First truck is a 1941-42 International. I used to have a '42. At 19:57, that is a (after market) turn signal control. 3 on the tree shifters were on the right side of the steering column and much stouter. That's what I learned to drive with in 1960 (1948 Studebaker). That's a GMC at 21:17. Chevy's didn't have flathead engines then, GMC's did. I had several 1937-38 GMC's. Your "alternator" is a generator. The GMC appears to have had a power take off: the levers coming out of the floor in front the driver indicate that.
Younger folks are so used to the niceties which come automatically with a modern vehicle they often don't realize that trucks and cars used to be sold downright bare bones. Turn signals were an option or you added aftermarket parts yourself if you wanted them. Heaters were an option and they even sold gasoline heaters for the cab which you had to light and had an open flame, etc. Even headlights and electric starters were often "upgrades" at an extra cost earlier on. Many older trucks had only a single rear brake light on one side, added just to keep it legal. Defroster was almost always an open electric fan pointed at the windshield which you added as an aftermarket part--and you turned it around to point at you as "air conditioning" in the summer.
Guys, two items you need. High lift jack and lightbar. One will hopefully keep you from needing the other. But its great you are out there doing this instead of gaming. The set up was full seperation. The top bin was the raw ore and it went to the ball mill then through the tromel. If it fell through it hit the conveyor belt to the roller crusher then up to the shaker table and then to the ore bin for hauling. That machine at the table was the electrical generator. The first cabin was the sleeping quarters the little one with the digging was the kitchen and yes, that was the storage for food. The other building thats barely standing was the dinning area. And also the showers and bathroom were once just to the right and back a little ways. It was a great place to work in its day. My Great uncle worked there before WW2 and after lived in Pennsylvania. But he had pictures of the mine in operation. He drove that GMC dump and was the mechanic. Everyone had a few jobs. He called the dumo the ankle biter. To dump you stood outside and you used the controls in front of the seat. But driving on those roads bounced you around and you would hit your ankles on the levers. He said if he had to go to town in it he'd tie burlap bags to his legs before he left so he could walk when he got to town. And you already know how far away that is. So your Jeep ride wasn't so bad now was it lol. Hes the reson im into mine exploring. The stories he told were amazing. Those guys were some of the toughest and hardest working people you could imagine. All that you saw was brought up in pieces and assembled there. And if they didnt have something they made it. Those guys made preppers look like cub scouts lol And the extra leaf springs are called helper springs. And that was the turn signal the two levers to the right were the split shift transmission levers. So you had a really low range and a standard.
one of my favorite mines ive watched of yours . the cabin under the trees with a creek . that place is the spot to go to get away from the world . with the creek you could grow a garden and even have some chickens and hogs . thats the spot
This is the first mining cabin I’ve seen on your channel with sewage plumbing…. Notice at 39:00 the sewer pipe in the back running into a septic tank.. (kinda curious if that was ever emptied.. lol)
Really interesting mine exploration and video of the area. I go off road at night at times too, but I have multiple LED light bars mounted on my vehicle with backup lights just in case I need them. Also carry a satellite communicator if you don't already have one for emergencies along with a strobe. I also have ham radio communication gear which I find very useful and also use Star Link for internet access. And yes I have extra emergency supplies food, water and gas. But I really like you new jeep--very nice. Thanks for sharing an awesome video. I will looking forward to you next video
That was definitely the signal light you were playing with, the shifter was certainly on the floor of that truck, it goes directly into the transmission
That 'YJ' Jeep is a good, solid basic 4X4. I've been off roading for 50+ years and I've owned about any 4X4 you can name. Honestly, the best money I ever spent and the most helpful upgrade was always a locker installed in the rear diff. It helps so much, off road, and it makes the hard stuff much softer and easier to do and reduces the strain and pounding on your vehicle.
Couple things here, first you had said it was mostly worked in the '30s, which I agree it looks like some of the original structures and stuff date back to then, but that cabin clearly was added onto probably in the seventies (brick) so they definitely worked it a long time, I guess that's why there's so much equipment and it's so well developed. Weird that you didn't find more underground activity... Also the first truck that you looked at with the flat deck on it, that is a k-series International, built from '40-'42, I have a '47 KB-5 myself. Great video!👍
Hope y’all are staying safe out there. At 19:42, you were touching the Gear Shift Lever on the transmission. 20:05, that is a Turn Signal Indicator Switch. 21:39, a Flat Head Six Cylinder Inline Motor. 21:48, that is actually called a Generator. The Alternator started being used in 1960. Ford mainly started using them in 1964 but there were a few exceptions. 41:57, looks like a Belt Buckle without the Pin for putting in Leather Hole. Definitely not a Nut because there are no Screw Threads inside of it! PS: back in the 30’s & 40’s no such descriptions as 3-On-The-Tree (think Old-School)!!!
