Jump to content

mrsmackpaul

BMT Benefactor
  • Posts

    6,445
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    79

Everything posted by mrsmackpaul

  1. Yes Mack tinware isnt cheap A fella I know with a series 1 Superliner he has had from new reckons it only seems like yesterday you could buy a brand new E9 for 20 grand I remember Mack advertising them for that sort of money Aluminium Mack step tanks 350 bucks, should of stocked up on those Paul
  2. It can be a Econodyne and a Maxidyne at the same time cant it ? I believe Economy name came about when Mack went away from Coolpower Paul
  3. The gold dogs I have seen on the older Maxidyne trucks are polished up gold like the chrome dog And yes the newer gold dogs look to be just painted Paul
  4. The Hay plains are the flattest place on earth, literally the flattest spot The only place were you can see the curvature of the earth whilst standing on the earth I know people will talk about the Bonneville salt flats but you can only tell its curved by comparing it to telegraph poles etc The Hay plains can be seen with nothing more than the naked eye
  5. The next few photos are heading out west on the southern edge of the Hay plains
  6. Spike ? , were the heck did that come from ? Trolley valve, I could sort of make that connection, but spike ? no idea 🤔 Paul
  7. My understanding it has only been this way in recent years and as others have said gold dog Maxidyne silver Thermodyne Im guessing this stopped with the Maxidyne and was just a silver dog for many years When the MP series motors arrived on the scene is around the time that the gold dog meant all Mack drive train I'm guessing it was a way of trying to capture the past gloryof something famous and tie it into the future Paul
  8. Definitely a neat old truck there Paul
  9. Maybe not all is lost yet, heads can be welded up and machined again You need a specialist shop for this but it can be done very successfully depending on were the crack is Dont feel to bad, the only people that dont make mistakes have never tried, I learnt the same way once some years ago now, my head was damaged beyond repair Paul
  10. I'm kinda strange as no doubt most of you have guessed by now, but just sitting there on a beautiful spring or autumn (fall for you lot) afternoon in my folding cheer (lawn chair) with my esky (cooler) having a cool refreshing beverage admiring this truck in the sun would be plenty for me Sometimes things are just to fantastic to muck with and this rare beauty is one of those, so original and so straight I would count myself as a very lucky man to have something this special as part of my life Each to their own but they are only original once and can never go back to been that way once changed I hope who ever buys it leaves it as it is and just maintains it Paul
  11. Yeah I think you just weld the remains of the hole up for the spoke and when finished redrill and tap in the correct spot I have welded up spokes before and ground them back into shape and never had a issue Swishman might know more about this than me Paul
  12. Looks neat as a pin, what sort of weight and length are you at with three trailers Oh and does how much horse power is needed to shift this along Paul
  13. Well unlike you blokes, I wouldn't hesitate having that truck I wouldn't change a thing, just drive and enjoy it Paul
  14. Way way back when dinosaurs roamed the earth, well maybe not that far back but you get my drift After WW2 NR Macks were plentiful in Australia but had those stupid yanky 22 inch or 24 inch tyres on spiders (daytons) Anyway this made tyres hard to get and most had the hubs machined down to accept 20 inch tubed type rims These are 22 inch tubless Could this be a simple proven option for your hubs I'm guessing thousands were done in Australia this way Thought it maybe of some help Paul
  15. A dumb question from me, they normally always are though lol Trolly valve, is that just used for pulling the trailer brakes on ? Or something else? Paul
  16. Miss Maddie is the perfect little helper by the looks of it Happy times Paul
  17. That is a well worn pedal, looking good and thanks for the update Paul
  18. A header is called a header in Australia because up until say 30 years ago we only harvested the head And the seed drill is called a combine because it combines three jobs Cultivate Seed Fertilize Even in Australia a we call things vastly different names from end of the country to the other A landing net that is used for fishing is called a didel (pronounced die dill, I have no idea how it is spelt) in the area I farmed in north Queensland Yeah I have no idea about that one either Who knows probably Italian or from that part of the world as there is a lot of Italian descendents on the sugar cane Paul
  19. Is it a combine or a header ? We call them headers in Australia and a combine I believe is what you lot call a drill Last years debacle ended up with some quality gear out and about A Massey Ferguson 587 pto on the back of the Fordson Super Major What a mess lol And six weeks later on new years eve we were done Paul
  20. Looks pretty flash to me Paul
  21. Looks like a allcrop header to me, Allis chalmers were probably the biggest manufacturer of them but I think everyone had a go at building something along those lines Paul
×
×
  • Create New...