Maybe the good news is that the fire hydrant was there?
- John
Well probably not, I live in a cul de sac. The good news is I didn't break the hydrant off with the impact!
Truck is manual transmission and i either only put parking brake on lightly or not at all. I hadn't started in over two weeks so was going to take the truck on some errands and and was warming up while I was checking lights and was going to clean the windshield when out of corner of my eye saw it start to roll (it is level where I park, but front wheels are only a few inches behind where the drive starts sloping down to the street level). I got my hand on wheel while chasing it a few feet to the hydrant, just needed another couple seconds to get it turned, as it was I was only into the hydrant maybe 6-12", right front outside edge of tire left a mark just 2-3" onto the hydrant.
I think if it had of missed the hydrant I would of been able to stay with it and get it stopped, but really would of probably just coasted into the cul de sac and stopped. After this happened I sat in truck, took brake off and waited a minute or two and truck slowly creeped to the sloped concrete and then started picking up speed, might of been doing 1-2 MPH by the speedo by the time I passed the hydrant. I have lived in same house for 16 years and parked my truck in same spot hundreds of times, just one careless setting the parking brake and bang.
I always set the brake, so I think I might of put it on only lightly since it was very cold and I had run in wet roads for three hours prior to parking a couple weeks before the incident. Having a frozen parking brake after running in rain and snow and parking in cold temps isn't fun. Another possibility is some loss of brake cable tension over the two weeks? Not sure if that can happen or not, but whatever the reason, obviously the parking brake wasn't on tight enough and it rolled, definitely one disadvantage of a manual transmission, and big lesson learned to always check brake before leaving the driver seat when truck is out of gear.