Snowplowing 1939-40 Part 1

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  • Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
  • This video was produced back in 1939 by person unknown. It was discovered in a dumpster in 1978 and circulated for all to enjoy. Part 1 of 3

КОМЕНТАРІ • 591

  • @americanadreaming
    @americanadreaming Рік тому +310

    This is the sort of video that I come to UA-cam for. Nondescript, copy of a copy, vintage stuff like this is a real treat.

    • @woodsplitter3274
      @woodsplitter3274 Рік тому +2

      I am guilty of watching too MST3K and Rifftrax, I am expecting a bunch of comments and jokes.
      Either way, I appreciate the video.

    • @svenneff
      @svenneff Рік тому +1

      Old UA-cam

    • @alexduncan8735
      @alexduncan8735 Рік тому

      Check out the UA-cam channel “Periscope Films”

    • @ImOlDrippy
      @ImOlDrippy Рік тому +3

      1000% agree. These really are the best, grainy views of history captured on real potatoes of yore.

    • @haloking1988
      @haloking1988 Рік тому

      🧢🧢

  • @jimmotormedic
    @jimmotormedic Рік тому +69

    Rumor has it that Charlie is still out there somewhere and that the county commissioner says he should be punching through to the main highway within the hour!

    • @kiethj7
      @kiethj7 Рік тому +3

      I read this before the city commissioner came out to inspect the work and laughed at how bizarre things were then

    • @rufiorufioo
      @rufiorufioo Рік тому +1

      hahaha

    • @HANKTHEDANKEST
      @HANKTHEDANKEST 7 місяців тому

      Poor Charlie, hope he's got a big thermos of coffee in there!

  • @dbfcrell8300
    @dbfcrell8300 3 роки тому +204

    Over the years. we learned to get the plows out during the storm, not after the storm, so the build up wasn't so sever.

    • @dbfcrell8300
      @dbfcrell8300 3 роки тому +4

      @Robert Hall I agree.

    • @thomascastillo549
      @thomascastillo549 Рік тому

      @@dbfcrell8300 5

    • @mikeznel6048
      @mikeznel6048 Рік тому +20

      @@dbfcrell8300 No, people can’t just stay at home for a few days now. They need everything done and they need it now.

    • @pjcanfield8
      @pjcanfield8 Рік тому +30

      @@mikeznel6048 you missed their point entirely

    • @gkassociates7112
      @gkassociates7112 Рік тому +23

      And in those days we were NOT operating at a $30 Trillion dollar debt with $200 trillion in accrued liabilities . No we were OK waiting out driving to town and most were prepared for the next storm.

  • @VangoghsDoggo
    @VangoghsDoggo Рік тому +152

    Now I know why my mother always announced: "Plow's Commin'!" My dad didn't go to work those days, but he knew that announcement meant he had to go shovel the end of the drive so he could go to work the next day. We also knew it meant back to school. If the plow came, we didn't get the next day off. I remember twice in my life when we got two snow days in a row, once when I was in high school and once when my kids were in grade school. We got 5' of snow that storm. The second day, our plow driver, came down the road like these guys. He plowed off up at the corner to the other end of the road. That was about 3 blocks. About a half hour later he came flying past the house. Took the snow about 15 minutes to settle from him going through. I asked how he knew he wasn't going to go off the road when the snow is that deep. He said, I have been at it 30 years. I know where the roads are. If I don't go 50-60 miles per hour, I can't get through it. It's why all of us plow the same routes!

    • @SMaamri78
      @SMaamri78 Рік тому +6

      It’s funny how times have changed in terms of closing schools. Here in KY, they close for anything. AC out, bad rain predicted, unusually cold, etc. All will close the schools now. I grew up in the 60’s and I can remember only once having the a]schools closed for weather.

    • @theforgotten081
      @theforgotten081 Рік тому +6

      @@SMaamri78 and now they do online school on off days with no time to go play in the snow

    • @Honest-abe76
      @Honest-abe76 Рік тому +1

      I know exactly what your talking about.. I grew up in Maine.. what state for you??

    • @JustinandCodysLawnCare
      @JustinandCodysLawnCare Рік тому

      I’ve gotten a week of before

    • @Justicesdad
      @Justicesdad Рік тому

      I remember this exactly almost in upstate New York, Albany as a kid

  • @proofbox
    @proofbox 3 роки тому +210

    Back in the day those trucks had around 150 HP and those were the big ones , in WW2 1.5 tones 6 WD had about 115.00 HP . After the war there were major blizzards in the upper midwest in 1948 -1950 that the US military was called in for help and they came with tracked vehicals as well as transport aircraft to drop hay to the stranded livestock , the bulldozers not only cleared roads but went into the fields to cut paths for the livestock to get to the air dropped feed from the newly created USAF C 47 and C 46 transport aircraft ,at that time right after WW2 we had a lot more ability to react.

