The Truck That Invented An Industry

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  • @makismakiavelis5718
    @makismakiavelis5718 4 года назад +114

    This looks like a video Hank Hill would immensely enjoy.

    • @roadmaster720
      @roadmaster720 4 года назад +6

      gosh durn it,dale. gotta get ottawa to put propane gas on them thar trucks they make so mr. strickland can give me a 10.00 a week raise.--- hank hill, the propane man.

    • @anderson.m.kraggs9855
      @anderson.m.kraggs9855 3 года назад +1

      Im not hank and i enjoy it

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад +1

      Gosh dern it Dale bring my shuttle truck back over here. I need to change the LP tank.

    • @jeremiahkmusic358
      @jeremiahkmusic358 2 года назад +1

      I tell ya what, this is something Bobby oughtta watch. Well alright boomhower! Where’d you find this gem?

    • @jaminova_1969
      @jaminova_1969 Год назад

      Yep!

  • @Rastonification
    @Rastonification 5 лет назад +313

    I worked for Cummins Inc. for 30 years and this story reminded me a lot of growing up in the 50's and working through the 70's to early 2003. I think something that has been lost since the 50's and 60's was the pride in doing a good job and loyalty to your company. Too much social engineering going on today and not enough mechanical engineering.

    • @mattkaustickomments
      @mattkaustickomments 5 лет назад +7

      Go Cummins! Remember the Hummin Cummins 45 from the 70’s?? Every kid in town used to play the heck out of them. Did you ever meet J. I. Miller? Thank you for helping to make our town a great place to grow up!

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull 5 лет назад +62

      Employees lost that pride and loyalty around the time employers started treating them like disposable slaves. Employers get what they pay for and if they're paying shit wages on shit schedules they're gonna get shit work and high turnover.

    • @hehheh1222
      @hehheh1222 4 года назад +6

      @Sir Honks-Alot notice what you don't see in this video and that tells you why the company and it's employees are so cohesive.

    • @yourallbrainwashed
      @yourallbrainwashed 4 года назад

      I hear you. But pride is never a good thing.

    • @jimziemer474
      @jimziemer474 4 года назад +14

      @@yourallbrainwashed Wrong. Pride in your work is a very good thing. The lack of pride in the workplace is one of the reasons that the United States has been on the decline for the last 20 years. It’s also why may manufacturing jobs have moved overseas.

  • @bradh6185
    @bradh6185 5 лет назад +1381

    Someone got fired for making a product more prone to breaking down. Boy, those were different times.

    • @jazzcatt
      @jazzcatt 5 лет назад +160

      Yeah. Now they build shit to break on purpose. They also make it more expensive to repair the old item than to buy a new one!

    • @dahnteyog
      @dahnteyog 5 лет назад +58

      Indeed! Now it's the other way around. You risk losing on profits if you make more durable products. Smh!

    • @bradh6185
      @bradh6185 5 лет назад +34

      And maybe even a bigger issue is you risk losing shareholders if your profits aren't continually increasing.@@dahnteyog

    • @cjshaw1419
      @cjshaw1419 5 лет назад +26

      He'd make C.E.O instantly nowadays.

    • @Landrew0
      @Landrew0 5 лет назад +31

      Obvious BS. Of course upper management gave him their blessing. When the employees revolted, they took their side and fired the manager as a scapegoat.

  • @farmcentralohio
    @farmcentralohio 5 лет назад +417

    whoever put this together did a good job, interesting and informative

    • @itsMe_TheHerpes
      @itsMe_TheHerpes 5 лет назад +1

      so what did they actually invent ?

    • @2Truth4Liberty
      @2Truth4Liberty 5 лет назад +6

      @@itsMe_TheHerpes
      Specialized trucks for warehouse truck terminals where you just move container trailers around on your property (not highway).
      Easy to manuever container trailers with these trucks and cost little to run.
      FYI - I live about 10 miles from there (Ottawa) and they STILL MAKE THEM daily.

    • @itsMe_TheHerpes
      @itsMe_TheHerpes 5 лет назад +1

      @@2Truth4Liberty thank you 😊

    • @farmcentralohio
      @farmcentralohio 5 лет назад +1

      @@hendricksonrunner5015 You are an idiot, just say it as it is.

    • @jimbarchuk
      @jimbarchuk 5 лет назад +4

      They built the American dream. They saw ideaS to fill nicheS. Plurals. Many small good ideas. That's enough to keep the utilities on, pay the employees, and keep trying. No home runs. They focused on quality, customer service, and INNOVATION. 60 years through fire, flood, and foe. 60k of a niche motor vehicle is impressive!! 99% guarantee that anything you come in contact with on a daily basis that could have been transported in a trailer, was pulled by an Ottawa at some point.
      They're going autonomous right now.

  • @SchrottiJr
    @SchrottiJr 5 лет назад +586

    Keep your people happy and they´ll go to hell and back for you. Some CEOs and managers need to learn from this.

    • @nanomckomsncom
      @nanomckomsncom 5 лет назад +5

      Agreed.

    • @yamahonkawazuki
      @yamahonkawazuki 5 лет назад +11

      some rank and file need to learn this also.

    • @incubatork
      @incubatork 5 лет назад +6

      The chinese companies are almost all doing this and it pays off.

    • @NotSoCrazyNinja
      @NotSoCrazyNinja 5 лет назад +22

      Employee loyalty is at an all-time low due to corporate greed. It's almost always a better "deal" to lose a little profit in exchange for more loyal employees. A loyal employee will go the extra mile without hesitation because they know their company "has their back". When the company treats you like a number, there is no loyalty. The employee doesn't care about the product any more than they have to, and the product suffers, therefore, profits suffer. I work for a small business who treats their employees like family. I don't get paid nearly enough, but, I'm loyal because I know if I need them, they will come through for me as best they can. If I get sick and have to be out of work for a few weeks, they will not fire me because of it. So, I have a vested interest in them succeeding.

    • @johnwatkins4051
      @johnwatkins4051 5 лет назад +17

      @@NotSoCrazyNinja The bad part is when you are a loyal employee and go above and beyond then the company cuts you loose anyway. Happened several times to me.

  • @stuffdo_er
    @stuffdo_er 2 года назад +1

    I'm sitting in a Spotter right now watching this. Awesome history.

  • @chrisackerley1842
    @chrisackerley1842 5 лет назад +146

    The right product in the right place at the right time. Customer service. Innovation. Companies like Ottawa [no matter what it's called today] have made America great.

