A great number of tractors such as these as well as straight trucks were on the road during WW2. I remember seeing 2-3 chained together in order to climb the mountains with heavy loads and low horsepower. The open cab configuration was not a rarity, during winter the drivers would look three times their size due too extra clothing. Some brand names I remember, Autocar, Fageol ,Mack, Oshkosh and Packard .
That is because there were no brake lines of air supply to the trailers. Leper trailers had no brakes!. I still have my grandpa's 1926 Kenworth and the Leper trailer made in 1927. Both are now restored after an 8 year project.
It was a reverse setup from the later trucks. The fifth wheel had a pin that would slide through a slot in the front of the trailer. The pin made contact with a ram that would actually move the landing gear back and upwards for traveling. This system was very handy especially if you were using the trucks and trailers for like interplant hauling or having to relocate a lot of trailers in a day. I actually drove trucks like this for a couple of years back in 1979-80 hauling IBM Endicott NY. We had 20 trailers that were 20 ft long and 3 tractors that were reverse set up.
That was great. I've seen plenty of pictures, but never film. Thanks for sharing. I've been driving for thirty five years, yet I never tire of these types of videos.
@@Romeo_GR I just know from being a history buff of sorts, I can't give you specifics. I do know that at this time a lot of formerly steam powered fire engines had been converted to being tractor drawn from horse drawn though.
I’ve been driving tractor trailer for over 40 years. Don’t know if I would have made 20 years in one of those. Great video thanks to whoever uploaded it.
Right, even though their range was much smaller it must have been very rough on the body. but things were very localized back then we didn't even have the interstate system til the 50's. it was still the railways that ruled the day for long-haul..
👍👌👏 Simply fantastic! My grandfather and his father drove such vehicles (axles powerd with enormous chaines). Thanks a lot for uploading and sharing this great view into the past. Best regards, luck and health.
The trailers are actually pretty cool. I like the self-retracting landing gear. I get really tired of wrestling with landing gear cranks on modern semis, haha.
I drive tankers and this 1st one is just beautiful..I love these old trucks......and because of them we have what we have today...so imagine driving this open cab in the rain or the snow for .10 cents an hour....totally nuts!! Still love these old rigs though.
great old footage.could you imagine spending 10 hours in one of those trucks.hats off to the drivers.im sure they didnt live too long without permenant pain issues.they make a current freight shaker look like a rolls royce.
Cool video, Armstrong steering at its best. The Lapeer Trailer Company was in business from 1919-1928, then became the Lapeer Trailer Corporation on July 1, 1928, which was a division of Trailer Company of America until 1932.
O-H-I-O Porter greetings 🇺🇸 My dad started trucking in the 1930s. He mostly had straight trucks when he started, but he did get into semi trucks eventually. Goes to show you that those super single tires were around even back then. Yeah, the shaking video didn’t help my eyes, but it was well worth watching this. I pulled some old Dorsey trailers from the 40-50s that had similar landing gear that would retract when you backed under the trailer. You sure had to make sure that they latched when you started to pull away with them. I bet many a trailer was dropped onto the ground back in those days! Hmm! Wonderful film!!! Good stuff! 🥰😎✌️
Enjoyed your film clips the one truck said MILKY WAY this caught my eye I live in Lynden wash state a dairy area and we have a trucking firm that hauls milk and other liquids by same name .thank you .
That was always the problem with trucks or any vehicles of that era, and well after. it took until the 60's before they even considered making passenger cars stop well. Henry Ford was always against hydraulic brakes, he said famously "The safety of steel, from pedal to wheel." eventually he relented of course.. but I get it. I don't completely trust todays electric steering. a mechanical connection is safest imo.
That first truck was an asphalt distributor. I did road paving for a couple years in the 2000s. The technology has not really changed much since this video.
This was quite fascinating. It seems to have picked up some extracts from someone's home movie! I think the third truck-trailer film in the railroad yard may have been a Chevrolet, but couldn't identify the other two.
I drove a 2020 Mack Anthem back in those days. Everyone would run away from me because they thought something from out of this world was coming. Good days. My time machine is broke for now.
my dad started his driving career in trucks like these. he would have loved this video. i also drove for almost 30 years, but never in such primitive, uncomfortable trucks. they were real men, back then.
Grandpa said these were not the easiest trucks to operate, he was working for the lumber mill after WWl Imagine, may have been old to us but very clever, 90% of innovation was already there
In the late 1950's, Century 21 Shows still used some trailers with the solid rubber and wood spoked wheels. They ran the Midway at the Iowa State Fair and traveled a circuit.
@@huntermossakajunkerman9646 True - but those solid tyres were notoriously prone to skidding on cobbles in wet weather - hence one suggested origin of the English expression 'gone for a burton' - Burton's Tailors shops were often on corner sites, and a prime target!
automatic gear then but not now?? i used one of these type trailers in the 70s if it was kept clean worked ok. needed better safety to make sure the gear latched before pin released.