    • @RobChapala
      @RobChapala Рік тому +17

      With 900 lb torque

    • @theforgotten081
      @theforgotten081 Рік тому +19

      Back then we airdropped food to feed our livestock, nowadays our administration can't even keep baby humans fed

    • @frankpeletz1818
      @frankpeletz1818 Рік тому

      The Hall- Scott engines had more power then that.

    • @ericg4915
      @ericg4915 Рік тому +5

      What's most important plowing is traction. Take a 1000 hp truck with 2 wheel drive and bald tires and it won't be able to plow. Now take a 140 hp Tacoma with 4 wheels and good rubber and it can plow all day

    • @Slavicsquat4871
      @Slavicsquat4871 Рік тому

      Thank you for sharing!

  • @rcnelson
    @rcnelson Рік тому +81

    That was some serious deep snow. The repeated ramming of that hard=packed snow had to be murder on the machines.

    • @jenette16
      @jenette16 Рік тому +38

      And the driver.

    • @gman77gas
      @gman77gas Рік тому +10

      @@jenette16 Repeated crash...no seat belts

    • @wisconsinwoodsman1987
      @wisconsinwoodsman1987 Рік тому +9

      Must of had beefy transmission.

    • @davenhla
      @davenhla Рік тому +13

      Sort of. They still have a few of these trucks out east, and you can find them for sale occasionally. Stuff was built different back then, now days things are built to a price point not a function.
      Walter and FWD trucks are massive, overbuilt, amazing pieces of equipment. I grew up in midwest, we have more old FWD then Walter over here. The front pumkin(differential) on an old FWD truck has got to be 18" diameter or better. These trucks had lower horsepower then new trucks, but they also had big gear reduction like a tractor and lower top speeds which is why they could move so much stuff.

    • @gman77gas
      @gman77gas Рік тому +5

      @@davenhla and the drivers died early of concussions

  • @countrymorgan2942
    @countrymorgan2942 3 роки тому +81

    8.5 yrs later the algorithm brought us here.

    • @george8873
      @george8873 3 роки тому +3

      And I'm not disappointed, lol. Finally something recommended that I actually was interested in.

    • @JohnyComeLately
      @JohnyComeLately 3 роки тому

      Same and this is great!

    • @winternunya4561
      @winternunya4561 3 роки тому +3

      @@george8873 yes, UA-cam just isn’t the same anymore. It’s like having cable. 500 channels of nothing to watch........most of the time.

  • @bobblenuts
    @bobblenuts 3 роки тому +102

    I remember seeing crews of 15+ men walking ahead of plows with shovels breaking up snow pack so plow could bust through. Also big Allis-Chalmers dozers going ahead of plows in the 50's & 60's. Seen pictures of my mother sledding off barn roofs in the 40's. Great video, thanks for posting.

  • @andrewdow1609
    @andrewdow1609 3 роки тому +82

    I can't imagine the damage that does to a man's body. That man would have taken 100s of low speed impact collisions per day...multiply that for a 4mth season and 10+ seasons........and lets remember this is 1940s...so that means no seatbelt, no comfy seats, no sound proof cabins, no power steering or power breaks.

    • @EthanL21800
      @EthanL21800 Рік тому

      Definitely a couple concussions

    • @battlejack1863
      @battlejack1863 Рік тому +8

      …….. and probably NO HEAT!

    • @Saturnia2014
      @Saturnia2014 Рік тому +11

      @@battlejack1863 Sure there was! It was called smoking cigarettes and wearing layers!

    • @9ZERO6
      @9ZERO6 Рік тому +15

      When men were men.

    • @AmazingBlaze0
      @AmazingBlaze0 Рік тому +2

      @@9ZERO6 yep now everyone has a complaint, no “heat” “seats aren’t comfortable” “I’m quitting cus I’m a little bitch who’s been giving everything” is what they ought to say nowadays

  • @LordBLB
    @LordBLB Рік тому +26

    My grandfather bought an army surplus Half-track after WW2 and used it to plow his neighborhood in Ohio for about 20 years until it broke. Was just fun watching that thing push the snow.

    • @evanfinch4987
      @evanfinch4987 Рік тому

      @Al Fabeech Uh, that's not how any local government I've ever seen in Wisconsin works--these decisions and their financing are all local. Are you sure you're not just being a disingenuous idealogue?

    • @patty109109
      @patty109109 Рік тому +1

      @@alfabeech life is a lot better if you don’t try to force politics into everything. Give it a go.

    • @danielmalone4446
      @danielmalone4446 Рік тому

      @@patty109109 yeah life is a lot better when you stick your head in the sand

  • @MarkRBlackwell
    @MarkRBlackwell 3 роки тому +46

    Sounds like the narrator is the same guy who did all the old railroad videos for Sunday River Productions. Good stuff!

    • @SD-unlimited
      @SD-unlimited Рік тому +3

      First thing I thought of was the narrator for the original Endless Summer.

    • @oneeyedjack8525
      @oneeyedjack8525 Рік тому

      Good stuff!