    • @chrisackerley1842
      @chrisackerley1842 5 лет назад +7

      I have no problem with that. Ottawa is still an American company in the sense almost all the workers are from good 'ol Kansas. Besides that, the Finns are not the Swedes. They have not been seduced by the EEC/UN lie that all immigration is good. They value hard work and good engineering. I'm sure that most of the Ottawa workers would admit the parent company is OK. Maybe not as good as local ownership but, Hell, they haven't had local ownership since the 70's.

    • @michaelprosperity3420
      @michaelprosperity3420 5 лет назад +2

      Great video. Glad to see they stayed in the good old USA. Anheiser Busch was sold to Belgium based Inbev in 2004.
      American ingenuity can't be beat.

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle 5 лет назад +6

      @Big Bill O'Reilly -- I'd work for a Finnish company over a Chinese company any day.

    • @quanbrooklynkid7776
      @quanbrooklynkid7776 5 лет назад +4

      @Big Bill O'Reilly stfu

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle 5 лет назад +3

      @Big Bill O'Reilly -- It's not a racial thing, but an ideological thing.

  • @garyhaber333
    @garyhaber333 4 года назад +8

    👍👍
    Worked as a driver for Walmart for the past 17 yrs of my entire 32 yrs as a CDL driver.
    I started as OTR, and went to local for several yrs.
    After I wasn't able to drive on roadways due to a health issue, I was asked to work out of their old Riverside DC in SoCal of which I was overjoyed!
    I made the hostler position mine for the last 7 yrs of my time with them,and that dog was mine!
    3 yrs ago due to worsening health issues,I retired.
    Thank you for the many years Walmart.
    It was a good ride starting out when you were a smaller company.
    They treated me like family.

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад +1

      One of the old guys at our factory when I was trucking kept driving a Mule for years until he retired. Many times I realized how smart he was to stay off the highways and away from DOT.

  • @pjrazvoza4343
    @pjrazvoza4343 2 года назад +7

    Ottawa epitomizes, an American tradition of excellence. Through creativity, engineering and a commitment to quality, lost by other industries in the United States. The men and women of this corporation, deserve the same at level of respect as anyone who has fought in the military. Thank you for sharing their amazing history!

  • @robertdukett6339
    @robertdukett6339 4 года назад +135

    The days when people had pride in their work and loyalty to both company and employees.

    • @jamesstafford9067
      @jamesstafford9067 4 года назад +4

      This video takes me back when grandpa use to tell me stories like this. Makes me think of him and my father.

    • @dalton-at-work
      @dalton-at-work 4 года назад +11

      Tge got paid roughly 3x what people get paid now. Despite modern workers productivity being about 10x higher

    • @marksierra3522
      @marksierra3522 4 года назад +2

      Ok Boomer. People still do that.

    • @joshlynch3107
      @joshlynch3107 4 года назад +3

      Well did you catch the union part. Fair pay = Fair labor

    • @metallicarabbit
      @metallicarabbit 2 года назад +1

      yeah back in the days when you had to go on strike to get paid fairly, ahhhh good ol days mhmmmm yep

  • @KentuckyRanger
    @KentuckyRanger 5 лет назад +20

    Twenty years of trucking, the Ottawa was a common view at every supplier and receiver yard.
    This is an awesome in depth story, behind those yard Hostlers/Hustlers/Yard Dogs, that were always there in the background, working around the clock...
    What an awesome history!

  • @marstondavis
    @marstondavis 5 лет назад +9

    I grew up in a small town in Calif. in the '50's and my folks worked in the glass bottle industry. Their co-workers had the same attitudes about work and progress. They were all so proud of their labor and the products they produced. I remember company picnics and get togethers at Christmas. These were good people that formed life long bonds with each other. I so miss those days. The workers at that plant are almost all gone now, but their kids are still around. We're in our '60's and '70's now but we still have the work ethic of our parents. It's a very good thing, too.

  • @breakingames7772
    @breakingames7772 5 лет назад +7

    After 2 million safe miles I became a switcher, best thing i ever did. No more dot, worry about wrecks, dealing with shippers, traffic, logs, no more free labour and get hourly, time n a half and double time Sundays at Ford. Love it

    • @paradiseroad6405
      @paradiseroad6405 5 лет назад

      ...we got triple time on holidays...$37.50 an hour in 1982...

    • @Ckcdillpickle
      @Ckcdillpickle 5 лет назад

      @@paradiseroad6405 37$ a hour in today's money or 1982?

    • @paradiseroad6405
      @paradiseroad6405 5 лет назад

      @@Ckcdillpickle ...1982...

    • @Ckcdillpickle
      @Ckcdillpickle 5 лет назад

      @@paradiseroad6405 that's a insane amount of money, even for today's standards

    • @paradiseroad6405
      @paradiseroad6405 5 лет назад +2

      @@Ckcdillpickle ...we were Teamsters Union when the unions were really strong...started at $6.50 an hour in 1977...we were at $12.50 an hour by 1982 with time and a half for overtime ($18.75)...double time for Sunday ($25.00)...and triple time for holidays ($37.50)...

  • @michaelbaumgardner2530
    @michaelbaumgardner2530 5 лет назад +52

    I drove over the road for 15 plus years,you saw an Ottawa on most every terminal yard.Great video.!!!

    • @longwhiteline3308
      @longwhiteline3308 5 лет назад +1

      Still do see em I drove one at a chicken plant before I started this OTR JOB

  • @dapsapsrp
    @dapsapsrp 5 лет назад +35

    I remember these yard terminal tractors from my days at UPS. We called them spotters. They had gasoline engines and were much quieter than the OTR tractors that pulled the feeder trailers. That hydraulic fifth wheel and the very short wheelbase really sped things up.

  • @Gcal1956
    @Gcal1956 5 лет назад +51

    Drove an exact same yard goat like the one in the video for two years in 2003.
    No ac. No radio. Automatic. 20 mph max.
    That thing was a late 70s model and it still ran like a champ.
    Every driver should drive one when they first start. We would have a lot less accidents in parking lots. I’m great full for the chance to run one.

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад +1

      At the company I worked us fools who'd never been in a semi all started in a Mule. In reality it had little to do with truckin on the highways and outside docks.

  • @benparker6825
    @benparker6825 5 лет назад +47

    I am a sucker for a good documentary video. I am grateful for the paychecks earned driving these yard horses.

    • @donaldbartram6315
      @donaldbartram6315 5 лет назад

      we always called them a yard horse. I remember my dad calling his tractor a horse, or cab. never a tractor..