I believe that truck has snowplow, one time and that device you thought was a shifters. Actually, the aftermarket turn signal switch and it is a floor shifter just FYI good find
Yep! It's a 1937/38 GMC. That flathead is actually a Oldsmobile 230 engine. It was very common for GMC to use Oldsmobile or Buick engines in the prewar era. They used Pontiac engines post-war, as well, if memory serves.
The lever that that you were moving on the steering column on that truck is actually the directional switch the shift lever was over in the middle where they usually are and it was shift on the column it would be on the right hand side of the column
That was a whole mill setup with a shaker table ball mill and conveyors move material up lol and that probably was a leaching tank at the end but the truck that was a turn signal you touched the transmission shifter it wasn't a 3 on the tree keep getting out there thanks for sharing heavy pans brother
It looked like the lower part of the cabin was built around a big ol rock...Cool! Do you know how they used that tumbler in the mining process? Thanks!
I wish that cabin was for sale I would buy it for $5,000 clean it up, some paint, put some doors and windows in,some furniture, beds and put in some solar power.😊👍
it's quite amazing you getting out to these mines in the middle of nowhere, but do you consider your escape routes, as in, what do you do if this or that happens, i have many years experience off-roading, and there have been the odd instances when i have been alone, which is of course is when the proverbial hits the fan - and i have a couple of times done exactly what you did, drive into a ditch, thankfully nothing worse, but as the saying goes, everything in the US is much larger, true - one of the first rules in off-roading is to never venture too far with out a friend, that is another vehicle, to tow you out when needed, take precautions such as a high lift jack, or an air bag inflated from the exhaust, chains and ropes, snatch recovery rope, obviously these days you need a phone, and phone service - driving at night definitely requires more caution, you just learnt that, a minor lapse in concentration or distraction can lead to mishaps and worse, but we humans take these things in our stride, be wise my friend and not another statistic, and if you can, do an off-road course, it will be well worth your while, PS a tip from me, at all times keep thumbs on the outside of the wheel, if the wheel spins it will bite hard, and that's a nasty injury to bare you mentioned a windless, something i associate with winches on boats to haul up anchors, i know, or at least thought this might be a brand name, but i wonder where it comes from, why are they called a windless, is it just purely a brand name? someone might know has to be said, some of these mines creep me out, probably more from watching rather than being there in person, i always had a bit of adventure in me in my younger days, i don't think it dies, but other priorities of life take over
While boat trailer winches are typically geared, a windlass often associated with a mine is really just a simple version of a winch. It consists of a drum with a crank attached to it, and a rope wrapped around the drum. They work much like a water well that you would see in old western movies, with someone cranking up a bucket full of water. They were used mostly during the early exploratory/development phase of a mining operation. If large amounts of material needed to be removed, mechanical winches or hoists would usually replace the hand-powered windlass.
And back in the day before cellphones, my worst case scenario backup plan was to be prepared to walk back to the nearest payphone from wherever that I was able to drive in to.... It's probably not a bad plan even today! 🤠
Ask a Search and Rescue worker to hear how often people rely on cell phones thinking that will save them. But they rarely get a signal off road like this, so you better let people know where you're going and when you will return, carry a topo map and signal mirror and good sturdy souls on boots to hike back many miles on rocks. Lack of water takes many who get stranded.
@@jr.6199 good point too - have a bugout bag, or survival bag - funny i still have two old compasses in my glovebox (no map), spare torches and spare cash just in case - i recently got stranded and had to yomp 5 miles to a town where i could catch a train home - then had to do two return trips before getting car fixed - be familiar with your route, know where the alternate routes take you and what's at the end of them, food, public transport etc
next time you're stuck in a rut like that with a wheel off the ground, have your buddy balance on it and try and force the entire jeep to teeter totter that wheel in the rut up, then push rocks under it.
