I drove most of those trucks. Brought back LOTS of memories. No air ride truck with no air ride seats and no A/C and no power steering and no cruise control. Our cruise control was ram a stick on top of the fuel pedal and under the dash. A/C was two windows open and drive fast. My three favorite trucks were a 1959 B 61 Mack, a 1962 Emeryville, and a 1978 COE White Freightliner one of the last, one of the few with a 1978 title made in November 1977. Worked hard but had fun. You didn't care whose name was on the doors, if someone was broke down, you stopped to help. That doesn't happen today. A little over three years ago after a little over 54 years of driving truck , I retired. I didn't see it all but I did see 40 states and British Columbia and Ontario, Canada. It wasn't really a job but it was fun while it lasted. It's what you make of it. Today they have it over regulated and some of the regulations are not safe. There isn't one truck driver in Washington that makes the rules. There is a BIG difference between driving a truck and being a truck driver. Sadly today there are a lot of steering wheel holders. FEW truck drivers.
Bruce, I just wanna say I am not one to comment much, but have been watching you for a cpl of years now and I was skeptical of you at first, with all the corny skits and stunts you used to do. But now I see the direction you have taken your channel and I really like it! You have come a long way in a short time and I congratulate you on all these new endeavors you have taken on. I think that the choices you have made will greatly grow your channel! Keep up the good work and the more serious side with all the business aspects, we like seeing all that too!
Dummy axle is usually called a Tag Axle ... They saved weight over a second diff. Aluminum frames were to save weight along with aluminum front axles and cabs. Usually day cabs ... Aluminum wheels and a Jimmy 2-stroke. Those jimmy's were usually a few hundred pounds less than inline big sixes. It was all about "Bridge Formula" for gross weight. IIRC it was 73,400 lbs at 65' overall out here in the west. So the goal was to get as close to 23,000 for the truck & trailer. That was so you could bid 50,000# load 😁 Truck weight does not earn money. Only loads pay ...
Those 8V92-96 series Detroit engines were very reliable easy to work on and could make good power and were easy to turn up. They also had a unique sound with the supercharger and turbo together. Aluminum frame all boiled down to weight and corrosion. Sad to see those tractors and older cars out there sitting wasting away. They need to be put into the hands of people willing to restore them and them great again.
I love these videos of the junk yard tours. I drove some of them old trucks. GMC mainly. The leaf springs never gave an inch. Very rough driving truck.we had A/C just had to roll the windows down. Plus they had a ton of engine noise in the cab. Trucks have come a long way.
I applaud your decision ! Life is short, and time away from your family can never be recaptured. In the end, they are just toys, toys you'll never have enough time to enjoy. Plus, they cost money to maintain. Dead batteries from no use, leaks develop, tires go flat. Memories with the family are more valuable. Best of luck.
Those aluminum frames, if I recall, came out to help reduce vehicle weight to haul more freight because the length laws weren't what they are today or something along those lines.
I was around back in those days when those trucks were still running the road the big heavy springs you were looking at were back breakers. I drove for 50 years from 1973 and retired in 2023.
'70s drove a Chevy Titan cabover 12v71 12 cylinder two stroke 13 speed. Hauling yellow pine and treated lumber out of East Texas. 3 log books funnel with hose through the drivers floor getting paid $0.10 a mile. Hardcore trucking. Don't know why we need ELDs😂
In the UK we have truck shows called truckfest. These shows we get RUclips stars etc to come as guests. Would love to see you and the guys come to them bruce
Omg, a cool grave Jard of semi trucks which would have a good potential for will it start. At the beginning of the video, a green freightliner was parked and made me think are you going to BUY the green freightliner that you did a video on over 2 months ago?? Great video full of American history 😎👍
BRUCE I BEEN AROUND SINCE YOU WAS BUMPIN UPCHURCH IN THE SHOP WORKING. DONT WORRY ABOUT ANYF THESE HATERS YOUR A GOODOL BOY AN YOU HELP WHO EVER THE YOU WANT!!!!