    • @mtl-ss1538
      @mtl-ss1538 4 года назад

      @@donaldbartram6315 + Kiwi ace ;- Ivan Mauger - OBE & MBE.
      World Champion: 1968, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1977, 1979 - R/Up 1971, 1973, 1974
      New Zealand Sportsperson of the Year (Halberg Award) 1977 and 1979.
      Long Track World Champion 1971, 1972, 1976 R/Up 1974, 1975
      World Pairs Champion 1969, 1970 R/Up 1971, 1972, 1978, 1981
      Speedway World Team Cup Champion 1968, 1971, 1972, 1979
      European Champion 1966, 1970, 1971, 1975
      British Champion 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972
      www.nzonscreen.com/title/circuits-of-gold-1987.
      As 3 x concurrent World Speedway Champion he got a gold-plated Jawa 500 bike,
      which was done for him by two American fans after winning his third consecutive title.
      New Zealand Champion 1974, 1981
      New Zealand Long Track Champion 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986.
      World long track speed record. His bike reached 144.666km/h 1986 Auckland NZ
      New Zealand South Island Champion 1977, 1981, 1983
      Australasian Champion 1977, 1981
      Australasian Grand Prix winner 1970, 1971, 1972
      Sunday Times King of Claremont winner 1973, 1980, 1981, 1983
      British-Nordic Champion 1968, 1971
      British League Riders Champion 1971, 1973
      Embassy Internationale Winner 1970, 1971, 1972
      Northern Riders Champion 1964, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1972, 1980
      Provincial League Riders Champion 1963, 1964
      Lubos Tomicek Memorial Trophy Winner 1971, 1972, 1973, 1979
      Silver Sash Match Race Champion 1968, 1969
      Golden Helmet Match Race Champion 1970
      Scottish Open Champion 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973
      Scotianapolis Winner 1969, 1970
      Welsh Open Champion 1964, 1973
      Westernapolis Winner 1968, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975
      Leningrad Cup (USSR) Winner 1969
      Lokeren Memorial Trophy Winner 1970
      Golden Key of Bremen 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975
      Australian Long Track Champion 1962
      Victorian State Champion (Australia) 1962, 1963
      Queensland State Champion (Australia) 1962
      Western Australian State Champion 1973
      Yorkshire Television Trophy 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980
      Lada Indoor International 1979
      British Long Track Champion 1980
      World Champion of Champions Match Race Series 1989
      South Australian 150 Jubilee Trophy 1986
      www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/ivan-mauger-speedway-champs-collection-to-be-auctioned-by-bonhams-20170915-gyihwt.htm

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      MULE. Drove one in 1969 and some of 1970. Cold in winter hotter then heck in summer.

  • @harveyhandbanana
    @harveyhandbanana 5 лет назад +47

    The shop I worked in had an old 1980 Ottawa with a two stroke 453 Detroit in it. It was slow and it was LOUD but damn it that thing never quit. We called ours the yard goat

    • @yamahonkawazuki
      @yamahonkawazuki 5 лет назад +2

      We named ours bob

    • @jasonsprouse2803
      @jasonsprouse2803 4 года назад +1

      There's still a lot of GM Detroit 2 strokes running.... They were in a lot of construction equipment, busses, trucks etc.

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      For some reason all our Mules and semis had a yeller engine.

  • @zoealy972
    @zoealy972 5 лет назад +35

    did not know this history of what we call a "YARD DOG". enjoyed this video greatly

    • @MrEdwin57
      @MrEdwin57 5 лет назад

      I've heard of Yard Jockey !

    • @Squashyjet
      @Squashyjet 4 года назад +1

      Before our company got a yard dog we had to scale out our loads by hooking up to an old freight liner we called Ol Smokey. I am forever grateful for this piece of machinery no longer am I having to lower and raise landing gear but I do have to find a new workout regiment now that I don’t have to do all that

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      We called em a MULE. No matter how crappy they rode and how often they broke, it was sure better than using a Ford short cabover with no power steering. Back then the few inside docks had manual opening barn doors and were built for horse and buggies. Our main docks were the old washing machine factory.
      Call it a Yard Dog, a Mule or a terminal tractor........ or what we called them when they broke down!
      Model T 10-4!

  • @JuanPabloRojasW
    @JuanPabloRojasW Год назад

    RUclips Algorithm brought me here. I like heavy machinery and this awesome tractor has brought my attention many times... To all the personnel in Kalmar Ottawa, keep up your hard work, making America proud. Nice piece of history.

  • @mikelgonzalez
    @mikelgonzalez 6 лет назад +16

    Very impressive, riveting production! I thought I knew quite a bit of the history from previous narrative, but this film educated me even more with additional details, perspective and especially, old photographs and films. May the Ottawa terminal tractor and all employees continue to prosper for years to come!

  • @MinuteRice27
    @MinuteRice27 2 года назад +1

    I’ve run a T2 for the last 4 years. Great truck. Use to have to fight the old fellas for these trucks over the Capacity’s and Terbergs we also have. The rest are always in the shop but these Ottawas don’t quit!

  • @bebopalloobop
    @bebopalloobop 4 года назад +4

    I moved to Alaska a few years ago after growing up in the sticks about 10 minutes north east of the headquarters. I was at an auction in Anchorage and lo and behold there sat two 60’s Ottawa trucks up for bid. When I got back to the house I was so excited about spotting the greasy old dogs this far north I googled them, finding this documentary- was fantastic! Felt like I was home. Had no idea they were so widely distributed.

  • @Frankensteins_Highboy
    @Frankensteins_Highboy 5 лет назад +84

    At fedex, we are switchers
    The truck I drive was built when i was still in high school
    The wheel base is perfect, the control layout is second nature and the trucks are insanely tough
    If something does go wrong, our on property mechanic can have the truck back in the yard within the day (excpet anything with the motor- that can be hard down time)
    I have made many friends around the area who also run these trucks
    We couldnt ask for a better truck

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      Where I worked they were CAT powered. Soe where White, some were Ottawa. Anything from a Ford, Kenworth, Peterbilt, Freightliner, Mack etc was a better truck for actually truckin.

  • @johncichon9499
    @johncichon9499 4 года назад +3

    Now this is a history to be proud of! A real store of heroes in manufacturing. It took each employee (shop and office) to make this happen! GREAT JOB!!!!!

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar 2 года назад

      History is always HIS story. It depends on who's doing the telling. Others may have a decidedly different view.

  • @Mrwednesday84
    @Mrwednesday84 2 года назад +12

    I have been driving OTR for 14 years, encountering a quite a few of these trucks at yards. It's nice to see the story of these little guys.

  • @dale7436
    @dale7436 5 лет назад +203

    We that drove them and those that depended on us called them “yard dogs” because it didn’t matter the weather or where the trailer was we fetched it. Loved every hour because we were always busy and time flew by and in the evening I slept good

    • @Ham68229
      @Ham68229 5 лет назад +12

      Indeed, drove older models for over 20yrs.

