Home » Delaware Found A Genius Way To Stop Trucks From Hitting Low Bridges By Dangling Boat Fenders From Poles

Delaware Found A Genius Way To Stop Trucks From Hitting Low Bridges By Dangling Boat Fenders From Poles

Clanker Balls Ts

One of the most hilarious auto-related Internet sensations is watching a big truck attempting to fit under a low bridge. It always ends poorly for the truck, usually with a large chunk munched off the top by the bridge. While it’s fun to watch, trucks crashing into low rail bridges is a serious problem, as not only do the trucks get damaged, but traffic has to halt on the road and on the rails as the accident is cleared up and the bridge is inspected. Ideally, these crashes just wouldn’t happen at all, but too many drivers keep messing up. For the past few years, the state of Delaware might have found the best solution yet by placing giant plastic balls before a bridge. Here’s how so-called “Clanker Balls” have saved both trucks and bridges from hits.

America’s roads are full of bridges that offer varying levels of clearance underneath. If you’re driving down the Interstate Highway System, you can usually expect 16 feet of clearance between the pavement and a bridge. This number reduces to about 14 feet in some urban areas. These clearances generally work because the typical tractor-trailer sits at 13 feet, six inches high.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

However, the bridges found on local roads may vary. Many of the old rail bridges peppering America’s secondary roads offer far less than 14 feet of clearance because they were built before modern standards. The most infamous bridge is the Norfolk Southern–Gregson Street Overpass in Durham, North Carolina, which is also known as the “11-foot-8+8 Bridge” or the “Can Opener Bridge.” This bridge, which isn’t even the lowest that you’d find in America, attained its infamy because an office worker near the bridge pointed some cameras at the bridge for all to watch. Take a look!

When Old Infrastructure Meets Modern Traffic

These many low bridges across America cause headaches for trucks on the road because their drivers have to route around them, hopefully not causing any other problems in the process. If the drivers ignore warnings or don’t realize how tall their trucks are, they may end up clogging both road traffic and rail traffic after slamming into a bridge. These bridges sometimes need to be repaired after a hit from a truck. One crash can cause a ripple effect on a particularly busy rail line as trains have to stop.

In a perfect world, these accidents wouldn’t happen. The approaches for these bridges have yellow signs that clearly call out their low height. A trucker should also always know how tall their vehicle is. However, signs are only effective if drivers look at them. Likewise, the signs aren’t any help if the driver doesn’t realize how tall their vehicle is, as might be the case for someone driving a rental truck or someone towing a fifth-wheel camper.

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A truck failed to clear an 11’5″ bridge in Westbrook, Maine. Credit: Westbrook Fire Department

Sadly, the solution isn’t as simple as you’d think. These bridges often cannot be raised easily, and roadbeds sometimes cannot be lowered easily. Raising a rail bridge would require a reconfiguration of the rail grade approaching and departing the bridge. The bridge would then be rebuilt, causing delays or full stops on the rail line for potentially months. Of course, this would cost the bridge’s owner, usually the railroad, millions of dollars.

Lowering the roadbed might be difficult due to any infrastructure that may be under the road. Of course, this would also take time and cost a town a ton of cash. Even when the infamous Can Opener Bridge was raised, it was increased only eight inches to 12 feet, four inches, so it still messes up trucks.

Convincing Big Trucks To Stop

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The Can Opener Bridge. Screenshot: yovo68/YouTube

The alternative is to develop a solution to stop trucks from slamming into the bridge in the first place. At the Can Opener Bridge, for example, a sensor placed a half-block from the bridge detects when a truck is too tall, and then triggers an LED board to flash in an attempt to warn the driver. The traffic light in the intersection before the bridge also automatically turns to red. In theory, a driver approaching the bridge has 50 seconds to react before hitting the bridge, and there are warnings all over during the approach.

Yet, drivers still ignore all of the warnings, run the red light, and let the Can Opener Bridge slice their trucks open. Since drivers still can’t get the message, the North Carolina Railroad Company has a heavy steel crash beam that munches up the trucks so the bridge doesn’t get damaged.

The state of Delaware has taken a different approach. There is an infamous train trestle in Newark, Delaware, along Casho Mill Road.

Screenshot (1368)
Google Maps

This bridge, which has been around since the late 19th century, originally offered 11 feet, one inch of clearance. In the modern era, the bridge offers only eight feet, seven inches of clearance. This bridge makes the Can Opener Bridge seem roomy in comparison. The Casho Mill Road bridge is so short that it can easily trim off the tops of camper vans and lifted SUVs, forget about any sort of commercial vehicle.

As such, this bridge, which is just one of many short bridges in Delaware, has been beaten up by tall trucks throughout its long life. Mark Luszcz, the Delaware Department of Transportation’s Deputy Director for Operations & Support, published a presentation where he even found a news report from the 1970s about the bridge eating a truck.