That aluminum frame thickness was equivalent to double frame steel rails. The problem with double frame steel rails is over time up north the frames would produce rust jacking and would start separating the frame rails to the point where the frame was no longer structural. Aluminum would alleviate that until the aluminum would start corroding itself. The extra cost of aluminum became cost prohibitive and the manufactures went back to steel.
Those old old 2 stroke Detroits we called them double breastfed Yamaha. That tour you did reminded my of the trucks when I started driving truck in 1972.
24:33 Tell Tim he'll buy it especially if it has that kind of power he'll use it to move the boats especially the oversize boats that's perfect to do heavy haul long distance especially when that trailer frame is extended
I've always been a fan of the "will it runs". A lot of people think they're boring, but you never know what is gonna happen, so there is the excitement of seeing that old girl fire up. And seeing them on the road again. Plus, you can make some money buying the cheap ones and flipping them. I just love that old steel. In the days before DEF.
I guess I am from "back in the day". Started driving in 1970 with a F Model Mack cabover. No p/s or air con, no air ride Very low power, 237 mighty horses. Then I went to a GMC cabover, then an International Transtar Eagle, then a Freightliner conventional with "all" the goodies. Air ride seat, power steering, air conditioning. 400hp 'big cam' Cummins and a 10speed. 3million miles was enough. Like your videos, thanks for doing them. This retired old driver appreciates them.
Being a child of the late 60s and 70s, also, being a Farm Kid from Illinois... I love anything cabover, preferably and old IH Transtar! No frills work-a-holic truck to the core!
These type of videos make me feel old. I remember driving several of these trucks. I learned to drive in a 1985 Ford ltl 9000 with a 350 Cat and a 42 inch flat top bunk. Been dreaming of restoring one like that.
Back in the day when I started Trucking nearly 70s was very rare to see a truck with a lot of chrome. Lots of trucks had a spring in shock as suspension for the driver somewhere just fix seats to the floor. Most suspensions were either spring Hendriksen or what we used to call hockey puck suspension in Canada, which was actually rubber. That one truck you were looking at is a along those GMC don’t see many of them back in the day Dodge used to have the big horn cracker boxes. There was some really cool trucks. People didn’t have air conditioning unless it was 270 lolwindows down at 70 miles an hour. Very cool to see all these old trucks.
Ok now your video did it all that stuff you were talking about is what I started driving in the early 80 I spent 40 + years driving those trucks I first started driving a 67 kw with a comings 262 with a 5 and a 4. And Henderson rubber pad rear supination
Where is this museum ? I remember the Jimmy's with the two stroke 10 speeds which would slam your fillings loose cause no air seats. Great city truck in chicago!
@ 14:25 the bullet hole is from a glad hand. Someone forgot to disconnect the glad hands and pulled out from the trailer. The coil air lines pulled the glad hands from the trialer into the back wall causing the hole.
With anything in life, you have to do what is right for you. Sled pulling was right 18 months ago, but not so much now. Is it frustrating that you dont finish your projects...yeah, but you always keep us entertained, So that's cool. Take care mate...from Australia.
Have worked on alot of these trucks in this video. Brings back alot of great memories!! Standard wrenches, no computer needed to diagnose, just some common sense!!
I drove my share of all leaf spring trucks and they all had 8.25-20, 9.00-20, or the bouncy 10.00-20's on them hauling coal and slag with the old leaf springs and split rim Bias Ply 10.00-20's equaled a bouncing bronco day in and out of the mines to the steel mills or the power plant. You knew that you were working a 12/14 HR day back in the day before the electronic log book and the pencil ✏️ did all the work!😉 I hope you have a great afternoon and I miss driving the old Western Star cranking through the gears and splitting them up and down with the transmission and rear end both. Always loaded at the maximum weight and never over loaded!☺️😉😃
Aluminum frames were popular for lighter weight, but corrosion and cracking were what led to them falling out of favor. They tended to “ride” a bit smoother to boot….that truck “junk yard” has some pretty sweet pieces in there that would make great hobby trucks!
