A HELL OF A TRIP
Farmer Stefan Lindner’s alpine meadow has already caused many a driver to bottle out – even when they weren’t themselves behind the wheel of the 500 HP milk-collection truck. “There are currently three of us who do the trip,” says 43-year-old dairy-truck driver Roland Aicher. And it’s not something that can be taken for granted: Another driver refused to do the trip after a few practice runs. “He couldn’t get to sleep when he knew it was his turn to drive up to the mountain meadows. Fear and sweaty hands on such a route doesn’t help anyone.” That’s the way that Bernhard Pointner, who’s managing director at the dairy cooperative, also sees it. No-one is ever forced to do the trip into the alpine landscape – that’s what we’ve always said from the start. “We made the decision with the local drivers last year to collect the milk from the mountain farmers up there. We wouldn’t have made the decision without the men’s consent because they’re the ones who set out every other day to tackle the mad route – with a liquid load to boot.”
Roland Aicher, who used to work in the BMW racing team, now calmly steers the tanker around snaking wind after snaking wind up to the mountain pastures. "It usually turns out all right. But it’s only possible because of the extremely short wheelbase on the MAN TGS.” And sometimes even that’s no help in getting around the extremely tight bends at the first attempt. That’s when Roland has to manoeuvre the ‘alpine truck’ back and forth on the narrow gravel roads: a 28% gradient and just 40 centimetres of space for manoeuvring. The view straight ahead is of the mountain massif against a white-blue sky, the view down is of a green slope criss-crossed by sandy snaking winds. Aicher turns the wheel one way and then the next: once, five times, eleven times. He’s been driving up to the Kitzbüheler Alm, the Hochalm and the Moseralm in Tirol every other day since May. He knows his way by heart, when the next exposed tight spot is around the bend, for instance, by how far he has to turn the wheel and how much space he has for reversing without driving his truck off the mountain. Carelessness on the mountain won’t just scratch the vehicle’s paintwork. A mistake on the mountain will mean crashing down. “It's safer not to wear a seatbelt because you might need to jump out,” explains Roland as an aside and quite calmly. The dairy-truck driver’s nerves of steel and driving skills meet MAN’s all-rounder truck – an assured combination on dangerous routes.
ALWAYS READY TO GO
Safety is also a priority for Stefan Reiter, who manages the dairy’s fleet. He and his team look after almost 40 trucks, about half of which are used to collect milk. “The liquid load and the steep alpine routes up to our farmers on the mountains represent a very special challenge to our fleet. Everything has to simply work together.” The workshop team has all the trucks in the yard every day because the production location and the home base at ‘Berchtesgadener Land’ are one and the same. “But they’re all always in use: seven days a week, 365 days a year. So we always have to be flexible," he explains. Which is all the more reason why he appreciates having a good MAN workshop close by. And, thanks to vehicle digitalisation, the interaction between scheduled trips to the workshop and the punctual collection of the milk always runs smoothly.