Another very interesting explore; especially seeing the equipment left at the mining camp - thank you so much for taking us with you on that journey 👍 …but WHY O WHY are so many of you Americans gun crazy - what is it with you! And feel the need to shoot holes in everything - so utterly pointless! 🇬🇧⛏🧨⛏
@@WesternMineDetectivethat’s a very fair comment ! I never thought it was you - but I must have watched a few hundred mine exploring videos and whenever there are old vehicles lying around and/or equipment with metal panels - there are bullet holes in them! Agree I shouldn’t stereotype though ! ✌️🕊️
That rut was looking a lot less worse about 10 months ago, if that's the same spot toward the end of the trail there. ua-cam.com/video/1RRtGk8o73E/v-deo.html Those winter rains and summer tropical storm really tore up that area. We were up the other end of Indian Wells Canyon a few months ago and there was a similar rut we ended up filling in so as to avoid that predicament. Glad your machine was able to back out easily enough. ua-cam.com/video/IYR37hxIMkk/v-deo.html
SURPRISINGLY I SAW A THOUSAND HORSEPOWER VERY LOW RPM I THINK IT HAS PROBABLY BEEN USED ON A BOAT POSSIBLY A TUG BOAT DAVID ADAM GRENIS MAPLETON AVENUE BOULDER COLORADO
Looks like somebody or some people went broke and then just walked away from the whole operation. I wonder if the mine was ever profitable at all. Or maybe it was a potemken mining operation used to impress investors.
Last life. Awakened later in life. Violent past lives. My mission is also violent and will change everything. Not looking forward to it but it is my mission and am preparing. Prefer to remain anonymous but eventually everyone will know who I am. The mission hasn’t been completely revealed yet
EVERYTHING THAT DIDN'T HAVE ANY COPPER IN IT EXCEPT FOR THE SMALL ELECTRIC MOTORS THAT DON'T HAVE ENOUGH COPPER IN THEM TO MAKE IT WORTH STEALING. DAVID ADAM GRENIS MAPLETON AVENUE BOULDER COLORADO
YOU KNOW THAT NOW THAT YOU'VE SHOWN ALL THIS STUFF THAT BIG ASS GENERATOR PROBABLY HAS ENOUGH COPPER IN IT SOMEBODY WILL FIGURE OUT WHERE IT IS AND STEAL THE COPPER OUT IT YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY WRONG TO GIVE THE NAME OF THAT MIND WHATEVER IS LEFT FOR STEALING PROBABLY NOW EVEN AS SCRAP STEEL WILL SOON GONE NEVER SHOULD HAVE GIVEN THEM THE LOCATION OF THAT MINE
First truck is a 1941-42 International. I used to have a '42. At 19:57, that is a (after market) turn signal control. 3 on the tree shifters were on the right side of the steering column and much stouter. That's what I learned to drive with in 1960 (1948 Studebaker). That's a GMC at 21:17. Chevy's didn't have flathead engines then, GMC's did. I had several 1937-38 GMC's. Your "alternator" is a generator. The GMC appears to have had a power take off: the levers coming out of the floor in front the driver indicate that.
Younger folks are so used to the niceties which come automatically with a modern vehicle they often don't realize that trucks and cars used to be sold downright bare bones. Turn signals were an option or you added aftermarket parts yourself if you wanted them. Heaters were an option and they even sold gasoline heaters for the cab which you had to light and had an open flame, etc. Even headlights and electric starters were often "upgrades" at an extra cost earlier on. Many older trucks had only a single rear brake light on one side, added just to keep it legal. Defroster was almost always an open electric fan pointed at the windshield which you added as an aftermarket part--and you turned it around to point at you as "air conditioning" in the summer.
AM radios too.@@OldGeezerstoolbox
Guys, two items you need. High lift jack and lightbar. One will hopefully keep you from needing the other. But its great you are out there doing this instead of gaming. The set up was full seperation. The top bin was the raw ore and it went to the ball mill then through the tromel. If it fell through it hit the conveyor belt to the roller crusher then up to the shaker table and then to the ore bin for hauling. That machine at the table was the electrical generator. The first cabin was the sleeping quarters the little one with the digging was the kitchen and yes, that was the storage for food. The other building thats barely standing was the dinning area. And also the showers and bathroom were once just to the right and back a little ways. It was a great place to work in its day. My Great uncle worked there before WW2 and after lived in Pennsylvania. But he had pictures of the mine in operation. He drove that GMC dump and was the mechanic. Everyone had a few jobs. He called the dumo the ankle biter. To dump you stood outside and you used the controls in front of the seat. But driving on those roads bounced you around and you would hit your ankles on the levers. He said if he had to go to town in it he'd tie burlap bags to his legs before he left so he could walk when he got to town. And you already know how far away that is. So your Jeep ride wasn't so bad now was it lol. Hes the reson im into mine exploring. The stories he told were amazing. Those guys were some of the toughest and hardest working people you could imagine. All that you saw was brought up in pieces and assembled there. And if they didnt have something they made it. Those guys made preppers look like cub scouts lol
And the extra leaf springs are called helper springs. And that was the turn signal the two levers to the right were the split shift transmission levers. So you had a really low range and a standard.