    • @deadmeatdec2164
      @deadmeatdec2164 5 лет назад +16

      Those two things make a difference. If time flies and i sleep well at night i like my job alot more. Crazy aint it. How big those two things are

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull 5 лет назад +11

      Also had time to play when situation allowed. I remember watching the yard dog cut some donuts in the snow one icy December morning when I worked as a loader down at the Cracker Barrel DC. Wasn't any trailers to shift, there was ice and snow on the ground, so he ripped some nice fat donuts like he'd won the Daytona 500 :rofl:

    • @GrowthCurveMarketing
      @GrowthCurveMarketing 5 лет назад +6

      We called them "mules"... keep changing the oil, and you couldn't kill 'em.

    • @246spyder
      @246spyder 5 лет назад

      Yes, that's what I recall them being called.

  • @vanmanmike
    @vanmanmike 2 года назад +1

    Thanks. Great history lesson on what I have done for the last almost 30 years as a Ottawa yard jockey. Good information.

  • @jamesgrey3368
    @jamesgrey3368 5 лет назад +639

    I can't believe I just watched a 24 minute commercial.

    • @MrSlicer2424
      @MrSlicer2424 5 лет назад +6

      Anti union sentiment

    • @jamesgrey3368
      @jamesgrey3368 5 лет назад +8

      @@MrSlicer2424 Where do you get that?

    • @zone4garlicfarm
      @zone4garlicfarm 5 лет назад +34

      It's more of a documentary than a commercial. There wasn't a sales pitch.

    • @beltfed4624
      @beltfed4624 5 лет назад +25

      If you're gonna make a commercial, this is the way to do it... I set right here and watched it too. 😁

    • @nickw8071
      @nickw8071 5 лет назад +13

      But it was fun wasn’t it....

  • @jmitch623
    @jmitch623 4 года назад +1

    Ran a spotter in the Army on Okinawa 68-69. Made by Walters. Loaded ships bound for Nam and once loaded sailed with em. Unloaded and returned. Jump ahead to 1999 and I’m doing again for a local trucking company.

  • @nrood3821
    @nrood3821 5 лет назад +60

    this is a video that shows the proof that if you take care of your workers. they will be a better work force and be a better company

  • @Chr.U.Cas1622
    @Chr.U.Cas1622 5 лет назад +35

    Well done documentation/documentary. Congrats for being such a great company.

  • @paradiseroad6405
    @paradiseroad6405 5 лет назад +5

    ...great invention...I used one to wash the inside of trailers for a major grocery chain back in the late '70s early 80s...backed into a bay with a boom full of high pressure spray heads...kept it between the white lines and watched for the lights in the mirror...green would turn to yellow then red...you sat there as the boom did it's thing and then pulled out on the green again...never had to leave the seat as we had extended glad hands that we could connect by reaching out the sliding back window...connected only the emergency line for moving around the yard with an empty trailer...

  • @Rob_1776
    @Rob_1776 3 года назад +7

    Back when we did things in America! I love seeing interesting stuff like this! People actually had some pride back then! And a backbone 💪

  • @WEIXELTOWN
    @WEIXELTOWN 5 лет назад +42

    I'm buying one tomorrow...I don't need one but I liked this documentary so much...I want to have one.

    • @lightdark00
      @lightdark00 5 лет назад +9

      It's tomorrow! You can link us to a picture of the one you bought.

    • @firstname5912
      @firstname5912 5 лет назад +5

      lightdark00 😂😂😂

    • @Lunch_box
      @Lunch_box 5 лет назад +3

      Soooo.... did you get one??

    • @SpaceGhost999
      @SpaceGhost999 5 лет назад +3

      Do you drive it to work?

    • @smitty_1
      @smitty_1 5 лет назад +3

      @@SpaceGhost999 legend has it he drove off for a test drive and hasnt returned

  • @brimtime8117
    @brimtime8117 5 лет назад +61

    What a story!! America was built by company’s like this one...

    • @Dan-nj7tr
      @Dan-nj7tr 5 лет назад +2

      Unfortunately they sold out, it is not an American company anymore that's why it is called "Kalmar Ottawa".They did a good job hiding that in the video. This seem to be prevalent in the US.

    • @brimtime8117
      @brimtime8117 5 лет назад +1

      Dan 255 I was mainly talking about the early years of this company, as long as it’s based in America and not overseas America gains....

    • @AnonYmous-ny2tr
      @AnonYmous-ny2tr 5 лет назад

      America is a Corporatocracy Google *Mystery Babylon*

    • @ScooterMcAwesomeness
      @ScooterMcAwesomeness 4 года назад

      And destroyed by every company not like it....greed...

    • @papounnai
      @papounnai 4 года назад

      @Randy Travis yes toilet paper...

  • @tanman102
    @tanman102 4 года назад +6

    Seeing the pictures of the great flood of 1951 and all the damage, reminded me of the story of the Warner/Ottawa Mfg co.
    Ottawa Mfg had long been a manufacturer of wire fence, stationary engines, crosscut and buzzmaster saws and for a brief time the Ottawa garden tractor (which was a line of tractors that they had bought parts, machinery and all from the Jaques Saw Company of Denison Texas).
    The 1951 flood wrecked the Ottawa Mfg factories and later that year the owner died and the company assets were sold to the Comfort Equipment Company.

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      This Ottawa company was on the Fox and llinois river.
      As an aside from that a large nonunion company started by a man in Tremont, ill opened Keystone Steel and Wire. Everyone got along and was happy . The owner died and a greedy company owns it now. No one is happy!

  • @kpmariner1998
    @kpmariner1998 5 лет назад +1

    I have 3 Ottawa’s and one Kalmar. Can’t live without them

  • @samhouston1673
    @samhouston1673 5 лет назад +3

    The American Can-Do Spirit at its finest. At tip of the hat to ya Ottawa Steel from Texas.

    • @Dan-nj7tr
      @Dan-nj7tr 5 лет назад +1

      You do know they sold out in the 90's and are owned by the Finns.

  • @michaelaleman3591
    @michaelaleman3591 4 года назад +1

    Wow! What a great true story! Now only if our government and politicians would work together like this amazing company and employees of Ottawa our country would be in better shape!

  • @ClassicVehicleChannel
    @ClassicVehicleChannel 4 года назад +9

    Great film... These truck have always fascinated me... Funny a chap got fired for making trucks prone to breaking down... Heard he's working for Apple now... He's on the team that slows the older phones down...

    • @davids6533
      @davids6533 2 года назад

      At some point, they will both be out of a job. Nothing I know of lasts forever.

  • @kenlee5509
    @kenlee5509 2 года назад

    Great video!
    4 years old, and it just popped up in the "recommended" sidebar.
    YAY!

