location
Bucks County PA
I forgot to fold down my Roll bar hoop on my Kubota BX23 and crushed my Brand new Garage door while pulling it into the garage... Luckily I was able to replace the bent up section... **** happens
 

cdods

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May 7, 2009
Messages
159
A few years back, my parents car was running rough when it was wet. Suspecting the spark plug wires and/or distributor cap, I pulled the car into the dark garage, popped the hood, and confirmed the diagnosis. I could see pretty blue sparks up and down the spark plug wires.

Then for some reason that I can't remember, I decided I needed to look at one of the wires more closely and grabbed the wire. That's not something I'll ever do again.
 

USMCBay

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 16, 2009
Messages
352
Location
Heritage Park - Friendswood, TX
Had a 1 Ton Dodge and a 40' Gooseneck. Backed it into some mud to offload Railroad ties and realized I was stuck with the Trailer. Dropped the Trailer to pull out with the Truck and pulled the wiring harness out of the trailer neck.

OH WAIT... THAT WAS MY FRIEND BORROWING MY TRUCK!!!!

Had a 1 Ton Dodge and a broken down 40' Trailer (see above listed damage) so had some employees load RR ties that I had sold in the Truck Bed with an extend-a-boom forklift. Bed wouldn't close (why that was necessary I'll never know) so the well intending employees tried to shove the RR ties in with the Forklift and BINGO... pushed the front of the bed into the cab and past the rear window and into the rear seat...

OH WAIT... THAT WAS MY FRIEND BORROWING MY TRUCK!!!!

Rewired the 40' Gooseneck wrong and burned up an $800 brake acuator...

OH WAIT... THAT WAS MY FRIEND BORROWING MY TRUCK!!!!

Drove said truck and trailer through a ditch snapping a bolt in the front 4x4 suspension...

OH WAIT... THAT WAS MY FRIEND BORROWING MY TRUCK!!!!

My Really Stupid Move: LETTING MY FRIEND BORROW MY TRUCK~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 

Thorold

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 26, 2009
Messages
305
Location
Thorold, Ontario
Thanks, Guys. All of a sudden the big rusty nail i pulled out of my finger on Sunday doesn't seem so bad ( nor does the day I set my frayed jeans on fire while welding ).
 

Rickstir

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Joined
Jan 25, 2008
Messages
557
Location
Close by the Elk Fork of the Salt River, in MO
My brother has a high-school shop class made 10 X 5 trialer. Heavy duty, 4 foot walls. We take it up to his in-laws farm to bring back firewood. When we got there we un-hitched but for some reason (beer) forgot to move the car. Couple hours later we are going to town (more beer) and he hits reverse. Bang! We hit the trailer right in the toung and we turn around to see what the noise was. We sat there helpless as the trailer starts down the driveway headed for a lake about 150 yards down the hill. But first there is a fence in the way, with a gate. Miraculously it hit the gate dead center, flung it open and the trailer whipped into a left turn and stopped on its own. We still laugh about it.
 

ihredo4

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Joined
Sep 3, 2009
Messages
1,575
Location
100 miles W of Daileyville in Idiotnois
I have more than one Duhhh moment and am kind of embaressed to admit to this one. A number of years ago I had a delivery business for Sears. I get a delivery one day for a lawn tractor. Not a big one maybe 10 hp or so. Any way I back my truck up to the loading dock and get out the ramps and drive the tractor up into the bed. Well I got to the delivery site and got the ramps out and sat them up onto the tailgate from the ground. I got up onto the tractor and started it and started to back down the ramps. Weeeeeellllllllllll the deck hooked the front of the ramp and stopped the tractor right there. I should have had the idea right there to stop but nnnnnnoooooooooo. Genious here decides to rock the tractor side to sid to get it to unhook. It did but not where I expected. I yanked the fricking ramp right off the tailgate. All I remember is wondering why the hell am I looking at the sky. Following that was damn my back then damn this tractor is heavy and why am I between it and the EARTH. When I hooked the ramp I drug it back right off the truck. My left ramp was still on the tailgate and made that tractor roll right over upside down with me under it. Maybe took a half second to happen but took me ten minutes standind next to it looking around wondering who saw it. Then I had to leave a detailed note to the owners on what happened. Talking about having to own up to something. Ended up geing some real nice folks and I rebuilt the tractor for them. Dont think any of us will ever forget that one.
 

Kev442

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 15, 2009
Messages
5,386
Location
Wi
A few years back, my parents car was running rough when it was wet. Suspecting the spark plug wires and/or distributor cap, I pulled the car into the dark garage, popped the hood, and confirmed the diagnosis. I could see pretty blue sparks up and down the spark plug wires.

Then for some reason that I can't remember, I decided I needed to look at one of the wires more closely and grabbed the wire. That's not something I'll ever do again.

It's even more fun when your jean shorts are kinda damp from checking this out right after the rain stops and you are leaning on the fender with mini me pressed up against it. Trust me, completing a circuit with your groin makes everyone laugh but you!:shocking:
 

jtrace

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 13, 2008
Messages
180
Location
Piscataway,NJ
About 20 years ago I was loading a 642 Bobcat onto a Ford Roll-off at work.I always winched the Bobcats up but my boss was there saying just drive it up then put the back chain on it etc..... So I start driving it up went to far and the bed came slamming down I got spooked pushed the handles forward and proceeded to do a wheelie off the back of the truck( the bed was comming back down but was like 2-3 feet off the ground. Now anyone who has driven a Bobcat knows they have no suspension so my head bounced off of every part of the cage.... I was totally dazed and continued driving into the dumpster pushed the dumpster into the building and was sitting there maybe out cold don't remember wheels spinning up against the dumpster,My boss came running over to see if I was ok and he got his feet tangled up in an extension cord and went on his face.All the while my Dad is standing there just shaking his head. I wont go into the rock fight I got into at the same rental store or the time I spilled 52 gallons of gas out of an air compressor,was a fun job back then...


John
 

PassnThru

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 5, 2010
Messages
6,510
Location
Bowling Green KY
I was assembling a play set for the kids by myself. I had the tower built and had the swing arm built. Basically a 4 by with an A frame at the end. Needed to attach the swing arm to the tower and it was a little unwieldy so I needed something to support it while I bolted it up. Looking at the height I decided that my 8' ladder would be good for the purpose. Set it up at the tower and set the end of the swing arm on top. I misjudged - the ladder was too tall. But hey - the next step down from the top is just about right. So I put the swing arm on that step and climbed up and bolted it together. I was quite proud of myself for managing to mount it by myself. It was also at that point that I realized that the ladder had just become a permanent part of the swing set. Time for plan B.
 
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