Thank you so much for all the additional information that was very interesting and helpful 🇬🇧🧨⛏🧨
one of my favorite mines ive watched of yours . the cabin under the trees with a creek . that place is the spot to go to get away from the world . with the creek you could grow a garden and even have some chickens and hogs . thats the spot
absolutely !!
if I were 30 years younger- I" d be there in a heart beat !!
20:14 turn signal indicator after market, floor shift
This is the first mining cabin I’ve seen on your channel with sewage plumbing…. Notice at 39:00 the sewer pipe in the back running into a septic tank.. (kinda curious if that was ever emptied.. lol)
Really interesting mine exploration and video of the area. I go off road at night at times too, but I have multiple LED light bars mounted on my vehicle with backup lights just in case I need them. Also carry a satellite communicator if you don't already have one for emergencies along with a strobe. I also have ham radio communication gear which I find very useful and also use Star Link for internet access. And yes I have extra emergency supplies food, water and gas. But I really like you new jeep--very nice. Thanks for sharing an awesome video. I will looking forward to you next video
That was definitely the signal light you were playing with, the shifter was certainly on the floor of that truck, it goes directly into the transmission
Judging by the equipment and the buildings and other things I would say there is a large mine somewhere close by.... Keep up the good explores.
That 'YJ' Jeep is a good, solid basic 4X4. I've been off roading for 50+ years and I've owned about any 4X4 you can name. Honestly, the best money I ever spent and the most helpful upgrade was always a locker installed in the rear diff. It helps so much, off road, and it makes the hard stuff much softer and easier to do and reduces the strain and pounding on your vehicle.
You should make your buddy a part of your video... and never be without one out there !!!
Ha Ha 19:57 turn signal :-) The shifter is on the floor. Thanks for the hard work to get us the video!
Regards from Ody Slim
Couple things here, first you had said it was mostly worked in the '30s, which I agree it looks like some of the original structures and stuff date back to then, but that cabin clearly was added onto probably in the seventies (brick) so they definitely worked it a long time, I guess that's why there's so much equipment and it's so well developed. Weird that you didn't find more underground activity... Also the first truck that you looked at with the flat deck on it, that is a k-series International, built from '40-'42, I have a '47 KB-5 myself. Great video!👍
at 32.17 the air accumulator is a muffler
i think these guys were hustling shares in this mine. picture show of of equipment, ??? anyway a cool video for sure and thanks for sharing.
Total fixer upper that cabin.Surprised you couldn't get underground. Clearly, a well established mine site.
That was a neat cabin. Cool to see the equipment
Enjoyed your exploration
Having a running creek, it would be a good place to go if SHTF.
👍👍
Hope y’all are staying safe out there. At 19:42, you were touching the Gear Shift Lever on the transmission. 20:05, that is a Turn Signal Indicator Switch. 21:39, a Flat Head Six Cylinder Inline Motor. 21:48, that is actually called a Generator. The Alternator started being used in 1960. Ford mainly started using them in 1964 but there were a few exceptions. 41:57, looks like a Belt Buckle without the Pin for putting in Leather Hole. Definitely not a Nut because there are no Screw Threads inside of it! PS: back in the 30’s & 40’s no such descriptions as 3-On-The-Tree (think Old-School)!!!
love this video gosh i wish i lived in that area or in one of those cabins my kind of peace n quiet
I think buda was founded in the late 1800s and started out with gas motors and railroad equipment. Later sold to Allis-Chalmers in the 50s.
I believe that truck has snowplow, one time and that device you thought was a shifters. Actually, the aftermarket turn signal switch and it is a floor shifter just FYI good find
Very cool as always I love your adventures for sure!
Thanks again, keep up all the good work😊
1st truck appears to be 40s International Harvester KB6 or KB8 truck. 2nd one 30s or 40s GMC or Chevy.
1941-42 IHC. I had a '42. Chevy's didn't have flathead engines then but GMC's did. I had several 1938 GMC's.
Yep! It's a 1937/38 GMC.