@ Bruce !!! I'm so excited to see new will it starts. I've watched all of your videos. The only two I watch are You and ViceGrip Garage! Keep doing what u do! Much love from Knoxville, Tennessee!!!!! It would be nice to get to meet you and your crew.. I just lost My Bestfriend my #1 My Mom. I've been so depressed. Your videos and Derek's really help keep my mind occupied. Thank all of you! Much Love and God Bless!!!!
Congratulations 🎉💯 Bruce Wilson 😄 I do not blame you bro sell it all post on the Facebook store and even Craigslist bruh...!! Your wife and beautiful children comes first.!! And I wouldn't give a crap what anybody has to say in these comments..!! Keep up the great work and awesome content.
Yes I can imagine trucking back in the day. I stated at 18 runing local & at 21 went OTR for almost 40 yrs. 82 now . Igot hurt in 2000 had to retire. Still miss trucking. Dave
I mean I'm sad bruce is selling business expense but im happy he is going back to will it starts why I started watching him so keep up up the content Bruce
You did not fall by climbing into the sleeper, 14:00 the bed was just below the window, the bed is missing, under the bed was your tool box. The things I could tell you about those days, and the things you are wrong about.
Whoever owns these "WORKHORSES OF YESTERYEAR" has nothing but treasures. A person like me who loves, and has a passion for "RESTORING", WOULD GIVE ANYTHING JUST TO BE ABLE BRING THESE SLEEPING GIANTS BACK TO LIFE. The Truck he showed at "9:00" DODGE CAB OVER, I, for one, would call it a "DREAM COME TRUE" to be able to find one and fully restore it, And if course put a new paint job on it, Top it all off with something that trucks haven't had in years: "CHROME!" This is a RESTORE MANS or a MUSEUMS TREASURE CHEST INDEED. P.S: How many people here are old enough to remember the MOVIE "WHITE LINE FEVER" STARRING THE LATE "JAN MICHAEL VINCENT," AND HIS DODGE CAB-OVER "THE BLUE MULE?"
The kenworth you thought was a peterbilt belonged to a company that is still in business in Lexington KY. Carty & Carty pretty cool seeing an old truck with a company still in business.
The blue international eagle transtar, my grandfather drove that truck for white county lumber company. I have pictures of me and him next to that truck when I was a baby.
I drove a lot of those old cabovers in the 80's! I was a teenager washing trucks for the company my dad worked for. I learned how to drive a truck before a car!
Back in the day when the overall length limit here in the USA was shorter, cabovers were the king of the roads. These days, most of the cabovers you see on the roads are only fire trucks, garbage trucks, yard trucks, crane trucks, front discharge cement trucks, concrete pumper trucks, & non semi trucks like those smaller size ones.
I had a 1956 Dodge 1000 COE. 318 Detroit and a 4and 4 two Axle no sleeper and a ran up and down the west coast. I put a tool box in the jump seat and ran the air seat up all the way. And slept in the cab with a sleeping bag. No A/C no radio just my CB and a harmonica. never could play the dare thing. pulled 27ft high cub vans and three log books to look legal. welded an aluminum frame that was broke in half under the fifth wheel. It was a 1958 KW.
Every time I see gm cab overs I hope to see a chevy titan 90 with a Deere engine. Yes I said Deere. They only used them a short while and only in the titan not in sister truck gmc astro. It would be so awesome to see one
I drove most of those trucks. Brought back LOTS of memories. No air ride truck with no air ride seats and no A/C and no power steering and no cruise control. Our cruise control was ram a stick on top of the fuel pedal and under the dash. A/C was two windows open and drive fast. My three favorite trucks were a 1959 B 61 Mack, a 1962 Emeryville, and a 1978 COE White Freightliner one of the last, one of the few with a 1978 title made in November 1977. Worked hard but had fun. You didn't care whose name was on the doors, if someone was broke down, you stopped to help. That doesn't happen today. A little over three years ago after a little over 54 years of driving truck , I retired. I didn't see it all but I did see 40 states and British Columbia and Ontario, Canada. It wasn't really a job but it was fun while it lasted. It's what you make of it. Today they have it over regulated and some of the regulations are not safe. There isn't one truck driver in Washington that makes the rules. There is a BIG difference between driving a truck and being a truck driver. Sadly today there are a lot of steering wheel holders. FEW truck drivers.