Casho Mill Clankers Masite Luszcz 0bd618c748064fe2
DelDOT

Between 2005 and 2022, the Delaware Department of Transportation says, 78 vehicles crashed into the bridge. Eight of those crashes happened in 2021 alone, with another six crashes occurring in 2022.

The state has been trying to curb the crashes, with most methods being unsuccessful. In 2003, the state installed a set of lights that flash and are accompanied by a sign that says “Vehicle Exceeds Tunnel Height When Flashing”. Drivers ignored both. In 2017, the sign next to the lights was updated to say “TRUCKS – Too High When Flashing – Use Turnout”. Another sign was added to the bridge height marker that said: “Your Truck WILL NOT FIT”. Again, drivers ignored the lights and signs, just like they do with the bridge in North Carolina.

Delaware’s Big Orange Balls

Wra Casho Mill Rd Clankers Clank (1)
WRA, LLP

In 2018, CSX Transportation had become tired of trucks running into its bridge. So, it petitioned the Delaware Department of Transportation to close the under-grade crossing and then to fill the hole in so that no vehicle may ever crash into the rail bridge again. This lit a fire under Newark and Delaware state officials to try to fix the issue.

In 2019, the Delaware General Assembly proposed a solution. What if Delaware started using an over-height vehicle warning system? Such systems were already in place at the NYC Port Authority and parts of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. These systems were simple, too, utilizing a set of metal cans dangling from an overhead beam. If an over-height truck approached a low bridge, it would slam into the metal cans long before hitting the bridge, and its drivers would be alerted, alarmed, and come to a stop.

Screenshot (1366)
Google Maps

In 2021, the State of Delaware, DelDOT, and the City of Newark penned an agreement to install so-called “clankers” at the Casho Mill Road bridge.

Delaware’s interpretation was a bit different than what engineers found at the NYC Port Authority and elsewhere. Engineers had found that the metal cans of those over height vehicle vehicle warning systems weren’t very loud. They also didn’t look particularly appealing. The solution? They grabbed a bunch of Taylor Made Tuff End vinyl boat fenders.

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West Marine

Apparently, the sound created from hitting a bunch of boat fenders sounds more like a loud boom than a clank, but the nickname “clankers” stuck, anyway. The existing signage and lights were retained as well.

Whitman, Requardt & Associates, LLP, the engineers behind the project, added an additional sign that’s not only so huge that you basically can’t miss it, but also says in bold letters that if you don’t stop, your truck will go “kaboom”.

Bridgesupport 4
WRA, LLP

Add it all up, and there’s a lot of drama when a truck hits the clankers. The boat fenders make a loud boom and bounce all over the place while connected to their chains. Usually, the driver of the truck is snapped out of whatever daze or distraction they’re in and slams on the brakes. Then they see the sign warning of impending doom and decide not to press forward.

DelDOT admits that the signage and hanging boat fenders are not Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices-compliant. However, the state, the city, and residents do not care because the clankers have been super effective. In 2023, there were zero reported crashes at the bridge; the first time such has been recorded since 2005.

Clankers Hero 0
WRA, LLP

The state, city, and locals have also had some great fun with the clankers. People have decorated their homes with clanker replicas during the holidays, fire departments have hung clankers from their trucks during parades, and there’s even a satirical Facebook page that publishes funny posts around the clankers. Weirdly, these boat fenders hanging from a metal bar have become a bit of an in-joke in Delaware.

As NBC10 Philadelphia reports, other clankers have been installed in Milford, Newport, near Delaware Park, and on Chapel Street. DelDOT says that while the clankers have been amazingly effective, they haven’t been perfect. In more recent times, DelDOT has discovered that some trucks hit the clankers, come to a stop, but then continue forward, hitting the bridge. The state believes that the majority of these few remaining incidents may be college students driving rental moving trucks and not understanding what the clankers mean.

Clangers
Pictured, a Ram slams its brakes after the boat it’s towing hits the clangers. – Credit: DelDOT

Still, the clankers have been so good at their jobs that officials in California, Ohio, and other states have been reaching out to DelDOT to see if they can rig up their own version of the system.

So, if you happen to drive through one of these states and see what looks like a bunch of plastic balls hanging down from a traffic light, now you know why. Those are just simple boat fenders, and they’re there to stop truckers from blowing up their load onto a train bridge. If you’re driving a truck of some kind and you hear a loud boom just before going under a bridge, it’ll probably be wise to turn around. If you don’t, you might just turn your rig into a convertible.

Topshot graphic image: WRA, LLP

 

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A. Barth
A. Barth
22 seconds ago

We touched on this in Discord last week. I had an opinion:

That would be an interesting budgetary discussion…

“We’ve been spending all this money and people still hit the @#$%^&* bridge. We give up. We’re not wasting any more money on it. Go ahead and hit it – we’ll fine the hell out of you and charge you for the cleanup.”