That flathead is actually a Oldsmobile 230 engine. It was very common for GMC to use Oldsmobile or Buick engines in the prewar era. They used Pontiac engines post-war, as well, if memory serves.
Good video. Cool old equipment.
always very good videos
The two sets of leaf springs are the bottom springs are the standard pack, the top set are what make it a 1 1/2 ton.
Good video thanks 👍
I like how everything is hidden under the brush.
The lever that that you were moving on the steering column on that truck is actually the directional switch the shift lever was over in the middle where they usually are and it was shift on the column it would be on the right hand side of the column
Thanks for posting!
That was a whole mill setup with a shaker table ball mill and conveyors move material up lol and that probably was a leaching tank at the end but the truck that was a turn signal you touched the transmission shifter it wasn't a 3 on the tree keep getting out there thanks for sharing heavy pans brother
I always enjoy tours of cabins and relics. Mine exploration..next time. Thanks!
Awesome video ❤. Always interesting.
That's a generator with it's muffler on top. Not a air accumulater.
It looked like the lower part of the cabin was built around a big ol rock...Cool!
Do you know how they used that tumbler in the mining process?
Thanks!
Clean yj 😎👌
Nothing like open diffs when you need lockers
Great video! Your buddy Johnny looks familiar. Has he explored with Brent at Cerro Gordo?
Yep! That's him.
Your videos are great and I love the Jeep!!!
As long as you got Jesus that devil can’t touch you
Someone was definitely there for the long haul. Probably died and no one found him for years.
I wish that cabin was for sale I would buy it for $5,000 clean it up, some paint, put some doors and windows in,some furniture, beds and put in some solar power.😊👍
An extra long video! Christmas came early!
it's quite amazing you getting out to these mines in the middle of nowhere, but do you consider your escape routes, as in, what do you do if this or that happens, i have many years experience off-roading, and there have been the odd instances when i have been alone, which is of course is when the proverbial hits the fan - and i have a couple of times done exactly what you did, drive into a ditch, thankfully nothing worse, but as the saying goes, everything in the US is much larger, true - one of the first rules in off-roading is to never venture too far with out a friend, that is another vehicle, to tow you out when needed, take precautions such as a high lift jack, or an air bag inflated from the exhaust, chains and ropes, snatch recovery rope, obviously these days you need a phone, and phone service - driving at night definitely requires more caution, you just learnt that, a minor lapse in concentration or distraction can lead to mishaps and worse, but we humans take these things in our stride, be wise my friend and not another statistic, and if you can, do an off-road course, it will be well worth your while, PS a tip from me, at all times keep thumbs on the outside of the wheel, if the wheel spins it will bite hard, and that's a nasty injury to bare
you mentioned a windless, something i associate with winches on boats to haul up anchors, i know, or at least thought this might be a brand name, but i wonder where it comes from, why are they called a windless, is it just purely a brand name? someone might know
has to be said, some of these mines creep me out, probably more from watching rather than being there in person, i always had a bit of adventure in me in my younger days, i don't think it dies, but other priorities of life take over
While boat trailer winches are typically geared, a windlass often associated with a mine is really just a simple version of a winch.
It consists of a drum with a crank attached to it, and a rope wrapped around the drum.
They work much like a water well that you would see in old western movies, with someone cranking up a bucket full of water.
They were used mostly during the early exploratory/development phase of a mining operation. If large amounts of material needed to be removed, mechanical winches or hoists would usually replace the hand-powered windlass.
And back in the day before cellphones, my worst case scenario backup plan was to be prepared to walk back to the nearest payphone from wherever that I was able to drive in to....
It's probably not a bad plan even today! 🤠
@@straybullitt it seems that 'Windlass' then is a brand name, i was mispronounced as windless - cheers for explanation
Ask a Search and Rescue worker to hear how often people rely on cell phones thinking that will save them. But they rarely get a signal off road like this, so you better let people know where you're going and when you will return, carry a topo map and signal mirror and good sturdy souls on boots to hike back many miles on rocks. Lack of water takes many who get stranded.
@@jr.6199 good point too - have a bugout bag, or survival bag - funny i still have two old compasses in my glovebox (no map), spare torches and spare cash just in case - i recently got stranded and had to yomp 5 miles to a town where i could catch a train home - then had to do two return trips before getting car fixed - be familiar with your route, know where the alternate routes take you and what's at the end of them, food, public transport etc
Tires today, last about 2-5 years max, before they are cracked and dry rotted.