Фильму лет 100, а концепция седельного тягача и полуприцепа осталась неизменной. Я сейчас такой же трал таскаю, чуть длиньше, чуть шире и осей сзади три. И кузовочек имеется, и сходни сзади. Только система автоматического расцепа в России не нашла своего признания. На части тягачей из Америки такая функция есть, но мало кто пользуется.
At least they wouldn't drop trailers back then never had it happened to me but seen enough of it. Bin driving since 18 and will probably die in the sleeper 🐱
I've often thought of how much they were able to get done back then with so much less. Everything was small, trucks and trailers, heavy equipment. Heck, even the plates people ate from were small.
That’s the first time I’ve seen automatic landing gear. Today I can understand why they did away with it. Seems drivers need an incentive to not be lazy. it’s not that I’m just some nobody being judgmental,I am a driver. Also, it’s too easy for equipment to break down. That would leave a lot of trailers unretrievable.
Imagine these brill creme hacks blind siding a 53 foot trailer with a sleeper cab into Bachman trains off of Erie Ave in North Philly , buses and cars not respecting you, coming both ways ,these hacks would have a problem, no spotters to help u, did this a hundred times!!
Not possible to have 16mm movies from the 1920's!!! The format and cameras weren't invented until 1935! Ask the George Eastman Museum. In Europe, there was the 17.5mm film format for amateur's from 1917, but cameras, projectors and film in the US were unavailable to the general public. You may have gotten a 16mm "bounce-down" from the original 35mm film, that is possible. The Blackhawk Company in Chicago did lots of that to 16mm and 8mm formats. Now 8mm was available in 1921. Another case of u-toob lies and falsehoods taking two years to be caught and corrected!
A great number of tractors such as these as well as straight trucks were on the road during WW2. I remember seeing 2-3 chained together in order to climb the mountains with heavy loads and low horsepower. The open cab configuration was not a rarity, during winter the drivers would look three times their size due too extra clothing.
Some brand names I remember, Autocar, Fageol ,Mack, Oshkosh and Packard .
Wow! This was almost 100 years ago and they had a way of dropping trailers and picking trailers up without getting off the vehicle amazing.
That is because there were no brake lines of air supply to the trailers. Leper trailers had no brakes!. I still have my grandpa's 1926 Kenworth and the Leper trailer made in 1927. Both are now restored after an 8 year project.
@@robertreisner6119 that is awesome. I love how things were made back then.
It was a reverse setup from the later trucks. The fifth wheel had a pin that would slide through a slot in the front of the trailer. The pin made contact with a ram that would actually move the landing gear back and upwards for traveling. This system was very handy especially if you were using the trucks and trailers for like interplant hauling or having to relocate a lot of trailers in a day. I actually drove trucks like this for a couple of years back in 1979-80 hauling
IBM Endicott NY. We had 20 trailers that were 20 ft long and 3 tractors that were reverse set up.
Thanks Gary I forgot to mention that. Pins were the anchoring system for these early trailers.
That's handy. Why hand crank ing still going on .
Solid tires,no power steering,just a large steering wheel and a lot of upper body strength.
right no hydraulic steering what a night mare, the wheel hits bumps and turn left or right.
That was great. I've seen plenty of pictures, but never film. Thanks for sharing. I've been driving for thirty five years, yet I never tire of these types of videos.
Simply....I didn't know that there were semis in those years! Wonderful video!!
Relatively few...
@@ffjsb I 've looked for in internet but I didn't find who or which company was the first to construct a semi-truck. You have any information?
@@Romeo_GR I just know from being a history buff of sorts, I can't give you specifics. I do know that at this time a lot of formerly steam powered fire engines had been converted to being tractor drawn from horse drawn though.
Well done! Restoring old film is tough and really old film even harder!!!
I’ve been driving tractor trailer for over 40 years. Don’t know if I would have made 20 years in one of those. Great video thanks to whoever uploaded it.
Right, even though their range was much smaller it must have been very rough on the body. but things were very localized back then we didn't even have the interstate system til the 50's. it was still the railways that ruled the day for long-haul..
somebody might say the same thing about the equipment that we're driving a hundred years from now. that is if they still have humans behind the wheel
Fantastic. Thank you for sharing with us modern day drivers.
This is really beautiful to watch.
Thanks for sharing.
👍👌👏 Simply fantastic! My grandfather and his father drove such vehicles (axles powerd with enormous chaines).
Thanks a lot for uploading and sharing this great view into the past.
Best regards, luck and health.
As a mechanic, if I were to use the term "beautifully dangerous", it would apply to those designs. Jay Leno has some I believe..
