Jump to content

chris1953

Bulldog
  • Posts

    62
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Everything posted by chris1953

  1. The Trucknet UK Forum has a topic on Mack trucks with plenty of detail of the Macks on British roads. There is a road test done with a Mack for the British transport magazine "Truck." April 1978. A very favorable result and I thought it would only be a matter of time before we were all running around in Macks. Alas, that was not the case. http://www.trucknetuk.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=127603
  2. Rynart are still in business and Rinus Rynart still takes an active interest in the company. They have the contract to supply the armed forces in Afghanistan with fresh food and run fridges overland from Westrn Europe to Kabul. Most of their drivers are from Estonia and neighboring states and ,alas, the trucks are no longer Macks. Er-San had a big mixed fleet of Macks and Fiats. Their base was on the western outskirts of Istanbul, just a few hundred yards from the Londra Camp. Their workshops were very handy for any repairs needed for any make of truck. A most friendly and helpful place but it was a bit disconcerting to see a couple of 12 year old boys stripping down a motor ready for a head-gasket change while the men sat around smoking and drinking tea. LKW Walter are still around although they don't have their own trucks. They are like C H Robinson, they have plenty of work and give it to the operators willing to work for the least amount of money. I pulled fro them from 1999 to 2004; up until all the east European countries joined the European Union. Overnight LKW Walters halved the rate. OHS were owned by a Turkish gentleman, OH Sutil; known to everyone as "Sooty." He loved everything American and especially Mack trucks. The fleet was based in Rainham, Essex, England, and ran to most Middle-East destinations. The drivers were a mix of Brits and Turks; great guys to run with and always helpful when crossing borders and dealing with paperwork. Besides Macks, Sooty had two GMC Astros with V8 Detroits and Allison transmissions.
  3. Yes. I have been living in the truck for two years now; since I retired.
  4. That photo of the San Jose Mack at the Londra Camp brings back memories. That was a regular watering hole just outside Istanbul and every west European truck driver would pull in there on the way to the Middle East. I stopped there many times between 1983 to 1986 and there was always an Irani registered Mack F700 with trailer parked at the gate. The story was that the Iranian driver had stabbed an Iraqi driver to death in the restaurant while arguing about Sunni and Shia religion differences. Like all the truck stops on the Middle-East run; it had a bit of an edge to it.
  5. No. The lights and the siren funded the build.
  6. Home Sweet Home. February 2020.
  7. Sunset on the beach at Puerto Penasco, Sonora, Mexico.
  8. Gulf Coast camping at Magnolia Beach, Texas.
  9. Winter sunshine at BLM site at Imperial Dam, near Yuma.
  10. Here is a link to a video of the exterior and interior that I made at the same time.
  11. It was up near Syracuse, NY, from 1989 to 2004. Then served 10 years in Mercer County, Missouri.
  12. Here are a few more pictures; as you see it is still in the truck.
  13. A 2500 watt inverter would be enough for me. The main reason the generator is coming out is because I want to get the truck registered as a motor home and need direct access from the drivers seat to the living area. It sits right behind the cab in the middle of the box. The truck is a R688 FC. I'll try and get some more photos posted soon.
  14. The problem with this type of generator is that you have to run the truck engine to get it to work. I'm thinking that I might as well have an inverter. Hydraulic generators need something to drive the pump. In theory this could work with a farm tractor, a wind turbine or a water wheel.
×
×
  • Create New...