@Disco , no I don’t think you’re making your truck inherently more hazardous, given your use and situation.
Don’t tell anyone but I have a Jeep with no CSS and a mower with a disabled deadman switch on the seat. I’m not bragging, just stating, you are not the only one “living on the edge.” My kids also drive and operate these. And both have been instructed appropriately.
Sure, when I was a kid, I used to run dads power saw with no chain brake either. ( Not disabled, just not invented yet). We cut ALOT of wood with that saw. A buddy’s dad bought a new saw from a department store. First time out of the box, he damn near cut his leg off with it. Sued the department store….
Point is, yes as technology advances, so do safety devices and requirements. And to that end, most every or every one of them is a result of something like I wrote above. Safety devices are to protect everyone but more so they are extremely valuable to those who are untrained, mis-judge or just the lowest common denominator in the IQ pool.
We do things that could kill us every day. Everyone of us.
But being in, and managing heavy construction work for many years has taught me volumes about safety. And seen many horrific incidents. A few deemed essentially unpreventable. But most are/were preventable. And some very easily preventable.
In general one can’t judge how smart or qualified someone is by just looking at them. Training is a great step, but sometimes “you can’t fix stupid” happens in a preventable incident.
Hell, hired a new foreman. A transfer from another division of the company. 13 year employee. He was immediately seen as unqualified but we were desparAte and kept him on for a few days. Any help is better than none, right?
Yes until said employee magically explodes a 375lb rated ladder just standing on it motionless observing the work taking place. Same ladder that had been used probably 10x that day alone with guys 100lbs more than him on it.
That one is suspicious and a mystery and possibly nefarious. But, safety…..
Ladder was not tied off at the top. As is a rule for access ladders. Whatever caused this dipchit to experience a recordable injury on my project, and as ridiculous as this situation was, was 100% preventable.
Totally off topic, and I still have no issue with you disabling YOUR CSS. Not a uge risk.