Re: Our Trucks Doing What They Did - Vintage Photo Thread
I just checked: hard to believe that a Toyota Prius actually weighs more than a 1955 Chevy pickup, so would push the Chevy truck backward in a crash.
1955 Chevy 1/2-ton truck: 3355 lbs 2021 Toyota Prius: 3378 - 3406 lbs (depending on option package, per Car and Driver magazine) |
Re: Our Trucks Doing What They Did - Vintage Photo Thread
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Moss Heavy Haul:
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Seriously cool picture.
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i was driving up nort a couple weeks ago, thinking that you rarely see a line of traffic behind a truck, like you see in that pic or used to see in the 60s. i remember road trips in the family wagon where we'd get behind a half mile of cars, going up hill at 20 mph. those old trucks were seriously underpowered compared to today's trucks. |
Re: Our Trucks Doing What They Did - Vintage Photo Thread
On my last job we had 5 tanks 18' diameter 155' long. we closed down US 30 for 3 hours getting them on site. Some people just didn't understand.
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Looks like an AD pickup in the line of vehicles behind too.
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Wow!
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That locomotive doesn't look like it was strapped down.
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Re: Our Trucks Doing What They Did - Vintage Photo Thread
Headline News ....
Train derails on overpass ... Lands on a line of trucks ! Traffic was spared delays as derailing train on overpass fall onto a line of Flatbed trucks going under in perfect timing to catch all the cars as they fell . Police and train employees astounded , no injuries reported . The trucks kept going to a site farther down the rail line so the train could be craned back onto the track . The train continued on with a new crew . |
Re: Our Trucks Doing What They Did - Vintage Photo Thread
"This may work for one or two trips but I still think we need to figure out how to fix the brakes so the locomotive can pull the train back down the mountain."
"That's the legendary Narrow Gauge of Poughkeepsie, cursed to travel the country in search of the line that never was." "The engine looks good, sure, but have you checked out that caboose?" |
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Oh damn do I love this one!
Brian |
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Wow!
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Brian |
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i'd certainly like to see more of those assembly pics
flip down 2x4 welding helmet... he has to flip it up to reposition the spot welder every time nothing like todays body shop, conveyor cycles and 50 robotic welders come in at once it's pretty wild if you've never seen it happen |
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hardly a vintage picture, as it was taken this week...
this was sent to me by my bro-in-law from great basin national park |
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Now THAT is a set of mirrors and side pipes too!
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Getting there is half the fun!
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;) Now that I think about it: my guys didn't even wear a helmet or goggles, or coveralls. Just street clothes. I had a sweater that had a bunch of holes burned in it, because they could control the direction the sparks would shoot and they would aim them at me (just for fun). Flint Line 2 (Blazer and Suburban) cab shop shown. Line 2 was an old school manual process. Flint Line 1 (pickups) was highly automated; you fed panels in one end and a pickup cab popped out the other. |
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The variation would be in the door opening as a result of piecing it together from all the separate bits. That's why vehicles today the door opening (or entire body side) is stamped from one piece: to minimize that variation. K |
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Brian |
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Newspaper ad:
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Hey, that ain't workin'. Or maybe that is a traveling work unit. I'm thinking yes.
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Damn I love this thread!
Thanks for posting guys. Brian |
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Chevy truck:
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Leading the seams.
Brian |
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Looks like those years of lead exposure have taken a toll on that poor guy.
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Brian |
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These are what some people call, The "Good Old Days"?????? |
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I just saw this photo of a woman's hand who painted clock dials in the 30's with paint that had radium in it. :(
Brian https://i2.wp.com/we-make-money-not-...size=700%2C936 |
Re: Our Trucks Doing What They Did - Vintage Photo Thread
Worse yet is some would moisten their brushes with their tongues to "paint" the radium on watch dials and hands.
Used to bring my small geiger to antique/military collectible shows and shock the h-ll out of those with radioactive stuff like clocks, watches, aircraft instruments and compasses. Got some real deals (often free) on low level stuff from those who would not accept items in question were barely above background. Dumb ones would not accept fact that background radiation is natural. Have a nice collection of "donations". Look up Patek. |
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UGH! I'm gonna need some eye bleach to get rid of this image.
Please, do NOT show the mouth of a person that moistened their tongue with salvia while using radium infused paint! I'll post this here. Interesting; though tragic reading. https://www.cnn.com/style/article/ra...int/index.html |
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https://www.epa.gov/radtown/radioactivity-antiques my father had a couple oz of pure liquid mercury in a glass jar in our basement. no lid, just masking tape over the top. we'd tip the jar over and a couple drops would sneak by the tape, into a tray and rub it on pennies with our fingers. the pennies looked like dimes after that and my brother and i would spend our 'dimes' |
Re: Our Trucks Doing What They Did - Vintage Photo Thread
Was a Hazmat Engr for a couple years and things got a little too scary for me so Went to work with Solid Waste. Even there it was hairy. Our geigers went off all the time at landfills and transfer station. Seems stuff from 1900's is still "hot" like radioactive ceramic jars that drug stores sold water out of to dentists xray "sources" to chemo stuff. Love to switch mine to gamma and watch folks cover their privates when natural rays set it off.
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