Bruce, I just wanna say I am not one to comment much, but have been watching you for a cpl of years now and I was skeptical of you at first, with all the corny skits and stunts you used to do. But now I see the direction you have taken your channel and I really like it! You have come a long way in a short time and I congratulate you on all these new endeavors you have taken on. I think that the choices you have made will greatly grow your channel! Keep up the good work and the more serious side with all the business aspects, we like seeing all that too!
Dummy axle is usually called a Tag Axle ... They saved weight over a second diff. Aluminum frames were to save weight along with aluminum front axles and cabs. Usually day cabs ... Aluminum wheels and a Jimmy 2-stroke. Those jimmy's were usually a few hundred pounds less than inline big sixes. It was all about "Bridge Formula" for gross weight. IIRC it was 73,400 lbs at 65' overall out here in the west. So the goal was to get as close to 23,000 for the truck & trailer. That was so you could bid 50,000# load 😁
Truck weight does not earn money. Only loads pay ...
Those 8V92-96 series Detroit engines were very reliable easy to work on and could make good power and were easy to turn up. They also had a unique sound with the supercharger and turbo together.
Aluminum frame all boiled down to weight and corrosion.
Sad to see those tractors and older cars out there sitting wasting away. They need to be put into the hands of people willing to restore them and them great again.
I love these videos of the junk yard tours. I drove some of them old trucks. GMC mainly. The leaf springs never gave an inch. Very rough driving truck.we had A/C just had to roll the windows down. Plus they had a ton of engine noise in the cab. Trucks have come a long way.
I applaud your decision ! Life is short, and time away from your family can never be recaptured. In the end, they are just toys, toys you'll never have enough time to enjoy. Plus, they cost money to maintain. Dead batteries from no use, leaks develop, tires go flat. Memories with the family are more valuable. Best of luck.
Those aluminum frames, if I recall, came out to help reduce vehicle weight to haul more freight because the length laws weren't what they are today or something along those lines.
Hi from France, wow,that old Cabover Kenworth with that 3408,not very common,i'd love to drive it.
Some long distance 'will it make it home" type videos in a semi would be really cool
I was around back in those days when those trucks were still running the road the big heavy springs you were looking at were back breakers. I drove for 50 years from 1973 and retired in 2023.
'70s drove a Chevy Titan cabover 12v71 12 cylinder two stroke 13 speed. Hauling yellow pine and treated lumber out of East Texas. 3 log books funnel with hose through the drivers floor getting paid $0.10 a mile. Hardcore trucking. Don't know why we need ELDs😂
In the UK we have truck shows called truckfest. These shows we get RUclips stars etc to come as guests. Would love to see you and the guys come to them bruce
Holy SH!T Bruce, but that aluminum frame truck build it and polish that frame to a shine, trophy winner for sure!!!
That would look great all polished! I wonder if there are any big cracks in that frame??? 🤔
Some cool old trucks. Love that aluminum framed, V-8 Cat KW Cabover. (K-100?). Brings me back to my old days.
I actually drove a 74IH cabover when it was brand new, it had a big cam 400 with a 13 speed
Love all of your videos keep them coming Bruce
Man the second junk yard we totally need more keep on it so we can have updates plz 🙏
Omg, a cool grave Jard of semi trucks which would have a good potential for will it start. At the beginning of the video, a green freightliner was parked and made me think are you going to BUY the green freightliner that you did a video on over 2 months ago??
