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Weighing up the long and the short of it

25th October 2007
Page 28
Page 28, 25th October 2007 — Weighing up the long and the short of it
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Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

I THINK IT'S A real shame that Germany has ruled out using longer, heavier vehicles (LHVs) as I believe their introduction over there could have helped their cause over here.

It seems that people are worried about safety and the weight on bridges. But surely bridges are designed to take the weight of 44-tonners stood back to back. If the vehicle is longer and proportionately heavier, how is this any different?

Also, people seem to be under the impression that they will have these vehicles passing by their front door delivering to corner shops.This would not be the case they would stick to motorways, delivering to massive distribution centres-thereby taking a number of current artics off the road.

You have recently published comments from the Freight on Rail people, who claim that most of the country doesn't want LHVs. I'd be interested to know what questions they asked. Probably something along the lines of-do you want more dangerous, congestion-causing and polluting trucks on the road?".

In my opinion, their main motive is competition.

Douglas McCloud Bursledon, Hampshire


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