On Nov 27, 6:27 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
> http://www.rexresearch.com/boats/1boat.htm
>
> I've never seen any of these. They must have all ben surpressed by
> politicians. Probably. Whoever makes one first, be sure to post
> pictures.
What? You mean you _don't_ have a five-pontoon-cylinder boat driven
by a 500 HP engine driving an airplane propellor?! That's just not
right. I think we should take up a collection to help the man
out... ;)
R
Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 6:59am (EST-3) [email protected] (RicodJour)
doth sayeth:
What? You mean you _don't_ have a five-pontoon-cylinder boat driven by a
500 HP engine driving an airplane propellor?! That's just not right. I
think we should take up a collection to help the man out... ;)
Damn right. Listen to the man.
JOAT
You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
"know"?.
- Granny Weatherwax
Sounds like fun! I'll contribute and help build if i can get a ride in that
thing<g>
Skip
www.ShopFileR.com
"J T" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 6:59am (EST-3) [email protected] (RicodJour)
> doth sayeth:
> What? You mean you _don't_ have a five-pontoon-cylinder boat driven by a
> 500 HP engine driving an airplane propellor?! That's just not right. I
> think we should take up a collection to help the man out... ;)
>
> Damn right. Listen to the man.
>
>
>
> JOAT
> You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
> "know"?.
> - Granny Weatherwax
>
Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 8:52pm [email protected] (Skip=A0Williams)
generously says:
Sounds like fun! I'll contribute and help build if i can get a ride in
that thing<g>
Send enough money and you won't even need to work on it to get a
ride.
JOAT
Even Popeye didn't eat his spinach until he had to.
On Nov 27, 6:27 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
> http://www.rexresearch.com/boats/1boat.htm
>
> I've never seen any of these. They must have all ben surpressed by
> politicians. Probably. Whoever makes one first, be sure to post
> pictures.
>
I haven't freelanced for Pop. Science in something close over 20
years, but back then, and for decades earlier, they were known as the
"What's New" magazine. In the '30s, '40s (when I first started reading
Gus's Garage and other articles) and '50s, it was more of a What's
Coming (Maybe) magazine.
I'm not sure what it is now, as I stopped reading when they stopped
publishing any appreciable DIY material.
On Nov 28, 12:19 pm, "J. Clarke" <[email protected]> wrote:
> J T wrote:
> > Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 4:57am (EST-3) [email protected] (Charlie
> > Self)
> > doth sayeth:
> > <snip> but back then, and for decades earlier, they were known as
> > the
> > "What's New" magazine. In the '30s, '40s (when I first started
> > reading
> > Gus's Garage and other articles) and '50s, it was more of a What's
> > Coming (Maybe) magazine. <snip>
>
> > Loved those articles whenever I could get ahold of any old
> > issues. Some of the other magazines used to have some similar
> > articles too, Popular Mechanics, etc. Walking battle machines,
> > continuous flying blimps with landing fields on them, and so on, my
> > kind of thinkers.
>
> > I remember an article in a can't remember which magazine about
> > a
> > WWII tanker vet that made a small one-man tracked crawler, powered
> > by
> > a small one-cylinder engine. He used it to go deer hunting and to
> > carry his deer out. No plans as I recall, but enouch information
> > and
> > pictures to tell how it was put together and worked. I've been
> > looking for that article for a year or more, no luck so far. I want
> > to make something like that, to use as a jukyard crawler. Any clue?
>
> I remember that one--I think the article was something like "Build
> your own bulldozer". Would have been in the mid-to-late '60s or early
> '70s I think. This is one where the Reader's Guide to Periodical
> Literature would be your friend.
>
> --
Oh, yeah! Is that on-line yet?
Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 4:57am (EST-3) [email protected] (Charlie=A0Self)
doth sayeth:
<snip> but back then, and for decades earlier, they were known as the
"What's New" magazine. In the '30s, '40s (when I first started reading
Gus's Garage and other articles) and '50s, it was more of a What's
Coming (Maybe) magazine. <snip>
Loved those articles whenever I could get ahold of any old issues.
Some of the other magazines used to have some similar articles too,
Popular Mechanics, etc. Walking battle machines, continuous flying
blimps with landing fields on them, and so on, my kind of thinkers.
I remember an article in a can't remember which magazine about a
WWII tanker vet that made a small one-man tracked crawler, powered by a
small one-cylinder engine. He used it to go deer hunting and to carry
his deer out. No plans as I recall, but enouch information and pictures
to tell how it was put together and worked. I've been looking for that
article for a year or more, no luck so far. I want to make something
like that, to use as a jukyard crawler. Any clue?
JOAT
You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
"know"?.
- Granny Weatherwax
J T wrote:
> Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 4:57am (EST-3) [email protected] (Charlie
> Self)
> doth sayeth:
> <snip> but back then, and for decades earlier, they were known as
> the
> "What's New" magazine. In the '30s, '40s (when I first started
> reading
> Gus's Garage and other articles) and '50s, it was more of a What's
> Coming (Maybe) magazine. <snip>
>
> Loved those articles whenever I could get ahold of any old
> issues. Some of the other magazines used to have some similar
> articles too, Popular Mechanics, etc. Walking battle machines,
> continuous flying blimps with landing fields on them, and so on, my
> kind of thinkers.
>
> I remember an article in a can't remember which magazine about
> a
> WWII tanker vet that made a small one-man tracked crawler, powered
> by
> a small one-cylinder engine. He used it to go deer hunting and to
> carry his deer out. No plans as I recall, but enouch information
> and
> pictures to tell how it was put together and worked. I've been
> looking for that article for a year or more, no luck so far. I want
> to make something like that, to use as a jukyard crawler. Any clue?