    • @tristan2332
      @tristan2332 Рік тому

      ​@sdunlimited1sdunlimited169 Same thing...has to be Bruce Brown.

  • @MultiCrusher2
    @MultiCrusher2 3 роки тому +36

    When we had a snow day when i was in high school in the 60s i plowed with the towns Walter Snow Fighter.it had a big V plow and a double wing.What a beast.It got about 2 MPG but it could move some snow.They still use it on big storms.

  • @mrt9781
    @mrt9781 3 роки тому +48

    Getting harder and harder to find people with the true grit these ol boys had.

    • @gumby511
      @gumby511 Рік тому +2

      Technology has made it so the machines do the hard work and we just operate then for 35hrs straight.

    • @kevinpurscell7283
      @kevinpurscell7283 Рік тому +6

      Brute force over brains. I am happy that most of us are smarter now.

    • @LordBLB
      @LordBLB Рік тому

      @@gumby511 Does a chimpanzee have "true grit" because they use a rock to smash open a nut? Or the human who figured out how to make a nut-cracker? Nothing wrong with working smarter, not harder.

    • @ajjackson1526
      @ajjackson1526 Рік тому +7

      @@gumby511 As a country boy...I'm totally fine with that. More time to do other stuff like play with the kids and stuff.

    • @timnewman1172
      @timnewman1172 Рік тому +1

      My Grandpa was one of 'em!

  • @thomaslouis5626
    @thomaslouis5626 Рік тому +55

    OMG can you imagine working a 12 hour shift ramming snow back and forth ?

    • @patriot6350
      @patriot6350 Рік тому +11

      Yes my kidneys hurt just watching him, sadly been there done that 😁

    • @rollinsomethingbutiforgot
      @rollinsomethingbutiforgot Рік тому +8

      Brain famagr
      Frank damsge
      Frain danage

    • @coloradohikertrash9958
      @coloradohikertrash9958 Рік тому +3

      @@rollinsomethingbutiforgot Me frian meh bamage? ohh no...

    • @davec.3198
      @davec.3198 Рік тому +5

      Yeah...with open headers in front of you and no cats! Wow. The smell all day alone would knock you out.

    • @avtomat6471
      @avtomat6471 Рік тому +1

      Sounds like a good paying job, sorry it doesn't involve Tiktok or some "mocha frappe latte bullshit from Starbucks" and 12 safe spaces because the white snow hurt your feelings for being White.

  • @michaeldulmage8449
    @michaeldulmage8449 3 роки тому +16

    This from the region I grew up and live. Turin is 40 min from where I live. The plows made at frink in Clayton ny. That has been closed for years. Great video never seen this footage before.

    • @TopGarageTV
      @TopGarageTV Рік тому

      At our work, we would watch this movie almost every year. The version we had was titled
      “Tug Hill”.

  • @cahg3871
    @cahg3871 Рік тому +8

    As a retired plow driver,our trucks were like Cadillacs compared to the rigs these drivers used and our streets were gold compared to the roads these guys had to plow.The last 15 years I was there our trucks were automatics,no gears to shift and all your controls at your finger tips.We had it made compared to these guys.Those old V plows jarred your kidneys every time you made a hard stop pounding that snow/ice.Glad I didn’t have to do what those men had to do to clear snow.✌️👍

  • @michigannative2951
    @michigannative2951 Рік тому +5

    Great video thanks for sharing this video.
    My snow storm happened in 1978 I was eight years old and it took the county 4 days to get us plowed out, my uncle got stuck on the farm road and they barely went past his car and he almost didn’t have a car after that.
    My parents had to walk a mile to the farm to milk the cows and stayed at the farm until they got through the road! They had to milk the cows only to have to dump it down the drain because the milk truck couldn’t get to us.
    It’s happened twice in my 52 years so far.
    We had pancakes every morning because my uncle was single and could barely feed himself 😂😂😂 but we survived.

    • @monty4336
      @monty4336 Рік тому +2

      The blizzard of '78. I remember being off from school because of that. I was 9 years old. My grand parents live on a one lane road around a lake in Chelsea Michigan. They got trapped for 3 days. It was common that no one stayed at their home on that lake but my grandfather thought the storm wouldn't be so bad. After two days he called the city and asked, "when are you going to plow our road?" The reply he got was "We thought everyone vacated so if you hadn't called we weren't gonna plow it at all." Well, the next day (day 3) the plow crew came through and cleared the road just for them.

    • @michigannative2951
      @michigannative2951 Рік тому +1

      @@monty4336
      Oh man that’s something else, I was 8 then so we’re pretty close in age, we live on a north and south running road so when it drifts we get nailed! Luckily we have equipment that can move the snow better than in 78’ so we can manage it better but we still get nailed down.
      Another thing I don’t understand is the people that just go driving around to see how bad it is? I’ve pulled many dudes having country cocktails and pulled them out.😒
      Another story really quick in 68’ the Michigan National bank in Battle Creek got robbed on snowmobile and they never caught the guys because nobody could get around to catch them.😂😂
      Happy new year stay well.

