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Safety warrior commits to long haul in new TIV K200

With a shiny new KW – and brand new trailer set on its way – high-profile safety advocate Rod Hannifey is as dedicated as

BY JAMES GRAHAM

ALMOST 25 years and millions of kilometres later, Australia’s most famous truckie Rod Hannifey still remembers the pivotal 1999 day like it was yesterday.

He’d just had a good night’s rest at Narrabri, NSW, and only been on the road for 15 minutes, barely up to highway speed, when a car went around him with two children in the back, seemingly oblivious to the Lindsay’s B-double looming from the other direction.

“We both put a wheel into the dirt for the car to go in between us and I could see two little kids sitting in the back of that car,” Hannifey, now 66, recalled.

“And I thought, ‘Jesus Christ’, and actually said to the Lindsay’s bloke, Christ Almighty, some people are stupid, aren’t they? And the bloke in car behind me with an UHF heard me and said he’d go and get the rego.

“He called me back with the rego and I rang the Moree Police and when I got to Moree they had the car pulled up on the side of the road, and I hope that they said to them, ‘Be a bit more careful, take a bit more time’.”

About five hours later, a fully-loaded Hannifey gets yet another scare as he’s coming down onto a bridge on the south side of Kilkivan.

It’s a narrow crossing too and there’s a F250 Ford coming so he flashed the lights once to say to the motorist, ‘Lift your foot off the accelerator a bit and let me across the bridge’.

“No, he came straight on to the bridge, and I missed him and the bridge by about 2cm. I actually pulled up in a little rest area in Kilkivan and thought, ‘How do I change this?’.”

With that one burning question driving him, Hannifey was off and running on an unprecedented road safety crusade that still continues today, all without any financial reward for the father-of-seven who still juggles a full-time driving job for Rod Pilon Transport around commitments at home.

The only element that has changed in that time is the truck in which Hannifey now drives to spread the key safety messages; better roads and rest areas for everybody, better education of motorists, and better industry awareness from the public.

It’s the third iteration of the celebrated Truckright Industry Vehicle (TIV) since Ken Wilkie helped Hannifey kick off the concept in 2008, before Rod Pilon came on board to support the cause from 2011.

Built in May 2021 as one of Kenworth’s 50th anniversary trucks, the latest Rod Pilon Transport-owned K200, one of the badge’s first Cummins-powered Euro 6s in Australia, made its first public appearance in February 2022.

“It still has the onboard scales but sitting behind that is a program called INSCOM and that reads the impact of the road into the truck,” Hannifey explains.

“Being a big cab there’s a longer wheelbase than your average K200 and that makes them ride that little bit better.”

The Air CTI (central tyre inflation) system has been extended to the steer this time –Hannifey’s last K200 only had it on the drive – to give Hannifey more of a footprint on the road, when light, or even empty.

“They’ve been a supporter since the start, the same as Tramanco and Icepack, and looking at the way we’re going with managing fatigue, that’s where Icepack are involved. Inland Trucks in Dubbo gave me some lights and a couple of things. Kenworth themselves contributed some of the things to the truck.

“So, it’s a joint effort from a lot of people who see value in promoting the industry and to put something out there that shows a different face to how we’re normally portrayed. I owe a big thank you to all the sponsors.”

Pilons has ordered a new set of similar TIV trailers too –the first two sets are still working hard on other trucks in the fleet – that will carry the same educational and awareness imagery that Hannifey’s TIV is so well known for, including the Truckies’ Top 10 Tips on the rear.

The new trailers and prime mover will also help give Hannifey a platform from which he can spread the message that the industry is not recognised enough for the lives that it saves on the roads.

“We are certainly castigated and hung out to dry for the people that we kill, and the fact that you’re guilty two seconds after the accident before any investigation is done,” he says. “And it’s put in the media as ‘Truck kills so many people’. Well, that implies guilt by default. But we are never recognised for the fact that we do drive expecting people to do stupid shit, and we try and anticipate it. I reckon that we save dozens of lives a day by being proactive, by looking ahead, by being defensive, by expecting someone to do something stupid.”

It’s a well-known fact amongst industry that 80 per cent of fatalities between cars and trucks are the fault of the motorist, but Hannifey asks, ‘What have we done to change that?’

“The NHVR has done a little bit of late, I’ve certainly tried but it’s bloody hard doing it on your own, believe you me.

“Why aren’t those top 10 tips [Truckies’ Top 10 Tips] part of the licensing process?

A 17-year-old is 10-foot tall and bulletproof and they don’t know any different until they decide to pull straight out in front of a fully-loaded B-double and think, ‘Well, this will stop because I pulled out in front of it’.”

Until the new trailers are ready, Hannifey is proud to be towing a special set to commemorate Rod Pilon Transport’s 50th year in business in 2022.

“It shows the level of support that Pilons give me, but it also shows the support that they’re prepared to put back into the industry.

“I simply can’t do it without the support of sponsors, and I couldn’t do it without the support of Pilons. It’s a level of support that very few other companies would give a driver, let alone return to the industry.”

There are also those eye-catching lights of course, purposely laid out in rows of seven in honour of his seven children and a thank you to his wife for having them and looking after them when he wasn’t always there to help.

“We know that’s one of the biggest pressures of the industry, and if I can get to 7 million kilometres [he’s just ticked over the 6 million-mark behind the wheel] I suppose it’s a million for each [of my children].”

Continued on page 16

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