  • @jawdon_smith
    @jawdon_smith 5 лет назад +41

    Man... if only America was like this now, it’d be a far better place

    • @Angel-xj3wf
      @Angel-xj3wf 5 лет назад

      Jordan Smith no bitch

    • @zuccerworm8402
      @zuccerworm8402 5 лет назад +2

      @@Angel-xj3wf Stfu kid

    • @louisedwards6681
      @louisedwards6681 5 лет назад

      My family business try to get the job done,,43ys and holding 🏁 EDWARDS BROTHER'S TRANSMISSION ROANOKE RAPIDS NORTH CAROLINA 👍🏁🇺🇸🔧 🔩 THANKS.

    • @pbama5220
      @pbama5220 4 года назад

      Dam did't see no black race 😆

  • @BitterDemo
    @BitterDemo 2 года назад

    I really enjoyed seeing this because it was a part of my life also. I am now 83 years old and nobody cares anymore like when I was younger. Living in redding, Ca, and wishing I was back in the Midwest.

  • @user-justbeingme
    @user-justbeingme 4 года назад +3

    In 1978 - 1980 I worked at C.W.C.I. supply, in the city of industry, Calif. The owner treated his workers the same as this company did, and we would make challenges to help improve our own productive output. That is when you made work fun and got rewarded for that work, unlike today's companies.

  • @deanedeane4318
    @deanedeane4318 4 месяца назад

    À sence of family in any form I believe to be one of the most meaningful experiences we can have and story's like this are such a fine example ! Thankyou for sharing ! 😉🙃😎 NZ

  • @robertmcgee141
    @robertmcgee141 5 лет назад +13

    They are still out there working. Great little machine to shuffle trailers around.

  • @donnieporter7890
    @donnieporter7890 5 лет назад

    Proud to b from kansas this video is exactly what this country was made from.. hard work- dedication- and employee's that would work 24/7 and a employer who care its sad all this is dam near gone... i want to thank all those people for all their hard work that made this country great

  • @Killedbycotton
    @Killedbycotton 5 лет назад +14

    Those company picnics make me feel jealous living in 2019

    • @KMcNally117
      @KMcNally117 4 года назад +1

      How you feel in 2020?

    • @Killedbycotton
      @Killedbycotton 4 года назад

      @@KMcNally117 fuckin perfecto

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      In 30 /2 years at the same company our super had one picnic! He was a black man and only two drivers were black. We all got along like brothers and sisters. Life was good back then.

  • @tommyeugene
    @tommyeugene 5 лет назад

    i don't post on the internet, but i had to chime in here, what an excellent video! i spent a lot of time in these, as we called them, "yard dawgs, or luggers" , they were indispensable when moving trailers around McClean trucking's yards , they were known as "double damond" back then , don't think anyone is alive anymore when McClean was a round, they were a huge trucking company in the sixties and seventies ,I even was part of the company that put all their yards together for auction when McClean went under , thank you for this video, it was wonderful! Tommy in Minnesota

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      And near McLean, Ill. along Il rt 136 and old Rt 66 is the oldest truck stop in America, The Dixie Truckers Home. I remember McClean trucking and many more.
      Model T remembers 10-4!
      I also drove an Ottawa Mule back in 69-70.
      Remember the girl wearin nothin but a smile and a towel in the picture on the billboard in the field along the big ole highway near Lincoln, Ill.
      The bill board is gone, the cornfield is a gated community, the highway is now I-55 and that girl is obese wearin yoga pants.
      I married a farmer's daughter from Redwood Falls many years ago. Model T from Illinoiz.

  • @haraldpettersen3649
    @haraldpettersen3649 5 лет назад +33

    Nice to hear about when workers and bosses worked together on the floor against the same goal.

    • @andrep8287
      @andrep8287 2 года назад +1

      ...you meant to say "towards the same goal", right?

  • @jonhallberg8334
    @jonhallberg8334 4 года назад +1

    As a machinist I can tell you that these people have the right attitude to make factory work the rewarding thing that it is.

  • @leehilton9932
    @leehilton9932 5 лет назад +12

    Love how it started with people using common sense!! Thanks for sharing this.

  • @StonesAndSand
    @StonesAndSand 2 года назад +1

    I've lived in a couple of small towns where world-class equipment was made. It seems there is an overall sense of complacency that overshadows decades of history of being the best in the market. It's good to see there's still a lot of pride left in Ottawa.

  • @snazzymcnazmy
    @snazzymcnazmy 5 лет назад +458

    yard dogs, parking trailers too close together since 1958

    • @truckerp7294
      @truckerp7294 5 лет назад +7

      😂😂never lied

    • @donziperk
      @donziperk 5 лет назад +31

      Wow did u get that right. And then try and find one to pull your trailer out so u can hook up.

    • @beltfed4624
      @beltfed4624 5 лет назад +34

      I unload flats (flat trailers) with a forklift, and there's few things that'll make your nerves stand on end like lifting 2 tons above one truck, turning it with half of it hanging over another truck, while one or two drivers are scrambling around taking off straps... This is at night, in a poorly lit yard, my forklift lights are just about all I have to see with, and they're about the size of baseballs. Thankfully, the yard dogs are spot on, and get my trucks in and out in about 25 minutes per load. But yeah, they have a very special gift for parking huge objects impossibly close. 😁

    • @riflelord2
      @riflelord2 5 лет назад +35

      if you park them close enough you can make enough room to shove 4 more trailers in there

    • @beltfed4624
      @beltfed4624 5 лет назад +19

      @@riflelord2 You know it! Most of the time, one truck has their nose on the others tail. Yard dogs are like "There's still about 8 inches to spare, if I cut sharp I'll clear it by 2, we're good!" 😲

  • @skipstein744
    @skipstein744 5 лет назад +2

    I agree that this video is a fine rendition of the ingenuity of American technology and workers.

  • @alanhowitzer
    @alanhowitzer 5 лет назад +428

    These trucks are the tug boats of the parking lot.

    • @alanhowitzer
      @alanhowitzer 5 лет назад +3

      @Dead Serious Ahahahahah!

    • @Mjc103
      @Mjc103 5 лет назад +1

      Dead Serious A game only bro. That was terrible.

    • @Mjc103
      @Mjc103 5 лет назад +2

      @Dead Serious I love it when kids act like grown ups. No go make your bed before you momma whips yo ass.

    • @mannyrivera4148
      @mannyrivera4148 5 лет назад

      You ain’t lying

    • @sheepdavis
      @sheepdavis 5 лет назад

      @Dead Serious you're dumb

  • @seanharris2320
    @seanharris2320 5 лет назад +1

    Grew up 45 min from there, went there lots as a kid, was through there last week to fuel up, have a history degree (from the U that is 20 min from there), and NEVER knew about this. The town has come a LONG way in the last 15 years or so. It is a NICE place. Nice to see something like this.