  • @ManualSoap
    @ManualSoap Рік тому +17

    I love how Joe pera nails this style of commentary perfectly. Relaxing and entertaining

    • @ArdFarkable
      @ArdFarkable Рік тому +4

      is this joe pera? im confused about the narration matching the video??

    • @Jistarii
      @Jistarii Рік тому

      It's not Joe Pera.

  • @BigRobChicagoPL
    @BigRobChicagoPL Рік тому +2

    Its a little crazy to think this was pulled from a dumpster in 78. Makes you wonder what other really cool video tapes/reels are hiding in your neighborhood landfill

  • @danw6014
    @danw6014 3 роки тому +67

    The farmers in my area were responsible for the roads back then. Usually someone in the neighborhood had a horse drawn road grader. After the big blizzard in 78, they used a Case 2670 four wheel drive tractor with a dozer blade to clear the snow for the milk truck. My dad cleared our road out after that storm with our John Deere backhoe. It was a mile out to the main road.

    • @mrpoizun
      @mrpoizun 3 роки тому +2

      1978??? Where did you live??

    • @danw6014
      @danw6014 3 роки тому +3

      @@mrpoizun southeast Michigan.

    • @danw6014
      @danw6014 3 роки тому +5

      @@mrpoizun we had a big storm in 1977 too. I don't remember that one very much but I was old enough to remember the one in 1978. There was a snow drift up to the eve of our back porch.

    • @mdsk7623
      @mdsk7623 3 роки тому +3

      I live there too was there actually big snowstorms back then. We barely get more than a couple inches now

    • @jasonvsd
      @jasonvsd 3 роки тому +4

      I have heard the farmers in South Dakota talk about this. Their motivation for clearing the roads was to get the milk to the creamery before it went bad. Dozers were kept running 24 hours a day and men working in shifts to keep them going. The biggest barrier was getting fuel. In some cases they had to rely on horses and sleighs to haul fuel into the rural areas. Winter of 68 or 69 if I remember right.

  • @monty4336
    @monty4336 Рік тому +6

    I just love seeing real history and seeing people's everyday lives. Unscripted as it took place. So fascinating. Brings a sense of connection to a by gone time.

  • @dougcrossen6751
    @dougcrossen6751 Рік тому +7

    I've worked on trucks like that and a lot larger. Yellowstone still has a Walters plow, with the wings down and spread it is 24 feet across.

    • @OutcastTraveller
      @OutcastTraveller Рік тому

      That Walter is my favorite of the Y’stone Spring plowing fleet. Such a cool old truck and still in use today.

    • @oldblueaccord2629
      @oldblueaccord2629 Рік тому +1

      You guys need to film it and show it to us!

    • @OutcastTraveller
      @OutcastTraveller Рік тому +1

      @@oldblueaccord2629 Next time I’m in the area, I’ll poke around and see if I can find where they’ve stashed it for the Winter.

  • @arneservatius1982
    @arneservatius1982 2 роки тому +10

    Born in 1946 remember dad pulling snowplow into barn with tractor welding up plow or truck frame and sending them back down the road. We still do that in Michigan the trucks are bigger and the tractors. And today every farmer can weld like a pro.🤗🇺🇸🇨🇦

  • @haroldwilkes598
    @haroldwilkes598 Рік тому +5

    About 1965 I had the pleasure of seeing all of the freshly maintained snow equipment roll out of the Anchorage, Alaska facility...there must have been a mile of powered plows, graders and snowblowers. Was not unusual after/during a snow storm to see a flying wedge of huge snowblowers clearing the runways at Elmendorf AFB. Now, in Wisconsin, mostly I see those big bull plows clearing the roads. In Idaho Falls, they used a conveyor system to load from the plows directly to dump trucks. The innovations have been fun to see. One thing hasn't changed though...the need to shovel out your driveway after they pass by. BTW back in the day, many places had "one track" roads as shown at the start of the video, somebody had to give way for traffic to flow.

  • @jeffreyknight3884
    @jeffreyknight3884 Рік тому +2

    Real men and women back then. Love to see old films like these. Great job charlie 👏.

    • @Saturnia2014
      @Saturnia2014 Рік тому

      You're right, the wires and circuits in me need some retuning
      That wouldn't be the case had I been born 100 years ago!

  • @BoMwarriorVlog
    @BoMwarriorVlog Рік тому +1

    After having a hard day with a spike in my lifelong MDD, and having to avoid UA-cam suggestions of even political stuff I agree with... being suggested and clicking on this old video is a breath of fresh air. 😊
    ❤️ Thank you for sharing.

  • @rooky55
    @rooky55 Рік тому +2

    I plowed with a 1950 FWD. You can take the jarring when you are young, Just make sure your hands are not in the steering wheel spokes or you were in for a injury when the wheel spun around.

