xtremek
Well-known member
Is that your daily driver?
Nice pics of the family.
Thanks Xtremek, I would not want to have to pay the fuel bill on the big trucks I due know that.Is that your daily driver?Nice pics of the family.
Bob I want say we had something like 12 departments and 20 plus trucks in the procession for his funeral. The Church was packed and there was people standing up in the back I had never seen the church that full before. It was a Best/Worst thing I have been apart of being on the Fire Department. In my 20 years on the department have now Had 4 active members who passed away, none on a fire scene but still there with you on the trucks 1 week and the next week your having there funeral.Matt, thanks for including the Fire Department vehicle in the photos. My uncle was Chief of the volunteer fire department in Holbrook, NY in the mid-'50s and our red '68 GTO brought up the rear of his 55-mile funeral procession to New Rochelle, NY. Made the mistake of cheaping out on a pair of (Thrush) mufflers the week before so the roar was less noticeable behind the muffler-free fire trucks.
Matt, 53 years ago we didn't take a lot of photos because they cost money to develop. We ordered the car in November and picked it up in January. My parents took us out to a fancy restaurant but their '65 Buick LeSabre wouldn't hold six of us with seat belts. My mother took this Polaroid that day, a few weeks after we got the car:Any Pics of the RED GTO?



Drives. brother had leukemia battled it for 3 years. We had 1 good year of both of us being on fire department and living in same house. It was a race out the front door when pager went off that was for sure. My fire department has only had 1 fire death. The chief had a heart attack at a grass fire back in The late 80'sGreat pix. another summer has come and gone and time to get ready for winter, but happy to see you got to have a little fun with your family while the weather was decent.
Did your brother pass while fighting a fire or just a great friend to all that knew him hence the name on the truck. sorry for your loss and I hope he's still here with you in spirit.
thanks What FB group are you on that Had that post?ALF delivering a TDA via railroad boxcar.
Not for sure brother in law did the butchering at his shop. Well gutted and hung the halves then we all showed up for butchering party. Id get a Hunk and get showed what to cut and then had a bucket of Grind as all the meat scraps went into the gind pail and that will get mixed with Deer meat in a few weeks and then you have Taco meat/Spagitte meat and some burgers as well out of the 50/50 Hog and Deer. Im a novice at all this butchering stuff and learning as I go. They was a pain to get loaded in the trailer that part I due know.I hated loading hogs. How much was their live weight?

yes. Buzz saw was orginal 3 point mounted to a Ford Jubliee or 8n/2n We still have the PTO to Belt Pulley gear box that bolted to tractor and then ran Belt to power the saw. My dad made the frame the saw is now on and added the PTO shafts so that any tractor with draw bar and PTO can run the saw. Reason being in the late 70's when he went back into cutting fire wood My grandpa still farmed and the jubliee tractor was the chore tractor and was needed daily to fit into the barn driveway so to be able to shovel the cow manure into the spreader. Grandpa had 19 cows that he milked no barn cleaner it was all by pitch fork to clean. So it was 10am or so before tractor was free to be used for buzz saw work. Took 1 hour to change out draw bar and put the saw on. Saw for a few hours then have to put drawbar back on tractor at the end of the day so tractor is ready for the next day. Conver Buzz saw to simple cart and then any tractor could run the saw for the day. Tractors we had to choose from was a Allis Chalmers WD-45, Case 730 or the big ol Diesel Oliver 88 that I rember being on the farm. Still have the jubliee and most years when it wants to run it now gets put on saw duty.PTO powered?
If I think about it I'll get some pics of the PTO and gearbox setup on this now its pretty simple and has worked well the last 30 years. I have alway's wanted to run a 2 cylinder Deere on this saw just to hear the 2 cylinder lug down some but then wonder if the saw will be jerky which could be all sorts of bad on the sawing end. Tractor runs at fast idle for the buzz saw work.Interesting! We've got a couple at home I'd like to run with one of our old Deeres some day. All setup for belt drive. The 3pt mounts I've seen on PowerWagons, Jeeps, and tractors would be nice.
I don't remember how it was staked down, but it worked. Looking back, what gets me is that he was able to line up the tractor and saw so that the belt didn't walk one way or the other.I don't know if Id want to use one that is just staked down to the ground? I guess it would be fine but I would think the stakes would work loose and then your belt drive would keep falling off?
staking them down must have worked as you there are several different models of Buzz saws that was just a stand on the ground. I would think they would work themselves loose and then you loose the belt off the pulley. Or getting the tractor straight to line up the pulley as well but back then there was alot of stationary equipment powered by a pulley from a tractor.I don't remember how it was staked down, but it worked. Looking back, what gets me is that he was able to line up the tractor and saw so that the belt didn't walk one way or the other.
One laughing emoji just wasn't enough. Sorry Drives.Not to be the safety (think OSHA) guy here but do you have a quick OFF method on that beast of a saw near the blade? Looks like if you pay attention it cuts small logs quickly.
just the tractor PTO off. though if you push the saw hard the Belt will come off on that turns the saw blade but anything. The close up pic of the saw and tractor you can see the belt drive pulley system that belt will track off to the right if your pushing the saw hard on a cut and will slip off and then you have to shut off tractor and lift saw put belt back on pulley and tighten belt again. I sawed for 5 hours and had the belt slip off 1 time was on a Bigger chunk that started sawing easy then got hard and and pinched on the blade and belt came off. Happens 1 or 2 times a sawing session. If the belt is to loose it come off easier as well.Not to be the safety (think OSHA) guy here but do you have a quick OFF method on that beast of a saw near the blade? Looks like if you pay attention it cuts small logs quickly.