I drove for Railway Express and they still used them in the 1960s. It was easy to drop the trailer on its nose when unhooking.
I feel so bad we are losing so much old footage everyday , even now with digital rot of stored data .
They even had super singles long ago. Great video.
Too cool thank you for sharing
Looks like a combination truck/tractor/hotrod.
Yeah I like the stance of it and the trucks rear wheel tires seems to be in low profile
That's awesome great video thanks for sharing. The truck has came a long way. I like the old school truck it was Simple
The trailers are actually pretty cool. I like the self-retracting landing gear. I get really tired of wrestling with landing gear cranks on modern semis, haha.
I drive tankers and this 1st one is just beautiful..I love these old trucks......and because of them we have what we have today...so imagine driving this open cab in the rain or the snow for .10 cents an hour....totally nuts!! Still love these old rigs though.
I am lucky enough to watch this video, superb 👍
great old footage.could you imagine spending 10 hours in one of those trucks.hats off to the drivers.im sure they didnt live too long without permenant pain issues.they make a current freight shaker look like a rolls royce.
Lol you got that right it’s their sacrifice then for our comfort today
Cool video, Armstrong steering at its best. The Lapeer Trailer Company was in business from 1919-1928, then became the Lapeer Trailer Corporation on July 1, 1928, which was a division of Trailer Company of America until 1932.
The super single tires, impressive on the rear
O-H-I-O Porter greetings 🇺🇸 My dad started trucking in the 1930s. He mostly had straight trucks when he started, but he did get into semi trucks eventually. Goes to show you that those super single tires were around even back then. Yeah, the shaking video didn’t help my eyes, but it was well worth watching this. I pulled some old Dorsey trailers from the 40-50s that had similar landing gear that would retract when you backed under the trailer. You sure had to make sure that they latched when you started to pull away with them. I bet many a trailer was dropped onto the ground back in those days! Hmm! Wonderful film!!! Good stuff! 🥰😎✌️
Took them a while longer to figure out the drivers needed weather protection.
- That looks like solid rubber tires on the first truck.
- They used to spray our shell street with that tar substance in the 1950s.
wow. what a gem.
my grandfather (1885-1967) was a proponent of solid tires. at first, i thought he was making it up.
Look at the size of those solid rubber tires 😄👍👍🇺🇸
Enjoyed your film clips the one truck said MILKY WAY this caught my eye I live in Lynden wash state a dairy area and we have a trucking firm that hauls milk and other liquids by same name .thank you .
A fantastic video
Idk why but this gives me joy!
3:40 interesting landing gear lifter.
All that and only one axle with brakes!
That was always the problem with trucks or any vehicles of that era, and well after. it took until the 60's before they even considered making passenger cars stop well. Henry Ford was always against hydraulic brakes, he said famously "The safety of steel, from pedal to wheel." eventually he relented of course.. but I get it. I don't completely trust todays electric steering. a mechanical connection is safest imo.
Awsome video thank you
Imagens maguinifica, sou apaixonado por vídeo antigos. Parabéns Rio Grande do Sul tchê 🇧🇷🇧🇷
That first truck was an asphalt distributor. I did road paving for a couple years in the 2000s. The technology has not really changed much since this video.
Cool video history....that piano player is awesome
Muy bonita música acordé al vídeo de la época saludos desde 🇲🇽👍👍😷✌️👌
Fantastic. For such an old film, it was quite good. I’ve seen worse.
Thanks for posting this. Very interesting.
📻🙂👍
This was quite fascinating. It seems to have picked up some extracts from someone's home movie! I think the third truck-trailer film in the railroad yard may have been a Chevrolet, but couldn't identify the other two.
I think the first truck was an Autocar.
I love the bitumen tanker
Nice video and a thumbs up.
I drove a 2020 Mack Anthem back in those days. Everyone would run away from me because they thought something from out of this world was coming. Good days. My time machine is broke for now.
Looks like a similar earlier version of the scammell tuck away leg idea
my dad started his driving career in trucks like these. he would have loved this video. i also drove for almost 30 years, but never in such primitive, uncomfortable trucks. they were real men, back then.
Grandpa said these were not the easiest trucks to operate, he was working for the lumber mill after WWl Imagine, may have been old to us but very clever, 90% of innovation was already there
Darn good music ....i will now replay lol.
Imagine trying to back these up with solid tires and no power 😳
Some of those trucks have solid rubber tires. When did inflatable tires come into use?
Like that high tech auto landing gear.
The first angry supertruckers.
Nice that you have that video?
Those guys figured it all out long before we did.
The long haul freight went by train then. These would work from train yard warehouses to delivery. Chain drive Mack at 5:13
Makes my Cabover seem like a modern marvel 😂
Those tires must have been hard as shit to mount. Prolly took hours if not days for a new rim lmao
But on a positive note at least you wouldn't have blowouts.