Yikes 😳👉my thumbs up for the video just made number 666.
next time you're stuck in a rut like that with a wheel off the ground, have your buddy balance on it and try and force the entire jeep to teeter totter that wheel in the rut up, then push rocks under it.
0020?!?! Holy crap it’s time for some midrats!🎉
The bars of Ivory soap are for rodent control...you read this as you're lathering your armpits with ivory soap. Ooops.
Wow I actually am in a tub right now and did just scrub my armpits
TMI@@Trash-Castle
They dont work
Is your jeep running real bad or is it my speakers? Sounds like it intermittently shuts off and has a bad miss at idle😳
only one stop light was required back then
Lemme go with you!! Haha
⭐️🇹🇷💯👍 türkiyeden selamlar
Maybe go in the daylight? Invest in a winch and jack.
Looks almost like a shaker table
A little creepy/scary content for Halloween lol
you need a lightbar on that jeep
Get a set if tire deflators. You screw them in then just drive
Another very interesting explore; especially seeing the equipment left at the mining camp - thank you so much for taking us with you on that journey 👍 …but WHY O WHY are so many of you Americans gun crazy - what is it with you! And feel the need to shoot holes in everything - so utterly pointless! 🇬🇧⛏🧨⛏
I mean, I didn’t shoot the trucks with holes.. appreciate it though. Please don’t make stereotypes though
@@WesternMineDetectivethat’s a very fair comment !
I never thought it was you - but I must have watched a few hundred mine exploring videos and whenever there are old vehicles lying around and/or equipment with metal panels - there are bullet holes in them!
Agree I shouldn’t stereotype though ! ✌️🕊️
man before your camera shut off, before you were filming the tables, the blacks in the picture were going strange...
ant yall afraid of the monsters in the desert at night time ,i hope you had some protection with you incase one of those monsters shows up
lot of peoples seeing dogmans out that way yall better be careful
That rut was looking a lot less worse about 10 months ago, if that's the same spot toward the end of the trail there. ua-cam.com/video/1RRtGk8o73E/v-deo.html Those winter rains and summer tropical storm really tore up that area. We were up the other end of Indian Wells Canyon a few months ago and there was a similar rut we ended up filling in so as to avoid that predicament. Glad your machine was able to back out easily enough. ua-cam.com/video/IYR37hxIMkk/v-deo.html
If you are going to do this you need to be prepared! Get Some recovery equipment NOW!
SURPRISINGLY I SAW A THOUSAND HORSEPOWER VERY LOW RPM I THINK IT HAS PROBABLY BEEN USED ON A BOAT POSSIBLY A TUG BOAT
DAVID ADAM GRENIS MAPLETON AVENUE BOULDER COLORADO
Looks like somebody or some people went broke and then just walked away from the whole operation. I wonder if the mine was ever profitable at all. Or maybe it was a potemken mining operation used to impress investors.
Last life. Awakened later in life. Violent past lives. My mission is also violent and will change everything. Not looking forward to it but it is my mission and am preparing. Prefer to remain anonymous but eventually everyone will know who I am. The mission hasn’t been completely revealed yet
EVERYTHING THAT DIDN'T HAVE ANY COPPER IN IT EXCEPT FOR THE SMALL ELECTRIC MOTORS THAT DON'T HAVE ENOUGH COPPER IN THEM TO MAKE IT WORTH STEALING.
DAVID ADAM GRENIS MAPLETON AVENUE BOULDER COLORADO
It kind of looks like someone was doing devil worshipping in that room. Be safe my friends.
Definitely some bad vibes in that cabin yikes!
WHAT CHANNEL IS ALWAYS TALKING ABOUT WILL IT START THEY OUGHT TO GET THAT TRUCK GOING MAKE THE PERFECT EXAMPLE OF A RAT ROD
isnt it a bit better to travel in the daylight hours? or is that just me
1
YOU KNOW THAT NOW THAT YOU'VE SHOWN ALL THIS STUFF THAT BIG ASS GENERATOR PROBABLY HAS ENOUGH COPPER IN IT SOMEBODY WILL FIGURE OUT WHERE IT IS AND STEAL THE COPPER OUT IT YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY WRONG TO GIVE THE NAME OF THAT MIND WHATEVER IS LEFT FOR STEALING PROBABLY NOW EVEN AS SCRAP STEEL WILL SOON GONE NEVER SHOULD HAVE GIVEN THEM THE LOCATION OF THAT MINE
lots of $ in scrap
The two sets of leaf springs, the bottom springs are the standard pack, the top set are what make it a 1 1/2 ton.