My dad's gone now but I still have his Pacific and his Hayes logging trucks! I found a Ford C series that was a racecar transporter with the race car and tool boxes and extra wheels for the car all in place as it was parked in 1969! Found it in the third barn which was their shop on a farm I was do the demolition of for condos! I photographed everything in the barn took everything out, hired the Amish to disassemble the barn! Because it had been built by the Amish in the late 1800s early 1900s! Three days with my equipment doing the heavy lifting they had it apart and it took 6 days for them to reassemble it with my equipment doing the heavy lifting! Put the shop back together inside as it was in the pictures I took!
The pictures don’t match the audio. There was only one actual photo of the POWERLINER. The whole section on the WHITE FREIGHTLINER missed the whole point of the purpose that Leroy James set out to accomplish!
Cabovers were the major trucks used in over the road due to length laws. The long nose or even the anteater design is old but now you have to order a cab over if you want one
I am disappointed at the number of incorrect images the K100 Aerodyne for example, showing many flat roofs and the Oshkosh M911 and showing a smaller orange plow truck. 1/10 could do better.
I realize it's difficult to get photos of many the the trucks in this video, but many you're showing are not what you've talking about. For instance, the Kenworth K100. All of the photos you showed, are K100E. But most were not areodine. Most had a flat roof, which is not the areodine. 😢 FYI: the E in K100E, stood for economy. I believe that version was introduced in the '70's. Before that there was an A, B, & C. They skipped D.
My uncle had a Kenny Bubble when I was little. The Kenny K-100E Aerodyne blew away that "Powerliner", so many truckers hated that truck. Was nicknamed "Flatliners" lol.
The first truck to be called a Bull Nose was the 1948 Kenworth 500 Series COE. The first modern COE was built by White Motor Company in 1932 and it was called a Camel Back Model
@@CharlesR.SteinruckIII It does not keep everyone i have known since childhood call those kenny's bull nose. I have never in my life heard those referred to as bubble nose
With regard to the title, I believe all of these trucks existed and most of them did not strike me as "bizarre". Overall, this video is shit as the pictures are often unrelated to the text (which was frequently inaccurate). You'll need to do a lot better to get a "thumbs up" from me.
More AI in correct rubbish
My dad's gone now but I still have his Pacific and his Hayes logging trucks! I found a Ford C series that was a racecar transporter with the race car and tool boxes and extra wheels for the car all in place as it was parked in 1969! Found it in the third barn which was their shop on a farm I was do the demolition of for condos! I photographed everything in the barn took everything out, hired the Amish to disassemble the barn! Because it had been built by the Amish in the late 1800s early 1900s! Three days with my equipment doing the heavy lifting they had it apart and it took 6 days for them to reassemble it with my equipment doing the heavy lifting! Put the shop back together inside as it was in the pictures I took!
Really sick of seeing AI generated INCORRECT bs! Friggin STOP already!!!
Lot's of cool trucks!!
amazing content brother
My Dad drove all Freightliner cabover it was cool to climb up into the cab and even go for a ride 😊
You never mention once that cabovers were required in the 50s and 60s due to vehicle length restrictions.
So, pretty much every truck was a “Cabover” not a LongBonnet? 😂
The pictures don’t match the audio. There was only one actual photo of the POWERLINER. The whole section on the WHITE FREIGHTLINER missed the whole point of the purpose that Leroy James set out to accomplish!
Designed to garner comments. I've yet to find an accurate AI narrated video.
Yea. My panties got wadded up right when I started the video.😢
Cabovers were the major trucks used in over the road due to length laws. The long nose or even the anteater design is old but now you have to order a cab over if you want one
I am disappointed at the number of incorrect images the K100 Aerodyne for example, showing many flat roofs and the Oshkosh M911 and showing a smaller orange plow truck. 1/10 could do better.
I realize it's difficult to get photos of many the the trucks in this video, but many you're showing are not what you've talking about. For instance, the Kenworth K100. All of the photos you showed, are K100E. But most were not areodine. Most had a flat roof, which is not the areodine. 😢 FYI: the E in K100E, stood for economy. I believe that version was introduced in the '70's. Before that there was an A, B, & C. They skipped D.
None of those trucks are bizarre
I drove a Pete 372 and it was a great truck. It was not anything like a european truck. It was roomy and comfortable and also rode very nice.
good day
Detroit Diesels are awesome.
Too much intro.
My uncle had a Kenny Bubble when I was little. The Kenny K-100E Aerodyne blew away that "Powerliner", so many truckers hated that truck. Was nicknamed "Flatliners" lol.
bullnose
I drove a 372 many years ago. The front was nicknamed a football helmet.
The first cab over is called a Bull Nose
The first truck to be called a Bull Nose was the 1948 Kenworth 500 Series COE. The first modern COE was built by White Motor Company in 1932 and it was called a Camel Back Model
@@CharlesR.SteinruckIII It does not keep everyone i have known since childhood call those kenny's bull nose. I have never in my life heard those referred to as bubble nose
You need a better AI narrator. Or maybe...i dunno...actually hire a human to read the script? Automatic downvote.
Why is that guy wearing shorts and gloves?😅😅
You need something to do?
КИНОКРУТ ИЗ ТЕБЯ НЕВАЖНЫЙ, ПО 10 РАЗ ПОКАЗЫВАЕШ ЭПИЗОД.
Useless
With regard to the title, I believe all of these trucks existed and most of them did not strike me as "bizarre". Overall, this video is shit as the pictures are often unrelated to the text (which was frequently inaccurate). You'll need to do a lot better to get a "thumbs up" from me.
Overuse of the word “utilitarian”