Great video full of American history 😎👍
Man, what you do is your business. Always gonna have people criticizing what you do. I Enjoy your channel.
😂
mom😅
Would love to see buying an old truck a few states out, getting it to run and drive it back!!
BRUCE I BEEN AROUND SINCE YOU WAS BUMPIN UPCHURCH IN THE SHOP WORKING. DONT WORRY ABOUT ANYF THESE HATERS YOUR A GOODOL BOY AN YOU HELP WHO EVER THE YOU WANT!!!!
Oh man a International Transtar. My favorite truck.
Hey Bruce, I love the channel, keep doing you!
Hello Bruce! I think it would be nice if you could get a trailer for the side-by-side to haul the truck for your son! Keep on keeping on '!...
Some of us out here dont have to imagine being alive "Back in the day" as you put it Bruce. We were alive back in the day and drove those trucks.
That aluminum frame thickness was equivalent to double frame steel rails. The problem with double frame steel rails is over time up north the frames would produce rust jacking and would start separating the frame rails to the point where the frame was no longer structural. Aluminum would alleviate that until the aluminum would start corroding itself. The extra cost of aluminum became cost prohibitive and the manufactures went back to steel.
Memories. Making my back hurt.
There is a needle nose Pete down the street sitting in a lot. It ran about 20 years ago.
I think the aluminum frames were used to save weight for some heavy haul trucks, a couple 100lb extra you could haul and make $
Really cool old trucks
That is a bunch of old trucks..
Thanks for sharing.
Those old old 2 stroke Detroits we called them double breastfed Yamaha. That tour you did reminded my of the trucks when I started driving truck in 1972.
1979 mack 3 Axle 400 big cam cummins Aluminum frame was the most comfortable mack we had in a 13 truck fleet,only on with the Aluminum frame
With camel back suspension 😉👍!!
Love them old salvages❤
Bruce, my dad worked at GMC Truck & Bus, I still remember those Cracker Boxes & the 9000 series GMC's sitting on the lot after assembly.
Hi Bruce love the old school trucks can build one as a project trucks it would be cool to see them back to life
24:33 Tell Tim he'll buy it especially if it has that kind of power he'll use it to move the boats especially the oversize boats that's perfect to do heavy haul long distance especially when that trailer frame is extended
Im glad to here that your doing will it start video's again i liked watching them
I've always been a fan of the "will it runs". A lot of people think they're boring, but you never know what is gonna happen, so there is the excitement of seeing that old girl fire up. And seeing them on the road again. Plus, you can make some money buying the cheap ones and flipping them. I just love that old steel. In the days before DEF.
You should do a will it start on that old Chevy 90. They are a very rare semi.
I guess I am from "back in the day". Started driving in 1970 with a F Model Mack cabover. No p/s or air con, no air ride
Very low power, 237 mighty horses. Then I went to a GMC cabover, then an International Transtar Eagle, then a Freightliner
conventional with "all" the goodies. Air ride seat, power steering, air conditioning. 400hp 'big cam' Cummins and a 10speed.
3million miles was enough. Like your videos, thanks for doing them. This retired old driver appreciates them.
Alot of sweet restoration rigs Bruce. I like that Crackerbox and I seen a 352 as well. Just alot of neat projects. Cabover heaven.
Oh plz go back there and do some will it starts. All those old trucks. I love the sound of a 2 stroke diesel
Man there's some Bad Ass trucks there !!
Being a child of the late 60s and 70s, also, being a Farm Kid from Illinois... I love anything cabover, preferably and old IH Transtar! No frills work-a-holic truck to the core!
Aluminum frames were lighter, allowing more payload.
These type of videos make me feel old. I remember driving several of these trucks. I learned to drive in a 1985 Ford ltl 9000 with a 350 Cat and a 42 inch flat top bunk. Been dreaming of restoring one like that.
I was hoping that you were going to find an old Werner Enterprises cabover in that pile of trucks.
