ok well i dont know if there is any pics of the ground below..i see that there is a river or creek below.. well i would try and attach the cab of the truck to some kind of lych or support cable and would use a few step chocks for the back tires of the bed of the truck for the cribbing and stable part of it.... well i have never seen this one befor...but if it would go i my way once again i would use a ladder truck postion the ladder at the back of the cab and cut the back of the cab out and give the person or persons trapped a rescue harness and use the ladder to pull them up and out and move them over to the surface of the bridge and boom you are safe for the most part...thats about all i could think of doing that would be the safest and quickest in my mind...
HaHa! this is pretty good! I would love to get involved, but you know how you fire people are...we are trained to use the tools and such, but you guys carry them!...lol
I would wait till the vehicle is secured and jump in and asume care, whil hanging from a bridge! I am only a emt, but i would secure c~spine, locate injuries and treat, get vitals, stabalize pt. and figure out how to extricate!
Well, first you would need to secure the cab somehow... It looks like the have it tied to something in the second picture. I think I would call the rope rescue crew to climb down there. Is the Pt stable? Does he need immobilized? I would use a stokes basket maybe....
How you going to secure it? This is a full size Dodge P/U Club cab.To make things worse,does it strike you as odd that the bed and cab are at 90*to each other.This indicates to me that the frame is SEVERLY compromised. Rope isn't the answer for securement.You're dealing with a dead weight load of around 4000# for easy figuring.Something in the lines of a 20,000# strap or some grade 70 3/8 chain run thru the two back windows of the cap and fastened to a substantial Fire engine or haevy Rescue would be a good start.Extrication here is going to require some fancy rigging or a crane/medium or HD hyd tow truck.AND someone who doesn't mind "swinging"
I'd rather NOT use J hooks if there is another option.Very few J hooks are rated for loading in excess of 3500-4700#.An alloy slip or grab hook would be a better choice if you can get a purchase on a cross or frame member. Seen to many horror shows with J hooks under load. In any event it will make for an interesting day.