I remember that one--I think the article was something like "Build
your own bulldozer". Would have been in the mid-to-late '60s or early
'70s I think. This is one where the Reader's Guide to Periodical
Literature would be your friend.
--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 12:19pm [email protected] (J.=A0Clarke) doth
sayeth:
I remember that one--I think the article was something like "Build your
own bulldozer". Would have been in the mid-to-late '60s or early '70s I
think. This is one where the Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature
would be your friend.
I don't remember that one at all - of course I was in the Army from
1960 on, so would have easily missed it.. The issue I'm thinking about
was, I think, around the 1949-50 or so range, and there was a picture
(drawing I believe) of the guy sitting on a low tracked crawler, out in
the woods, obviously deer hunting. The story said he was a tanker in
the big war, and missed it, so designed and made his own tracked
vehicle.
JOAT
You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
"know"?.
- Granny Weatherwax
J T wrote:
> Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 12:19pm [email protected] (J. Clarke) doth
> sayeth:
> I remember that one--I think the article was something like "Build
> your own bulldozer". Would have been in the mid-to-late '60s or
> early
> '70s I think. This is one where the Reader's Guide to Periodical
> Literature would be your friend.
>
> I don't remember that one at all - of course I was in the Army
> from 1960 on, so would have easily missed it.. The issue I'm
> thinking
> about was, I think, around the 1949-50 or so range, and there was a
> picture (drawing I believe) of the guy sitting on a low tracked
> crawler, out in the woods, obviously deer hunting. The story said
> he was a tanker in the big war, and missed it, so designed and made
> his own tracked vehicle.
I found one from 1950 but it was pedal-powered and kid-sized.
The one I remember either had plans or a kit or both.
--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 3:51pm [email protected] (J.=A0Clarke) doth
sayeth:
I found one from 1950 but it was pedal-powered and kid-sized.
The one I remember either had plans or a kit or both.
Sounds interesting. Something like that should be easy enough to
scale up, and ad a small one-cylinder engine. But is it actual tracks,
or phoney tracks hiding wheels? If it's real tracks I'd like to know
how I could get a copy. If it's wheels, I'm not interested.
Sounds like the Struck Company. They're still in business, but I'm
not sure if they still offer kits, I don't think they still offer plans.
http://www.struckcorp.com/
JOAT
You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
"know"?.
- Granny Weatherwax
A friend of mine built one of the Struck bulldozers from the plans. As I
remember it the only things that he bought from them were the transmission
and the tracks. He put a 2 cylinder Robin hay bailer engine on it and used
it to plow snow. I once saw him sitting on it on top of a 12 foot high pile
of snow (NY State) that he had made from clearing his drive and parking
area. That thing really worked.
I can put you in touch with him if you are interested.
Charley
"J T" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 3:51pm [email protected] (J. Clarke) doth
sayeth:
I found one from 1950 but it was pedal-powered and kid-sized.
The one I remember either had plans or a kit or both.
Sounds interesting. Something like that should be easy enough to
scale up, and ad a small one-cylinder engine. But is it actual tracks,
or phoney tracks hiding wheels? If it's real tracks I'd like to know
how I could get a copy. If it's wheels, I'm not interested.
Sounds like the Struck Company. They're still in business, but I'm
not sure if they still offer kits, I don't think they still offer plans.
http://www.struckcorp.com/
JOAT
You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
"know"?.
- Granny Weatherwax
Thu, Nov 29, 2007, 11:25am [email protected] (Charley) doth sayeth:
A friend of mine built one of the Struck bulldozers from the plans. As I
remember it the only things that he bought from them were the
transmission and the tracks. <snip>
I can put you in touch with him if you are interested.
I could figure out how to drive it, if I need to (jackshafts,
chains, belts, etc.), because I wouldn't buy a transmission from them -
don't have a lot of disposable income. My main problem is figuring how
to make my own tracks - I'm not buying them either. But if the guy
still has the plans, and I could get a copy, then yeah, I'd be
interested; it'd probably save some searching. Appreciate the thought.
JOAT
Even Popeye didn't eat his spinach until he had to.
J T wrote:
> Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 3:51pm [email protected] (J. Clarke) doth
> sayeth:
> I found one from 1950 but it was pedal-powered and kid-sized.
> The one I remember either had plans or a kit or both.
>
> Sounds interesting. Something like that should be easy enough
> to
> scale up, and ad a small one-cylinder engine. But is it actual
> tracks, or phoney tracks hiding wheels? If it's real tracks I'd
> like
> to know how I could get a copy. If it's wheels, I'm not interested.
Here's all I've got on it--it's not much
http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2007/07/24/child-size-bulldozer-looks-and-works-like-the-real-thing/.
> Sounds like the Struck Company. They're still in business, but
> I'm not sure if they still offer kits, I don't think they still
> offer
> plans. http://www.struckcorp.com/
>
>
>
> JOAT
> You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do
> you
> "know"?.
> - Granny Weatherwax
--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
Thu, Nov 29, 2007, 12:10pm [email protected] (J.=A0Clarke) doth
say:
Here's all I've got on it--it's not much
http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2007/07/24/child-size-bulldozer-looks-and-w=
orks-like-the-real-thing/.
Every time I try to connect with the link, my system kicks off.
But I was able to use webscissors and get a look. Pretty neat. Too bad
no plans.
JOAT
Even Popeye didn't eat his spinach until he had to.