  • @lancealdrich5499
    @lancealdrich5499 3 роки тому +29

    I can remember when the snow was so high in upstate NY, that you could almost touch the power lines. That was in the seventies and eighties

    • @lancealdrich5499
      @lancealdrich5499 3 роки тому +6

      @@willythewave just like Al gore speaking about global warming, when he lives in a mansion.

    • @TsunauticusIV
      @TsunauticusIV 3 роки тому +11

      @@willythewave I was thinking about the massive snow storms they used to have in the old days. So... you know how they can do cloud seeding with tiny particles to make moisture condense and eventually fall to the ground. Well... I was wondering if the “dirtier” air of yesteryear had anything to do with those big snowstorms we had previously. The stories of big snow storms seemed to increase around the time of the industrial revolution. So... maybe all that particulate in the air caused bigger/more frequent storms. 🤔 the storms seemed to have decreased once we stopped burning so much wood and coal. 🤔 🤔 🤔

    • @Old1Too
      @Old1Too 3 роки тому +6

      I worked at our local highway department during the blizzard of '77 in Western New York and we bucked plugged roads with an Oshkosh and v-plow with double wings just like this. I remember working two 80 hour weeks during the worst of it.

    • @luvr381
      @luvr381 3 роки тому +6

      My father in lay had pictures of Oswego, NY from the winter of 76/77, snow was about 3 feet below the power lines.

    • @lancealdrich5499
      @lancealdrich5499 3 роки тому +3

      The town of Verona. Still had one of those plows out front of the town barn on Germany road.

  • @jcanard6344
    @jcanard6344 3 роки тому +16

    And at the end of the season the drivers left leg muscles were larger than the right leg muscles from pushing in the clutch in and out a hundred million times. lol

    • @siddokis2945
      @siddokis2945 3 роки тому +2

      Ol Charley could kick like a mule.

    • @Saturnia2014
      @Saturnia2014 Рік тому +1

      And the sciatic pain was probably immense

  • @TeamCheap1
    @TeamCheap1 Рік тому +9

    Getting ready to go out and plow the drive with our side by side, thankfully we didn't get amounts of snow anywhere near as bad as these guys were busting out.
    The people that did it like this back in the day got us this far today.

  • @KH-qy7fm
    @KH-qy7fm 3 роки тому +7

    Fast forward to today. Snow still piles high. Plows are pretty much the same. The only improvement is we don’t use banjo music anymore in documentaries. And thank the Lord for that!

  • @rawbacon
    @rawbacon 3 роки тому +11

    Glad I clicked, this is incredible footage...... *GO CHARLIE !!*

  • @Majorbobbage1
    @Majorbobbage1 Рік тому +1

    I was living in the panhandle of West Virginia, up in the hills of Harpers ferry, when we got about 4 ft in 2001. Regular plows couldn't deal with it alone, we were snowed in for 4 or 5 days until they came by with a bulldozer in front of a plow truck in front of a grader, each one making a slightly wider path. Took me a full day to shovel the driveway before that and then another half day after they dumped more snow from the street on it LOL.

  • @karlk6860
    @karlk6860 2 роки тому +11

    Those plow mounts and associated brackets must be hooked directly to the frame of the truck, the force of a 40,000 pound truck ramming snow like this must be insane!!!

    • @cahg3871
      @cahg3871 Рік тому

      Your kidneys feel every bump and hard stop you make.Its a long day and night pounding hard pack.

  • @benscoles5085
    @benscoles5085 Рік тому +2

    5:55 is why mailboxes were big sellers in the spring.

  • @MadDestructionChaos
    @MadDestructionChaos Рік тому +3

    I'm 40. This is wild to see!!!!! Thx for posting!!

  • @crushthis123
    @crushthis123 Рік тому +4

    We used 6 wheel drive graders with chains and the snow drifts were over the hydro wires here in Sothern Ontario before the snowbelt moved 100 miles north.

  • @off_mah_lawn2074
    @off_mah_lawn2074 Рік тому +3

    A real treat, thanks for saving and posting!

  • @Miss.C.
    @Miss.C. 3 роки тому +3

    Watching this in Syracuse and a special weather report pops up.
    *very thankful for this mild winter this year ❤️

  • @docBZA
    @docBZA Рік тому +8

    This is a gem of a video. Thanks for posting

  • @v1ncepupp1o7
    @v1ncepupp1o7 Рік тому +1

    What a fascinating way to start 2023. Man that snow was deep. Those times seem so pure and innocent

    • @sarthurl9001
      @sarthurl9001 Рік тому +1

      Well besides the guy over in Germany trying to exterminate half the world...The world is probably more innocent today than it ever has been in history. I agree though that these sorts of videos make us nostalgic for a time that didn't really exist.

    • @v1ncepupp1o7
      @v1ncepupp1o7 Рік тому

      @@sarthurl9001 thats a real good point about germany. I often allow myself to get narrow minded when thinking about the past. Theres no good without bad, and there was a whole lot of bad back then. However can you elaborate on how you think the world is more innocent today? These technologies have allowed life to get so complex. Nearly the whole world has instant access to all the history of man. We know more each and everyday, less can be ignored. Innocence is diminishing rapidly in my opinion , talk to a 13 year old these days. Its a real shame what they have been exposed to on the web.