Back in the day when I started Trucking nearly 70s was very rare to see a truck with a lot of chrome. Lots of trucks had a spring in shock as suspension for the driver somewhere just fix seats to the floor. Most suspensions were either spring Hendriksen or what we used to call hockey puck suspension in Canada, which was actually rubber. That one truck you were looking at is a along those GMC don’t see many of them back in the day Dodge used to have the big horn cracker boxes. There was some really cool trucks. People didn’t have air conditioning unless it was 270 lolwindows down at 70 miles an hour. Very cool to see all these old trucks.
Ok now your video did it all that stuff you were talking about is what I started driving in the early 80 I spent 40 + years driving those trucks I first started driving a 67 kw with a comings 262 with a 5 and a 4. And Henderson rubber pad rear supination
Where is this museum ? I remember the Jimmy's with the two stroke 10 speeds which would slam your fillings loose cause no air seats. Great city truck in chicago!
Loved all the old tractors
@ 14:25 the bullet hole is from a glad hand. Someone forgot to disconnect the glad hands and pulled out from the trailer. The coil air lines pulled the glad hands from the trialer into the back wall causing the hole.
With anything in life, you have to do what is right for you. Sled pulling was right 18 months ago, but not so much now. Is it frustrating that you dont finish your projects...yeah, but you always keep us entertained, So that's cool. Take care mate...from Australia.
Aluminum frames were used for weight reduction allowing the truck to haul heavier.
Wow good truck
Have worked on alot of these trucks in this video. Brings back alot of great memories!! Standard wrenches, no computer needed to diagnose, just some common sense!!
I drove my share of all leaf spring trucks and they all had 8.25-20, 9.00-20, or the bouncy 10.00-20's on them hauling coal and slag with the old leaf springs and split rim Bias Ply 10.00-20's equaled a bouncing bronco day in and out of the mines to the steel mills or the power plant. You knew that you were working a 12/14 HR day back in the day before the electronic log book and the pencil ✏️ did all the work!😉 I hope you have a great afternoon and I miss driving the old Western Star cranking through the gears and splitting them up and down with the transmission and rear end both. Always loaded at the maximum weight and never over loaded!☺️😉😃
Aluminum frames were popular for lighter weight, but corrosion and cracking were what led to them falling out of favor. They tended to “ride” a bit smoother to boot….that truck “junk yard” has some pretty sweet pieces in there that would make great hobby trucks!
Favorite video! My dad had a Dodge v8 cab over & it went! But wow was it cold in the winter!
@ Bruce !!! I'm so excited to see new will it starts. I've watched all of your videos. The only two I watch are You and ViceGrip Garage! Keep doing what u do! Much love from Knoxville, Tennessee!!!!! It would be nice to get to meet you and your crew.. I just lost My Bestfriend my #1 My Mom. I've been so depressed. Your videos and Derek's really help keep my mind occupied. Thank all of you! Much Love and God Bless!!!!
Definitely looking forward to will it starts and cross country truck adventures
Congratulations 🎉💯 Bruce Wilson 😄 I do not blame you bro sell it all post on the Facebook store and even Craigslist bruh...!! Your wife and beautiful children comes first.!! And I wouldn't give a crap what anybody has to say in these comments..!! Keep up the great work and awesome content.
Kids are growing like weeds, good to hear about your progress and choices to invest more into the wife and kids. Good on ya Bruce.
would love to see a classic semi show someday
Yes I can imagine trucking back in the day. I stated at 18 runing local & at 21 went OTR for almost 40 yrs. 82 now . Igot hurt in 2000 had to retire. Still miss trucking. Dave
Bruce that would be a great video seeing you do a will it start and drive it home in a Pete or cab over. Great idea bro!
You’re going to love Cookeville. There are some awesome roads here I’ve been here most most of my life.
I mean I'm sad bruce is selling business expense but im happy he is going back to will it starts why I started watching him so keep up up the content Bruce
You did not fall by climbing into the sleeper, 14:00 the bed was just below the window, the bed is missing, under the bed was your tool box. The things I could tell you about those days, and the things you are wrong about.