  • @jebsails2837
    @jebsails2837 5 лет назад +3

    I'd seen pictures of a couple of these "yard tractors", never realizing the niche market that they fulfilled. A friend of mine drives over the road rigs and during downtime operates one at his normal terminal, which he really loves. Thanks for the back story.

    • @andrep8287
      @andrep8287 2 года назад

      IMHO, every OTR-driver should be forced to operate a yard-tractor for 3 months (day-shifts and night-shifts) for the only purpose to learn how to properly back-up a tractor/trailer....especially in tight areas! After such an apprenticeship, they would no longer make fools of themselves, taking far too much time to back-up the long-nose Petes with a tandem-trailer at customer-dockss...lol. Oh, btw it matters not if you're pulling a 45, 48 or 53 foot trailer.....their wheelbases are all identical at 41 ft (kingpin to center bogey)

  • @buckodonnghaile4309
    @buckodonnghaile4309 Год назад

    I like this Ottawa a lot more than the one in Canada. You guys produce useful things.

  • @chrismielitz7758
    @chrismielitz7758 5 лет назад +3

    Super cool, the place my dad used to work had a terminal tractor, must have been from the mid to late 70s, we called it the yard dog...

  • @aveoxus1139
    @aveoxus1139 5 лет назад +1

    This is a great history lesson about what integrity and build quality is.

  • @richardc7721
    @richardc7721 5 лет назад +5

    In the early 80s I was a HD mechanic for a pipeline contractor and needed a heavy weight for the bed of my 428 CJ powered F150 to help keep the rear tires planted.
    In our boneyard was an old Hydra Hammer that had the right sized counterweight on it.
    Fit nice and did a good job.

    • @heytasker
      @heytasker 5 лет назад

      Too bad you don't still have that CJ....

    • @richardc7721
      @richardc7721 5 лет назад +4

      @@heytasker I owned the truck 3 different times over a 30 period.
      The last time I owned it I gave it to my oldest grandson upon graduation from the USMC boot camp San Diego 10 years ago, he now owns it with a promise to never sell it.
      He will pass it on to his oldest in time

  • @desertbrewcrew1974
    @desertbrewcrew1974 4 года назад +1

    I worked on a few of these.These are built tough and are virtually indestructable.

  • @InjunOutdoors
    @InjunOutdoors 5 лет назад +20

    Was excited to see the fire truck for Twin Hills. I went to school there Small world

  • @kevinj2261
    @kevinj2261 5 лет назад +1

    I work at a container terminal which has several Ottawa trucks and Kalmar forks lift they are all specialized machine ,durable & reliable, some trucks are still working today after decades of services at terminal. Good job Ottawa

  • @soillife1
    @soillife1 4 года назад +6

    Our family is from Parsons Kansas.
    Note
    Nobody blamed global warming for floods and fires in the 40s and 50s.
    They kept on going.

  • @lourias
    @lourias 5 лет назад +17

    Cool history of a company.
    Keep the company personal, then you will always be great!!!
    Please remember that employess do not quit companies; they quit bosses.

    • @2Truth4Liberty
      @2Truth4Liberty 5 лет назад

      They are still there and still making them to this day.

  • @junicohen7918
    @junicohen7918 4 года назад +1

    Drove one for years.super nice.

  • @IndianaDundee
    @IndianaDundee 5 лет назад +77

    The only difference is now you’ll have no free time if you want to make enough money to buy a house, own a car, and support a family.

    • @-hiphopanonymous-7093
      @-hiphopanonymous-7093 5 лет назад +10

      Yep sell your soul to provide for a family

    • @dineironhead
      @dineironhead 5 лет назад +3

      Amen to that

    • @TylerVogel1
      @TylerVogel1 5 лет назад +8

      I believe it, I haven't experienced it yet but my mom and stepdad work so hard throughout the day that they hardly have time to eat. Today's world sucks to much work and stress and not enough caring. It kinda makes me want to commit suicide because things can be ran simpler easier while still have that we care about our work its the best quality we will not be cheap screw overs. I get it you have to work no matter what but working so much to where you can't even eat?! Yeah goodbye world. Its even worse that now I'm 18 and I graduated high school but your high school diploma doesn't even matter not even college degrees. Fuck the modern world.

    • @gregshearer423
      @gregshearer423 5 лет назад +3

      Tyler Vogel where the hell are u working that u can’t eat

    • @TylerVogel1
      @TylerVogel1 5 лет назад +1

      @@gregshearer423 i am working

  • @ernburn6340
    @ernburn6340 3 года назад

    Piloted countless spotter trucks in my past, never knew the significance til now. BRAVO OTTAWA! much respect

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад +1

      I drove them for 1 1/2 years. The longest 30 years of my life.

    • @andrep8287
      @andrep8287 2 года назад

      @@modeladenny1218 ...it would have felt like 60 years, if you didn't have a hydraulic 5th wheel, and had to hand-crank the landng-gears up and down yourself....LOL (did that every Friday night and all day Saturday for 4 years, until one day the company owner - on the way to supper with his wife - instructed me to go and buy an Ottawa asa[ ("and, make sure it's a street-legal one" he insisted, so we can use it to transfer the trailers to the 3rd party repair shop 10 kms down the road,).
      So I did go to our Great Dane trailer dealer (who was also representing Ottawa), they had one in stock @ C$99.0K (year 2000), confrmed it with the owner, who said "just sign the order" and that was it.
      Mind you, he attached one condition to it: "you're the only one allowed to operate it, for the time being" (that was ok with me....and so I did for the next 4 years (all the while maintaining my regular position within the company, i.e. Safety/Compliance & Fleet Manager.....LOL). That trucking company's owner was running his business the same way as the Ottawa management, i.e. we were the best-paying carrier in the Greater Toronto area, we had - figuratively speaking - drivers lining-up two-abreast around the block to work there; the entire firm's staff and drivers (no matter whether company employees or Owner/Operators) were invited for the annual X-mas party, with booked rooms for everyone, so that no-one was obliged to drive home that night!
      Yep, meanwhile, after more than 20 years, they were taken over by an 'income-fund' (resulting in the quality of the company going down hill big time)....I got out just in time before the transition.

  • @dannystrickland8674
    @dannystrickland8674 5 лет назад +68

    That's back when an employer took pride in their people and employees took pride in their product that's hard to find nowadays

    • @jstarr7506
      @jstarr7506 5 лет назад +6

      Now employers brag about having no full time employees

    • @curbmassa
      @curbmassa 5 лет назад +1

      @@jstarr7506 I'm guessing the bragging gets directed at the shareholders.