  • @sandorspalms
    @sandorspalms 3 роки тому +5

    Love these old video's! Great video and channel 👍😁🇨🇦

  • @jnolette1030
    @jnolette1030 3 роки тому +5

    That's the meanest looking plow I've ever seen. A beast!

    • @brucethomas3100
      @brucethomas3100 3 роки тому +1

      J Nolette
      Yeah, the early snowplows had 150 horsepower weighing 3000 pounds trying to move 10000 pounds of snow and ice.

    • @jnolette1030
      @jnolette1030 3 роки тому +2

      @@brucethomas3100 150hp if they're lucky that's a lot of power back then. It certainly is impressive

    • @elonmust7470
      @elonmust7470 3 роки тому +1

      @@brucethomas3100 that rig weighs more than 3k lbs.

  • @davenhla
    @davenhla Рік тому +2

    Remember this next time the weather guys on TV start spouting off "storm of a generation" or "150 year storm!"
    bah.
    People say the new trucks are better, the new trucks are better in many ways but won;t move what these old Walter or FWD trucks could. That's why they are out on the roads keeping them clear during the storms now. When the real big ones come all the back roads have to be done by the old equipment yet, the old graders with the V plow or the old FWD trucks(midwest) at least to get them open. Then the new stuff comes through and widens it out and cuts the banks back.
    We don;t get snow like we used to in WI. I have family pictures from way back where the banks in town were as high as the phone wire and you could only see the roof of the two story house behind them from the street. And that is fine by me! It might be "neat" to think about that type of ting but dealing with it is another story!

  • @lusmaghkla
    @lusmaghkla 3 роки тому +7

    That was tough work on man
    and machine alike, ramming
    snow like that.

    • @frez777
      @frez777 3 роки тому +3

      No power steering, manual transmissions. Manual brakes too.

    • @rearspeaker6364
      @rearspeaker6364 Рік тому +2

      @@frez777 the did have hydraulic brakes, big drum brakes..

  • @thatonewwefanguy2006
    @thatonewwefanguy2006 Рік тому +6

    Man, I wish we could have a nice winter storm like that.

  • @JackGAdams
    @JackGAdams 12 років тому +5

    That is a good old video Ed...geez you know I can remember snow drifts similar and old plow would take most of the day to go about 1/2 mile and that was on #10 North of Mafeking.. then a good old Northwester would blow up and fill the sucker right back in again lol... thanks for the share.. will pass it around..
    Jack

  • @larrypetteys9090
    @larrypetteys9090 3 роки тому +8

    Route 26 between Boonville and Turin I remember making the trip well many many times to go skiing at Snow Ridge, the snow was usually as high as the telephone wires every winter tug hill plateau common place

    • @queenbunnyfoofoo6112
      @queenbunnyfoofoo6112 3 роки тому

      Yes....that's always tough going . It's unbelievable how much snow you guys get.

    • @dlee3710
      @dlee3710 3 роки тому

      Get ready, its coming back!

  • @u.s.militia7682
    @u.s.militia7682 Рік тому +1

    I was in Dutch Harbor Alaska one winter and they had a road grader running 24/7. You gotta catch it before it gets too high or your out of luck.

  • @Kowyn
    @Kowyn Рік тому

    The mill I work at has an old FWD (four-wheel drive motor company) military truck, at one time it had a snow blower mounted to the front of it homemade and was used to clear local roads, cab is made of wood and tin, old girl is real rough these days but she was driven and park to where she sits now not too many years ago. When my grandma was alive she told me about the trucks that they had rigged up to use around Drumheller in the winter, all handmade by guys with next to no education, wish I could have seen them.

  • @kenloewenhagen2653
    @kenloewenhagen2653 Рік тому +1

    I remember when I was a kid, we lived between two hills. They would drift in bad. One winter after a bad storm, we heard the plow coming but, it sounded different. When we finally could see it, it wasn't the usual big Oshkosh truck with the V plow. it was two D8s with a V plow in front. The road has been reworked since so it doesn't get snowed in like that anymore.

  • @jomama01
    @jomama01 Рік тому +1

    Not sure OSHA would have approved the county workers standing in the path of the truck plowing towards them. Lived in upstate NY for 10 years and always amazed at the equipment used to move snow. NYS Turnpike would send two trucks with side wing plows down the road clearing anything in front of them. Our village of Sweden, outside of Brockport, were masters of clearing surface streets, regardless of snowfall. You left your car in the road at your own risk. If it didn’t get buried, good chance you’d be missing a mirror or more after you dug it would. Mailboxes were another unintended victim - smarter residents would mount theirs on a pivot to hopefully swing out of the way of passing snowplows.