Don't worry bout them wasps, that's just the Tennessee state bird
Man that green GMC by the pond, that was way too cool. I could see me swapping that to a modern chassis 👍🏻🙌🏼👊🏼🔧🔧🔧🔧
That green one you showed in the beginning is cool start it up what a cool collection. You should have these
10:00 is really old but stylish!
10:00 Thats a cool truck! Thats a rare truck actually!
You should get a old school truck and use it to do the sled pulling drag racing and up hill racing
Whoever owns these
"WORKHORSES OF YESTERYEAR" has nothing but treasures.
A person like me who loves, and has a passion for "RESTORING",
WOULD GIVE ANYTHING JUST TO BE ABLE BRING THESE SLEEPING GIANTS BACK TO LIFE.
The Truck he showed at "9:00"
DODGE CAB OVER,
I, for one, would call it a
"DREAM COME TRUE" to be able to find one and fully restore it,
And if course put a new paint job on it,
Top it all off with something that trucks haven't had in years:
"CHROME!"
This is a RESTORE MANS or a MUSEUMS TREASURE CHEST INDEED.
P.S: How many people here are old enough to remember the MOVIE
"WHITE LINE FEVER"
STARRING THE LATE
"JAN MICHAEL VINCENT,"
AND HIS DODGE CAB-OVER
"THE BLUE MULE?"
Rode many miles, with the old man, in an ‘80 IH cabover. It ran with Cat power under it
Hello from Moosomin,Saskatchewan,Canada you have great videos and great at communicating. Thanks for sharing. 😊😊😊
Love that little cab over
The kenworth you thought was a peterbilt belonged to a company that is still in business in Lexington KY. Carty & Carty pretty cool seeing an old truck with a company still in business.
Love cab overs
I know the sled owner, Justin is a really good guy
The blue international eagle transtar, my grandfather drove that truck for white county lumber company. I have pictures of me and him next to that truck when I was a baby.
I drove a lot of those old cabovers in the 80's! I was a teenager washing trucks for the company my dad worked for. I learned how to drive a truck before a car!
Killer cut and great job on the cut edit’s 🔥
The brown one at 8:30 is badass. Well I guess they all are
Thats the right decision-FAMILY FIRST - THE BEST keep up the channel luv it
Love the coe Pete. Like blue lights on business expense
You should get an old truck paint it blue and do that stuff to it. Would be awesome
Bruce I started driving a brockway in 1974 . Springs no power steering an no air seat .
Hell yeah more cab overs.
Back in the day when the overall length limit here in the USA was shorter, cabovers were the king of the roads. These days, most of the cabovers you see on the roads are only fire trucks, garbage trucks, yard trucks, crane trucks, front discharge cement trucks, concrete pumper trucks, & non semi trucks like those smaller size ones.
I work at Charlie Keltons GMC in the early 80s they certainly bring back memories
BIG TANKS YOU Bruce for ur time and passion
I had a 1956 Dodge 1000 COE. 318 Detroit and a 4and 4 two Axle no sleeper and a ran up and down the west coast. I put a tool box in the jump seat and ran the air seat up all the way. And slept in the cab with a sleeping bag. No A/C no radio just my CB and a harmonica. never could play the dare thing. pulled 27ft high cub vans and three log books to look legal. welded an aluminum frame that was broke in half under the fifth wheel. It was a 1958 KW.
Ol' Pullin Pete !!
Awesome video
I used to drive a 79 W900 with a small cam Cummins and 13 speed, those old KW's bring back a lot of good memories
I would be in heaven walking through all those trucks. Those are what I grew up around and on the road. A time capsule truck yard for sure..
Every time I see gm cab overs I hope to see a chevy titan 90 with a Deere engine. Yes I said Deere.
They only used them a short while and only in the titan not in sister truck gmc astro.
It would be so awesome to see one