    • @gearldmoore4545
      @gearldmoore4545 5 лет назад +2

      Agreed hard to find a good employer today,Good employers promote great Employees.

    • @LoneWolf-yp2mo
      @LoneWolf-yp2mo 5 лет назад +10

      J STAR 2, You can thank unions for that .... they produce the laziest bunch of overpaid suns-sa-bitches I've ever seen ... and of course they fight the company like a rattle snake when they try to fire them ... and you can MF me all you want .. I LIVED IT and watched a GREAT JOB go out of business .....

    • @freeworldneedsfreethinking
      @freeworldneedsfreethinking 5 лет назад

      Great employees work for them selfs .

  • @VeloxBY
    @VeloxBY 2 года назад

    Amazing video. Thank you for the work. As a trucking enthusiast I was very pleased to know more about Ottawa yard hustlers.

  • @chloehennessey6813
    @chloehennessey6813 5 лет назад +29

    Anyone who is a proponent of engineered obsolescence should be fired and it should follow him or her throughout their whole careers unless they publicly apologize and renounce the behavior.

    • @agnel47
      @agnel47 4 года назад

      Oh yeah, when was the last time you revolutionized an industry.
      Easy to lay high hopes on others shoulders.

  • @BitterDemo
    @BitterDemo 2 года назад

    I REMEMBER ALL OF THIS, In later years I was a Contract Trucker and I hauled a lot of equipment to them in the 60's and 70's. I have hauled many of their Trucks. I also remember the strike.

  • @carrotpeeler101
    @carrotpeeler101 5 лет назад +55

    As a fleet mechanic in Canada we always called them shunt trucks. I remember one truck that had the air dryer removed at a gravel quary. that truck moved hundreds of trailers a week. I purged the tanks the first time i did a service on it and it was like a goose crappin out 4 gallons of oatmeal. I informed the owner and he just looked at me like a deer in headlights. needless to say as soon as december rolled around my job comprised of 3 items; a hammer, blow torch and methyel hydrade.

    • @SteveCarras
      @SteveCarras 5 лет назад +7

      And there is an Ottowa there too.

    • @carrotpeeler101
      @carrotpeeler101 5 лет назад +5

      @Yard Sale Dale It was defective and they didn't want to replace it. they bought the truck for a grand

    • @theangryitalian7922
      @theangryitalian7922 5 лет назад +1

      WTF is an air dryer ?

    • @morgato4200
      @morgato4200 5 лет назад +7

      @@theangryitalian7922 it removes the moisture from the air that is used to control the brakes and other things

    • @carrotpeeler101
      @carrotpeeler101 5 лет назад +3

      @@theangryitalian7922 it's a part in the pneumatic system (air brakes). It removes some moisture and debris from the system.

  • @bardbacx
    @bardbacx 5 лет назад

    Brought tears to my eyes, don't even need one, but will buying one shortly

  • @PumaPete
    @PumaPete 5 лет назад +67

    I drove these in the port of LA! Ottawa trucks are by far the best!! Capacity trucks claim they are the number 1 choice of pro spotters! BULL!! We had both! The capacities always sat in the lots. Everyone chose the Ottawas first!

  • @toupac3195
    @toupac3195 2 года назад

    This was a beautiful documentary. We midwest machinists are amazing.

  • @TylerVogel1
    @TylerVogel1 5 лет назад +7

    Ayyyyy the dock tug, my favorite semi truck especially to use in gta 5

  • @denniswarren3211
    @denniswarren3211 5 лет назад +2

    Back in the 70's we got our 1st Ottawa spotting tractor and this was during the 1st fuel crunch. We had single & tandem axle trucks in a slip seat operation that varied from 1 to 24 stops on a trailer. Every driver wanted a tandem axle tractor whether the weight justified 1 or not. We installed a pressure gauge on the lifting side of the hydraulic 5th wheel and calibrated it to tell us how much weight was in the nose of the trailer to help us make a decision about SA vs TAxle since the single axles were a lot more fuel efficient. It also saved us some axle overweight fines. I wonder if anyone else ever did this?

    • @brtecson
      @brtecson 2 года назад

      my company started doing this in thier single axle tractors 2 years ago haha. we actually use an air pressure gauge that measures the air pressure in the suspension. it sure would make a lot of sense to do it in the yard tractor though

    • @denniswarren3211
      @denniswarren3211 2 года назад

      @@brtecson Your reply made me look back at this after 3yrs. The hydraulic approach worked best because those spotting tractors we had did not have any rear suspension. The lack of suspension gave us another idea. We built a 12volt electromagnet that was mounted on all thread directly in front of the rear tires that was about 100 inches wide so a little wider than the rear tires which we kept on while working the yard and spotting trailers that picked up a lot of pallet nails. We made a trough about the width of a lane covered by a grate where we dumped/switched off voltage the electromagnet where the nails fell through. It was hard to impress on the yard guys how important this was to use and maintain. Did a great job when used and the dump trough was kept clean.
      I have to admit we came up with some innovative things which we probably should have marketed.

  • @6153calme
    @6153calme 5 лет назад +7

    I have Ottawa trucks at loading docks and warehouses, also in companies having shipping and receiving areas.

  • @oscaranderson1822
    @oscaranderson1822 2 года назад

    Good work good story thank you for sharing that it is what RUclips was intended for

  • @georei
    @georei 5 лет назад +6

    Very enjoyable to watch. Thanks for doing this.

  • @patrickyoung2117
    @patrickyoung2117 5 лет назад

    Honest people, delivering the best possible product, and standing behind it 100%. I bet you could talk to the owner or head engineer if you had a tough problem. And a company that treated their workers like they were part of the Big Picture. Those days are long gone. GREAT video.

    • @BigLisaFan
      @BigLisaFan 2 года назад

      Henry Repeating Arms is like that. Lifetime warranty, great customer service and you can even talk with the President of the company!

  • @jeffpittman8725
    @jeffpittman8725 5 лет назад +30

    The difference between today's workforce and the character of workers in those days is a very wide gap.

    • @PumaPete
      @PumaPete 5 лет назад +4

      Gary Dean Mercer Clark no they aren’t! They are spoiled and lazy!

    • @dankingma6344
      @dankingma6344 5 лет назад +5

      I work in a factory for the last25yrs and must say today’s young workers are spoiled and very lazy. Worries me to think what happened to America’s next gen workers always looking for the easy way. No putting forth effort for quality products

    • @PumaPete
      @PumaPete 5 лет назад

      Dan Kingma I agree!