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
11 minutes ago

Ugh. This just makes me think of how ineffective the “hawk signals” are at the new crosswalk near my kids’ school and one they’re putting on a major road to connect two sections of greenway.

Despite the brightly flashing read lights and crosswalk, way too many drivers blow through there like they have no idea what’s happening. It’s amazing how little attention people pay to what’s essentially a stop light if it’s not in a vehicle intersection like they’re used to.

Fortunately I don’t have to use the one by the school to get there, but once they install the new one for the greenway I expect I’ll just keep detouring down the street to the crosswalk at the intersection.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
10 minutes ago
Reply to  4moremazdas

They need to add some of these (but filled with concrete) that swing down and smack the shit out of cars like a wrecking ball if they run the light.

Droid
Member
Droid
16 minutes ago

these booming clankers seem like they might be very effective.
yet, “Since drivers still can’t get the message, the North Carolina Railroad Company has a heavy steel crash beam that munches up the trucks so the bridge doesn’t get damaged” seems like the idiot-resistant poka-yoke solution.

Dan1101
Dan1101
21 minutes ago

“Stop now, or kaboom” that’s awesome!

This will solve a lot of problems, but not all of them. We have a railroad bridge near me that is above a dip in the road, the first part of a truck can get under the bridge but then when the cab starts climbing on the other side, the middle of the trailer high-centers into the underside of the bridge.

Angry Bob
Member
Angry Bob
11 minutes ago
Reply to  Dan1101

That’s my new favorite sign.

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
35 minutes ago

The First State, living up to its motto.

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
39 minutes ago

Big orange balls. Low hanging fruit. Whatever it takes.

IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
Member
IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
39 minutes ago

What they need is a statue of King Kong standing over those balls that lets out a terrifying roar whenever they get hit. Will it help stop crashes? No. Will it make me laugh every single time? Yep.

Dan Roth
Dan Roth
40 minutes ago

Those are mooring buoys, not fenders.

Last edited 39 minutes ago by Dan Roth
Bags
Member
Bags
38 minutes ago
Reply to  Dan Roth

Are the moor or less the same thing?
Always good when we can get some pier review on these articles.

IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
Member
IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
36 minutes ago
Reply to  Bags

I harbor ill feelings towards pun threads.

10001010
Member
10001010
24 minutes ago

Oh buoy, here we go.

Bags
Member
Bags
23 minutes ago

That’s not a stern enough warning to stop.

Highland Green Miata
Member
Highland Green Miata
6 minutes ago
Reply to  Bags

Take a bow

PlugInPA
Member
PlugInPA
40 minutes ago

Since the former 11’8” bridge in Durham is on the main Amtrak line between Charlotte and Raleigh, thousands of people actually cross it daily. I had never looked it up before but realized I crossed it last month when I was in NC. It’s just west of the Durham station.

Palmetto Ranger
Palmetto Ranger
46 minutes ago

Truck nutz would be a better name than clankers. Or truck teabags.

Last edited 46 minutes ago by Palmetto Ranger
JCat
Member
JCat
52 minutes ago

My local bridge needs this… It’s like fantasy football guessing how many truck will hit it this year. Usually over a dozen.

Tondeleo Jones
Tondeleo Jones
53 minutes ago

May I present the Bankhead Tunnel in Mobile, Alabama. Undefeated since 1941.

Last edited 52 minutes ago by Tondeleo Jones
4jim
4jim
57 minutes ago

More cowbell!

Anonymous Person
Anonymous Person
1 hour ago

The state believes that the majority of these few remaining incidents may be college students driving rental moving trucks and not understanding what the clankers mean.

This is the sad state of students in America these days. Remember, most of these people actually graduated from some form of high school.

“Too tall??? WTF does that mean??? LOL!”

Wuffles Cookie
Wuffles Cookie
1 hour ago

The state is being diplomatic in it’s verbiage- it’s saying they’re foreign students.

Anonymous Person
Anonymous Person
52 minutes ago
Reply to  Wuffles Cookie

That’s most likely correct. I was just thinking about the stoners at some of the colleges in the midwest.

Njd
Member
Njd
51 minutes ago
Reply to  Wuffles Cookie

America produces plenty of homegrown morons. No need to jump to xenophobic conclusions.

Rollin Hand
Rollin Hand
43 minutes ago
Reply to  Wuffles Cookie

I took it to mean:

“Too tall??? WTF does that mean??? LOL!”

“Send it.”

PlugInPA
Member
PlugInPA
42 minutes ago
Reply to  Wuffles Cookie

Foreign students can read English.

Bags
Member
Bags
40 minutes ago
Reply to  PlugInPA

Better than most americans, in my experience.

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