  • @crazydansmachineshop8718
    @crazydansmachineshop8718 Рік тому +2

    Watching this and also classic NFL games makes me think... There used to be a lot more snow!!!

  • @Saturnia2014
    @Saturnia2014 Рік тому +10

    Now, imagine how much longer it took to plow snow in 1839

    • @monty4336
      @monty4336 Рік тому

      I was thinking the same thing. How did they manage before automobiles.

    • @KirkHermary
      @KirkHermary Рік тому

      @@monty4336 🧹

    • @joakrage3972
      @joakrage3972 Рік тому +2

      They went on top of the snow instead with sleighs or didn't go

  • @Whitebuffalo44
    @Whitebuffalo44 Рік тому +1

    I know all to well what those guys went through. I own an old Coleman plow truck similar to the ones used here. I also plow snow from October to June over two mountain passes. Granted I use a modern grader but 5 feet of hard packed snow and up to 12 foot drifts it's hard going. Hats off to those old timers!

  • @gmctech
    @gmctech Рік тому +7

    I quite literally can remember snow like this in the 1980's here in Nova Scotia, Canada where the D.O.T. would have to call in one of the 2 or 3 massive snowblowers in the province to get through to open the road and get the grader out of the snow drifts that was stuck.

  • @mnmvuk
    @mnmvuk Рік тому

    I love seeing content like this.
    Oh, and here I thought wing blades were a rather new technical achievement as we only started to see them around my area of the northeast about 15-20 years ago. LOL...

  • @ricepadi29
    @ricepadi29 3 роки тому +13

    That is insane. Thanks for the footage.

  • @Mr.McWatson
    @Mr.McWatson Рік тому

    I really enjoy 40s and 50s problem solving. 1) Can you put a bigger motor on it? 2) Can you hit it harder?
    This applies to civilian and military problem solving of the day.

  • @benjamindusseau4912
    @benjamindusseau4912 3 роки тому +6

    my great uncle used to talk about walking to school and being able to through snow ball DOWN at the cars cause the banks were taller then the roofs of the cars.

  • @christianjackson4093
    @christianjackson4093 Рік тому

    The more things change, the more they stay the same!! Those plows still look like the ones the truck use up north. Super cool look into the past!!

  • @eman2498
    @eman2498 Рік тому +5

    Thank you for the memories, I was part of the cdn military snow and ice control over a number of years on 12 hrs shifts. Long and hard especially during a multiple day storm. I’m glad we had the stuff they drive around to day. Only thing I didn’t like was when our crew chief decided to go on 8 hr shifts. Those really messed with our inner clocks. But all said I was particularly proud of our work clearing up streets, parking lots and airfields.

  • @captainkidd1234
    @captainkidd1234 3 роки тому +9

    Fisher plough motto :
    Always plough with the storm.

  • @CarswithNash
    @CarswithNash 3 роки тому +5

    Nice! I really enjoyed this, thanks!

  • @superdrummergaming
    @superdrummergaming Рік тому

    It's amazing what quadrupling the horsepower and torque does. That, and a lot more weight. Many more trucks making frequent passes is huge, too.

  • @TotallyNotRedneckYall
    @TotallyNotRedneckYall Рік тому

    No way this video was produced in 1939. Mic quality, colorization, dialect of the narrator all point to something produced in the late 1960s from older footage. Reminds me of the old disney documentaries.

  • @timhofstetter5654
    @timhofstetter5654 Рік тому +1

    That's brutally hard on those poor trucks... and it's why so much of the snow belt migrated to giant snowblowers, which make this job much, much easier.
    Also... the cars behind that fast-moving plow could not possibly have been "waiting to get out". That plow would have perfectly sealed the driveways on both sides of that road.

  • @GaryCSchade
    @GaryCSchade Рік тому +1

    I used to represent Walter's and Frink in Alaska many decades ago. Oshkosh, Western Star and International too

  • @mcnowski
    @mcnowski Рік тому +1

    My father plowed the roads in Ontario Canada for 20 years.

  • @arayabuchichi3798
    @arayabuchichi3798 3 роки тому +12

    Ah the good ole days Merry Christmas 🎄🎁

  • @brandong1443
    @brandong1443 Рік тому

    Love it. Our highway boys see drifts half this size they are calling in machinery to get through it. They don’t even try anymore

  • @samortimer1
    @samortimer1 3 роки тому +7

    The Dad in me keeps wanting to say, “Get the heck out of the way of that plow!!”

  • @frankloree2462
    @frankloree2462 Рік тому +1

    I can still smell the clutch burning and hear the u joints and axels snapping

    • @5.43v
      @5.43v Рік тому

      What if it's chain drive

    • @ericl2969
      @ericl2969 8 місяців тому

      You don't slip the clutch on trucks like that. You just engage it and go, and with no slippage, there's not much wear and certainly no burning. As to those other breakage issues you are thinking of, Walter trucks were famous for the durability of their entire drive train.