    • @LN997-i8x
      @LN997-i8x 5 лет назад +5

      @@dankingma6344 Employers have as much a hand in that as the employees do. People might be more inclined to put in the effort if employers paid a fair wage and actually gave a shit about their employees.
      It's difficult to care about about a company when you're considered disposable and will never, ever share in its success.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull 5 лет назад +5

      @@PumaPete No, they're underpaid, overworked overstressed, underappreciated, and treated like horseshit. You can't expect people to give it their all when the people they work for wouldn't think twice about shitcanning them or asking them to put aside any pretense of life off the clock to work ridiculous hours.
      You want honest, hard-working, loyal employees? Give them a living wage, good benefits, good conditions, AND FOR THE LOVE OF FUCK LET THEM HAVE THEIR FUCKING EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS! You do those things and you'll find the people working there will actually enjoy their jobs, and when they enjoy their jobs, the pride comes flooding right back.
      The workforce of the 1950s didn't go anywhere. It just adapted. You get what you pay for, and when you pay for shit labor through shit wages, shit hours, shit conditions *guess what you get in return...*

  • @raywilson800
    @raywilson800 4 года назад

    This was a fantastic video! Very educational. People should get their kids to watch videos like this!

  • @danmekeel7758
    @danmekeel7758 5 лет назад +6

    Back when America was United for this Country. Kalmar Ottawa keeps the Tradition.

    • @allenwagner2469
      @allenwagner2469 5 лет назад +1

      Ottawa trucks are great kalamar are junk

  • @reubeng2110
    @reubeng2110 4 года назад

    I get to use these once in a while whilst working

  • @braindamage1662
    @braindamage1662 5 лет назад +7

    Brilliant Documentary on the Factory, and the Employees Commitment and Dedication to the Company. I've seen Kalmars working in so many Countries in Europe and Russia, that i keep thinking, 'They must have a Production Line like Henry Ford's Model 'T's !' It is worth noting however, they were NOT, the first (by a long way) Company to Produce a Purpose Built 'Yard-Tug'. A British Company built a Vehicle in the 1930's called the 'Scammell Mechanical Horse', which was later Modified in the late 40's, and was then known as the 'Scammell Scarab'. This Vehicle was Unique (at that time) in that it had an Automatic Coupling and Un-Coupling Device which raised and lowered the Landing Legs as it Reversed/Drove out from under a Trailer. It was a Big favourite with the Royal Mail, The Railways, and Parcel Delivery Company's. As with most things though, they did not progress with the times, and the Company was bought out by British Leyland Trucks, which in turn was bought by DAF Trucks, which is now part of the Paccar Group.

  • @VinnyMartello
    @VinnyMartello 5 лет назад

    Yard Dogs are AWESOME. We have one at my plant. We can keep our chemical going 24/7 all year because we can swap out tankers at the drop of a hat. Good job Ottawa. You guys have an amazing product.

  • @scoop4363
    @scoop4363 5 лет назад +5

    "Yard Bird" is what we called them at UPS back in the 70s. Man, those 2 guys could back up, hook up, pull out, and back up again in minutes. With over 100 trailers coming in during 4 hours, they were key to production. It was still a crap company to work for, but the yard jocks were the bomb.

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад +1

      As they say, there ain't no easy run..... and being a Mule operator sure wasn't easy.

    • @shanechambers9529
      @shanechambers9529 2 года назад

      my neck of the woods we call them yard dogs

  • @lathamarea1437
    @lathamarea1437 4 года назад +1

    I remember back in the late sixties at a freight terminal ( REA ?) in N.Y.C i first saw my first yard dog..If memory serves it also had a hydraulic tire by the front bumper to make turning 90 degrees very easy..A memory that's lasted fifty years..

    • @modeladenny1218
      @modeladenny1218 3 года назад

      I remember driving Ottawa and White Mules...... By the way they were all white. My memory is fair and I don't remember any fancy extra wheel up front. Why would y'all need it. Those mules turned tight and with a trailer ya don't wanna turn too tight.
      I worked where some of the original docks were for horse and wagons.Barely 13.6 and narrow doors. So I know tight.

  • @STREETMACHINETV
    @STREETMACHINETV 5 лет назад +56

    Picture of green Australian Chrysler Centura at 10:44 is interesting. As far as I know they were never sold in the US.

    • @ptk4476
      @ptk4476 4 года назад +24

      Google "70s family picnic" and it's near the top of image results. Just the usual lazy use of stock media in these style documentaries.

    • @demonic4774
      @demonic4774 4 года назад +3

      that's a ford Cortina and yes England sold them in the US at 10:45 look over the old misses shoulder

    • @cepitman4938
      @cepitman4938 4 года назад +4

      The badge is in the position on the front guard says Centura. , cortina never put it there.

    • @jamesgovett2501
      @jamesgovett2501 4 года назад +11

      No mate that’s no cortina that’s a Chrysler Australia Centura with the unique to Australia 245 c.i. In-line six that was used in our Chrysler Valiants, as an aside the car was based on a French simca that had a 2 litre 4 banger but was too gutless for Australian conditions also speaking of Ford Cortinas we even found the 2 litre pinto engine a slug & Ford Australia shoehorned in our 200 & 250 c.i. Ford Falcon in-line sixes in them, the car is a Chrysler Centura from Australia if you have a good look @ the badge with a 4.0 litre smaller badge under it which denotes a 245 Aussie Hemi engine.

    • @yourallbrainwashed
      @yourallbrainwashed 4 года назад +4

      @@ptk4476 lol. Wtf.. that's horrible. I hate videos like that. RUclips channel fact verse is worse. Nothing but that stock photos.

  • @joebeastyg5686
    @joebeastyg5686 5 лет назад

    And this is why we said Make America Great AGAIN in 2016! There ain't no college that could possibly pump out the kind of determination and pride as seen in the people in this video.

  • @CapeAnnImages
    @CapeAnnImages 5 лет назад +13

    I've always wanted to know more about them, great video! Here in Gloucester, Ma you see them on the streets hauling trailers and containers between the huge freezer warehouses that ring the harbor.

    • @john-mo9jk
      @john-mo9jk 2 года назад

      from east main st to roger st

  • @billglenn10
    @billglenn10 5 лет назад +3

    Great video - I've always seen these trucks - there are a lot in our area - now I know a lot more about them...

  • @vanmanmike
    @vanmanmike 2 года назад

    Wanted to say that through my years of driving yard trucks for a living that I have driven all brands and pretty much they are all just copies of the Ottawa with just one exception, quality. Nothing stands the test of time like an Ottawa. Great wok in Kansas.

  • @CycolacFan
    @CycolacFan 5 лет назад +67

    Fire then a flood, bet they were preparing for locusts next...

  • @Species-lj8wh
    @Species-lj8wh 5 лет назад +2

    Ottawa. Saving time and truckers shoulders since 1958.