@@huntermossakajunkerman9646 No, you'd just have your entire wheel collapse and fold up like a crumbled piece of paper :D
In the late 1950's, Century 21 Shows still used some trailers with the solid rubber and wood spoked wheels. They ran the Midway at the Iowa State Fair and traveled a circuit.
@@huntermossakajunkerman9646 True - but those solid tyres were notoriously prone to skidding on cobbles in wet weather - hence one suggested origin of the English expression 'gone for a burton' - Burton's Tailors shops were often on corner sites, and a prime target!
Before the Motor Law, people operated those trucks. They were powered by internal combustion of petrol. It's said they made an oddly pleasant sound.
Solid rubber tires and little to no suspension!! Yes! I like to drive one 11 hours a day!!
Show video 👍😎🇧🇷
Prob a lot of these drivers were former freight wagon teamsters.. these old trucks were a luxery to them.. real men..!
automatic gear then but not now?? i used one of these type trailers in the 70s if it was kept clean worked ok. needed better safety to make sure the gear latched before pin released.
Looks like the first 5th wheel hitch.
we're is the turbo Diesel????
awesome
Why were the words on the trailer mirror reversed?
16mm film is small, and maybe they didn’t realize it was reversed when it was telecined (converted to digital).
Anyone notice the lack of glad hands and air lines on these rigs?
@3:53 I do believe that guy is all chromed up under the hood.
What about trailer's breaks?
Nobody uses brakes anymore. LOL
They must have tried rear steer with that hook up. If only to see what it was like? It’s just too easy to hook up.
Wonder how many of those kids fishing were either ww1 or ww2 Veterans....food for thought
Great!
Give this to NASS and let him colorize it!
Those looked like solid rubber tires.
no hydraulic steering if you were on a bumpy road the wheels turn left or right
very cool
Tougher men back then for sure
My gosh.....no windshield, no heat, hard rubber tires, no power anything. No thanks!
And sometimes no doors. Note the Dukes of Hazzard entrance at 5.22.
How about chains hanging down to touch the road from petroleum trucks?
No air ride no power steering
Rode like shit solid rubber tires !
Slow ass gas engines
It was all they had back then. Unless they were rich.
@@huntermossakajunkerman9646 I know
An artic lorry 100 years ago
☺️😋 that's so cool, how's that coupling pretty neat
Фильму лет 100, а концепция седельного тягача и полуприцепа осталась неизменной. Я сейчас такой же трал таскаю, чуть длиньше, чуть шире и осей сзади три. И кузовочек имеется, и сходни сзади. Только система автоматического расцепа в России не нашла своего признания. На части тягачей из Америки такая функция есть, но мало кто пользуется.
And nary a diesel bear anywhere to be found....the good old days!!
Believe it that they were actually in a hurry back then...
those tires probably never went flat
Imagine driving an open air cab truck on tje highways today?
no cup holder ..chuckle
I have been driving trucks since 1975 and I don't know where the hell I am.....
Wowwwwwww😯
At least they wouldn't drop trailers back then never had it happened to me but seen enough of it. Bin driving since 18 and will probably die in the sleeper 🐱
So cool I would loved be borne back then I love this
I think that first truck is spraying slurry on the asphalt.
I've often thought of how much they were able to get done back then with so much less. Everything was small, trucks and trailers, heavy equipment. Heck, even the plates people ate from were small.
they are spraying 100% pure dioxin, and this is TImes Beach, MO.
💈FUSCÃOPRETO💈
Didn't see anyone wearing flip flops.
That’s the first time I’ve seen automatic landing gear. Today I can understand why they did away with it. Seems drivers need an incentive to not be lazy. it’s not that I’m just some nobody being judgmental,I am a driver. Also, it’s too easy for equipment to break down. That would leave a lot of trailers unretrievable.
If’n they only knew what they were setting into motion, they would’ve stuck with horse & cart & oxen.
Imagine these brill creme hacks blind siding a 53 foot trailer with a sleeper cab into Bachman trains off of Erie Ave in North Philly , buses and cars not respecting you, coming both ways ,these hacks would have a problem, no spotters to help u, did this a hundred times!!
🙂👍👍👍
3:21 Original rat rod
No power stearing here fokes
Not possible to have 16mm movies from the 1920's!!! The format and cameras weren't invented until 1935! Ask the George Eastman Museum. In Europe, there was the 17.5mm film format for amateur's from 1917, but cameras, projectors and film in the US were unavailable to the general public. You may have gotten a 16mm "bounce-down" from the original 35mm film, that is possible. The Blackhawk Company in Chicago did lots of that to 16mm and 8mm formats. Now 8mm was available in 1921. Another case of u-toob lies and falsehoods taking two years to be caught and corrected!