  • @bowwinkle6651
    @bowwinkle6651 Рік тому +1

    Dec 13 2022
    Super Interesting Much Better Than Anything On TV

  • @Smittyschannel
    @Smittyschannel 3 роки тому +7

    So I wonder how many ppl got hit by standing in front of the plow truck when it finally broke through the hardpack

  • @proven6270
    @proven6270 Рік тому +2

    Great video !!!! 4:40 Nice to finally see Joe Biden there in his mid 40's FOR the 1st time in his life, actually WORKING and doing something positive for AMERICA 👍

  • @Smittyschannel
    @Smittyschannel 3 роки тому +12

    That has got to be murder on the suspension & drivetrain..... bet they had lots of practice repairing busted trucks

    • @shelbyoffrink4424
      @shelbyoffrink4424 3 роки тому

      Under powered and overbuilt.

    • @Smittyschannel
      @Smittyschannel 3 роки тому +2

      @@shelbyoffrink4424 150 hp diesel but I bet the torque was incredible

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 3 роки тому +1

      The trucks were built better, more robust.

  • @blainenodes8182
    @blainenodes8182 Рік тому

    Thanks so much for video,we can relate in Minnesota,born 1947

  • @chaseman113
    @chaseman113 Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing this!

  • @paulsmodels
    @paulsmodels Рік тому +3

    Ah...the good old days when the snow was real, the plows were real, and photoshopping was not invented yet.

  • @joegaffney1959
    @joegaffney1959 Рік тому

    Driving into those snow walls looks like driving into something pretty solid

  • @Wildfire86872
    @Wildfire86872 Рік тому +1

    Wow the frames of those trucks must have been built like a battleship

  • @Kentucky_Caveman
    @Kentucky_Caveman Рік тому

    I like the narrators voice. He doesn't have that fake Atlantic accent all the guys used to put on tv in the 40's and 50's. He sounds more down to earth and real.

  • @sharpshooter012345
    @sharpshooter012345 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the upload.

  • @RandomAxeOfKindness
    @RandomAxeOfKindness Рік тому

    Walter Snow Fighters are still in use today, in fact. Not as many of them, and some from later years, certainly. They aren't the fanciest, but they're sure impressive. And they have the best name of any snowplow to date.

  • @tallat8888
    @tallat8888 Рік тому

    This reminds me of a winter storm we had in Minnesota 40+ years ago I had to crawl out a window to get outside to shovel snow away from the door to our house.

  • @benjaminlambert8944
    @benjaminlambert8944 Рік тому +1

    Lack of decent lighting to plow constantly during night storms? Trying to think of the reason why they didn’t keep up w a storm instead of waiting until the storm ended.

  • @gdebruin82
    @gdebruin82 Рік тому

    Nothing like a lake effect band on the Tug Hill Plateau!

  • @blainenodes8182
    @blainenodes8182 Рік тому

    Wow...spoke to soon.. narration/vernacular perfect winter "accent"👍❄️🌬️

  • @anamerican2251
    @anamerican2251 Рік тому

    Holy crap that’s where I live !!! Never seen anything of Turin online ever !!

  • @tufaznail
    @tufaznail Рік тому

    Science and technology has taken the fun out of many things.

  • @marcslayer9444
    @marcslayer9444 Рік тому +1

    83 years ago . I bet one or two of those guys are still alive

  • @billsbus827
    @billsbus827 Рік тому +1

    Charlie needs to park the truck, before it falls apart, and get a Caterpillar to make the first pass

  • @lamarc2634
    @lamarc2634 Рік тому +2

    That was back when my dad walked 2 miles to school in 4 feet of snow

  • @pattrottier7636
    @pattrottier7636 Рік тому +1

    And no seatbelts! These guys crashed into walls all day, holding on for dear life... I'm 36, and this seems like another incredible example of when men were MEN... it's hard enough up here in Montana to get anyone to be a plow driver now, the work shown in this video, you wouldn't find anyone to do this today.... Just to put it out there, I only say when men were MEN because these jobs were literally only available to men and they put their heads down and went to work... I'm not saying anything about women, I'm literally only saying these men were hard men with hard jobs no one would ask for but they did it to make a better place for their families and their neighbors

  • @jefff6167
    @jefff6167 Рік тому

    So many folks are so soft and so quick to complain these days about the slightest inconvenience. Perspective is everything.

    • @Saturnia2014
      @Saturnia2014 Рік тому

      Funny, that's exactly what older folks were saying about young folks in the 1930s and 40s

  • @antz350
    @antz350 Рік тому +1

    As tough as life was back then I’d of like to have lived it.

  • @RamboJohnJ
    @RamboJohnJ Рік тому

    Can’t help but wonder how many times the transmission was toasted in that truck. Brutal on the operator, brutal on the vehicle to be essentially slamming into a wall of dense sand repeatedly.

  • @PeterBranco
    @PeterBranco Рік тому

    Thank you for the videos! 👍

  • @see-it-for-yourself
    @see-it-for-yourself 3 роки тому +3

    Good job Charlie!