AA memerories
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- Posts: 52
- Joined: January 28th, 2011, 6:26 am
- Body Type: 82a
- Model Year: 1929
- Location: Windber Pa.
AA memerories
Last weekend my two youngest grandsons John 8 and Luke 6 as usual came to check on paps truck. They wanted to hear stories about my dad and pap when we used the AA on the farm so we cracked open some HI-C drink boxes and sat in the garage forthe bed t some stories. My mind went back to a simpler time over a half century ago when my pap had his huckster route. I told them how we loaded that old truck every Thursday for our weekly trip to the city about 40 miles round trip. Sacks of potatoes,cabbage,beans,broccoli,
caltiflower,and whatever was in season. we started early on our trip around 6:00 am to make our rounds to mom and pop stores and households in the smokey steel town. I was the runner helping to carry the orders to the customers doors and collecting their orders for the next week. At the end of the day Pap and I would always stop at Coney Island Lunch. Ican still hear him say "how many do you think you can eat boy" refering to their hot dogs that were 20cents each or 3 for 50cents. About 3 I'd say and he'd get order "a bucks worth and 2 cokes". What a treat for a hillbilly farm kid! On the ride home he would always practice singing the hymns for Sunday church Pap was the choir director and had a wonderful tenor voice. I rarely stayed awake the whole ride home. What great memerories of growing up. I wish I had pictures of him and I and the truck at work but all I can do is share these great times in words. I have alot more to share if you guys want hear them.
Radar
caltiflower,and whatever was in season. we started early on our trip around 6:00 am to make our rounds to mom and pop stores and households in the smokey steel town. I was the runner helping to carry the orders to the customers doors and collecting their orders for the next week. At the end of the day Pap and I would always stop at Coney Island Lunch. Ican still hear him say "how many do you think you can eat boy" refering to their hot dogs that were 20cents each or 3 for 50cents. About 3 I'd say and he'd get order "a bucks worth and 2 cokes". What a treat for a hillbilly farm kid! On the ride home he would always practice singing the hymns for Sunday church Pap was the choir director and had a wonderful tenor voice. I rarely stayed awake the whole ride home. What great memerories of growing up. I wish I had pictures of him and I and the truck at work but all I can do is share these great times in words. I have alot more to share if you guys want hear them.
Radar
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- Posts: 8
- Joined: January 19th, 2011, 8:30 am
- Model Year: 1930
Re: AA memerories
Nice story.... thanks for sharing!
Re: AA memerories
Loved the story. Keep them coming...
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- Posts: 496
- Joined: April 25th, 2005, 2:25 pm
- Model Year: 1930
- Location: Ojai, California
Re: AA memerories
Radar,
More stories, please. Thanks for sharing! I encourage others to share their AA stories too. Especially, the history behind their AA's. Stories encourage all of us to get to working on our AA's to put them back on the road and create more great memories!
-- Drew
More stories, please. Thanks for sharing! I encourage others to share their AA stories too. Especially, the history behind their AA's. Stories encourage all of us to get to working on our AA's to put them back on the road and create more great memories!
-- Drew
Drew Mashburn
- Chris Haynes
- Posts: 2203
- Joined: September 7th, 2003, 5:18 pm
- Body Type: 82A
- Model Year: 1930
- Location: Camarillo, CA
Re: AA memerories
One day back in the early 1970 my Early 1930 AA was loaded to the gills to go to the Sepulveda land fill in Los Angeles. It is a long steep hill up to the landfill and the old overloaded AA just couldn't pull the grade. So it was turned around and the four speed placed in reverse it backed up the mile long hill. It weighed in at 6,800 pounds. That is quite a load but the old AA never complained about it.
This picture was taken of it during that same year. Notice the bed made of mining car track and diamond plate steel. Very heavy.
This picture was taken of it during that same year. Notice the bed made of mining car track and diamond plate steel. Very heavy.
- miner art
- Posts: 295
- Joined: March 22nd, 2005, 8:27 am
- Body Type: AA flt.BD.82a
- Model Year: 1929
- Location: gold hill oregon,97525
Re: AA memerories
Sound's as tho it had a load before it started,One heavy bed I bet!
- Chris Haynes
- Posts: 2203
- Joined: September 7th, 2003, 5:18 pm
- Body Type: 82A
- Model Year: 1930
- Location: Camarillo, CA
Re: AA memerories
I am saving that bed to sell for scrap when I retire and inhance my pension.miner art wrote:Sound's as tho it had a load before it started,One heavy bed I bet!
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- Posts: 603
- Joined: May 15th, 2010, 2:34 pm
- Body Type: dump
- Model Year: 1930
- Location: Eastern, CT
Re: AA memerories
Out here scrap iron is about $200 a ton for prepared steel, so you won't be enhancing your pension by much. Good luck though.
Red
Red
- nreed
- Posts: 61
- Joined: March 15th, 2010, 1:20 pm
- Body Type: 31aa
- Model Year: 1931
- Location: Hartford City, Ind.
Re: AA memerories
Here in east central Indiana scrap is going for 360.00 a ton. Still not worth scrapping a AA but it sure increases the traffic past my place with every thing from junk fencing to school buses and combines. We have a scrap yard with a crusher and baler just 2 miles north of us which makes mowing the side ditches challenging with all the junk that falls off the loads.
- miner art
- Posts: 295
- Joined: March 22nd, 2005, 8:27 am
- Body Type: AA flt.BD.82a
- Model Year: 1929
- Location: gold hill oregon,97525
Re: AA memerories
All good stuff falling, AA mana from passing truck's EH!!nreed wrote:Here in east central Indiana scrap is going for 360.00 a ton. Still not worth scrapping a AA but it sure increases the traffic past my place with every thing from junk fencing to school buses and combines. We have a scrap yard with a crusher and baler just 2 miles north of us which makes mowing the side ditches challenging with all the junk that falls off the loads.
- Chris Haynes
- Posts: 2203
- Joined: September 7th, 2003, 5:18 pm
- Body Type: 82A
- Model Year: 1930
- Location: Camarillo, CA
Re: AA memerories
Reds34 wrote:Out here scrap iron is about $200 a ton for prepared steel, so you won't be enhancing your pension by much. Good luck though.
Red
At $200.00 a ton I should get at least 50 bucks.
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- Posts: 52
- Joined: January 28th, 2011, 6:26 am
- Body Type: 82a
- Model Year: 1929
- Location: Windber Pa.
Re: AA memerories
I thought you guys might enjoy seeing this stuff. One of the original bill of sale for my AA when Pap bought it new, his Gulf card from the 1930's and me with my truck early 1960's Radar
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- miner art
- Posts: 295
- Joined: March 22nd, 2005, 8:27 am
- Body Type: AA flt.BD.82a
- Model Year: 1929
- Location: gold hill oregon,97525
Re: AA memerories
Great photo's, thank's for sharing,Back in time., I believe I will have two,here is $ 1500 in 20 dollar gold coin. Be like buying a new truck nowaday's 51,300.00.$.EACH!!!