1940's Oshkosh SNOGO Blower Truck March 1, 2012 please subscribe to my channel!! Thank You 😃

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  • čas přidán 29. 02. 2012
  • We believe this is a 1942,its all original. Its owed by Town of Washburn Located in Northern maine

Komentáře • 162

  • @ChiefWiggim
    @ChiefWiggim  Před 3 lety +18

    This is now owned by a Oshkosh collector and is resting in a mowed field along with 10 other Oshkosh trucks with v-plows.

    • @keepontruckinoutlawlife1248
      @keepontruckinoutlawlife1248 Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks for the update. Sounds like a bad thing though sitting in a field. Know of any cabover's sitting in any fields buddy?

    • @rogermealey3644
      @rogermealey3644 Před 2 lety +5

      Operator one of these in 1964 Ki Sawyer Air Force Base in Michigan Upper Peninsula Marquette like to see one again at my age 75 years old thanks

    • @scottyirish3231
      @scottyirish3231 Před rokem +4

      I'd be running it...shame

    • @turbo8454
      @turbo8454 Před rokem

      My 84 Oshkosh blower still works if the need arises.

  • @shirleybalinski4535
    @shirleybalinski4535 Před 2 lety +8

    They would use a 3 tier auger Oshkosh to clear side roads( county) in my area of eastern upper penninsula of Michigan when J was growing up back in the 1960's. After a " big blow" those roads would be packed as hard as concrete, with banks as tall as the truck. The winds blew that snow onto the road bed as high as the banks. I would watch them auger away for days to clear a mile or two of that compacted snow. That area is no stranger to snow,cold or winds either.

  • @ChiefWiggim
    @ChiefWiggim  Před 11 lety +9

    Thank You Jeff.......the town doesnt use this much at all....they did some motor work to it and pulled it out to have fun with it....I was at the right place at the right time to get this in action.

  • @nateswiger6960
    @nateswiger6960 Před 6 lety +12

    Listen to that old girl bark! I betcha you could watch the gas level drop in the tank under load! Cool old truck!

  • @highplainsdrifter498
    @highplainsdrifter498 Před 5 lety +7

    Nice machine! The way that blower eats up those big frozen chunks is nothing short of amazing!

  • @ericl2969
    @ericl2969 Před 3 lety +2

    I see all these comments about blowing snow to the wrong side of the road, based on that slight bit of wind blowing back the other way. Well, the banks seem to be a lot higher on the side he's working, which is a sure sign that he's sending the snow to the side where it's least likely to compound clearing efforts after the next storm since the wind during drifting conditions will usually be from a small range of directions, similar every time. I swear, the people making the harsh comments must not even live where it snows or they'd recognize what those higher banks on one side actually mean. If things are as they appear, it makes more sense to blow the snow to what will be the downwind side next time there's a storm, and do a quick cleanup with plow for the dusting that results right now. The video poster does point out, though, that they were just playing around with the thing, and they might have just aimed it straight for the side of the road having the taller snowbanks.

  • @eugenewikstrom1797
    @eugenewikstrom1797 Před 3 lety +3

    Brings back memories of the winter of 1953/54 at NAS Kodiak. I was on the roads and runway crew.

  • @justintime441971
    @justintime441971 Před 6 lety +4

    My buddy has one exactly like this one in video, and he has one from us military about same year. They have a big diesel on back that runs the blower and big diesel under the hood that runs truck itself. The motor for blower has turbo and when she hooks up on big snow pile she sounds awesome.Geared down real low. Was up north this past week, (MN), and we put about 50 miles on her, and mad hell of a lot of noise!

  • @paulschimel3572
    @paulschimel3572 Před 10 lety +14

    Oshkosh will make parts for any of their trucks they have ever built.

    • @leonsumrall524
      @leonsumrall524 Před 5 lety +5

      Correct we do. Legacy parts come through my booth all the time

    • @oldamericaniron5767
      @oldamericaniron5767 Před 3 lety +5

      I wonder if they have parts for mine, unrestored running 1919. Very advanced for its time. Overhead valve engine, electric start and lights, pneumatic tires and full time 4 wheel drive with limited slip in transfer case for front to rear axles.

  • @GlacialErratic
    @GlacialErratic Před rokem +2

    Would be a valuable asset in the hands of someone who knew how to operate it.

  • @brandonnelson7814
    @brandonnelson7814 Před 3 lety +5

    We have two of them where I work and we still use them.

  • @scottfoster2487
    @scottfoster2487 Před 6 lety +3

    Great old iron! Just a bit of love every year and she will be around for many more.

  • @Old1Too
    @Old1Too Před rokem +6

    I ran one exactly like this one in western NY for over 20 seasons. Got so I could tell how it was cutting just by feel because much of the time you couldn't see anything out the windshield. Sometimes I would just get out and walk along side as it cut if the wind was right. She'd burn 100 gallons of gas on a good day.

    • @jeanbrandt2624
      @jeanbrandt2624 Před rokem

      Thought it might burn more than that, looks like truck and blower engine both burned gasoline. I remember in Iowa in 1959 we had a tremendous amount of snow, Highway dept had an outfit about like this one, but it had wood spoke wheels with rubber tires

    • @Old1Too
      @Old1Too Před rokem +2

      @@jeanbrandt2624 The one we had used a six cylinder Continental gas motor in the front that just idled most of the time. The back motor was a six cylinder Climax Blue Streak engine with two carburetors. The pistons were the size of a two pound coffee cans, and it only ran at 1100 RPM max. It had tremendous low end torque that you could almost never over work, or stall.

  • @bearbon2
    @bearbon2 Před 8 lety +9

    Got their moneys worth there! That thing's a year older than I am - and in a lot better shape!

  • @silentdeath9237
    @silentdeath9237 Před 7 lety +9

    Old tried and true beast I have worked on one of these before! The one I worked on was a bit newer and had two blowers and two chutes it actually chewed up a stranded Honda that was stranded and buried in the blizzard in 1997.

  • @jackpine3528
    @jackpine3528 Před 2 lety +2

    A FROZEN WILD TURKEY MAKES A GREAT CLOUD OF FEATHERS WHEN YOU RUN THROUGH ONE!

  • @Thetruckhunter
    @Thetruckhunter Před 10 lety +2

    Too awesome!!! I love the old iron!!

  • @jeffberget719
    @jeffberget719 Před 11 lety +7

    neat video, the county highway that I work for has a 1946 FWD snogo very similar to this. I've only seen ours run once, but it will really move the snow!

  • @graemeharris1190
    @graemeharris1190 Před 4 lety +2

    Now that blower can throw snow wow what a machine !!!

  • @honestspirit56
    @honestspirit56 Před rokem

    Best snow mover ever made….imho

  • @caroleroseburgh1344
    @caroleroseburgh1344 Před 2 lety +2

    WOW ‼️ you need a good set of headphones to operate this machine.😀 it's redistributing the Snow back onto the road.🤷🏽.

  • @rearspeaker6364
    @rearspeaker6364 Před 8 lety +2

    it still does the job and has heat in the cab....wow!!!

  • @MichaelPowell-tc7tc
    @MichaelPowell-tc7tc Před rokem

    Beautiful

  • @karlk6860
    @karlk6860 Před 5 lety +6

    WOW both engines are GASOLINE, My neighbor has one from the early 50s its got a small Cummins for the truck engine and the blower engine is a straight 8 CAT, I am guessing around 300 to 350 HP and when he is working it hard that blower will make 500 gallons of diesel go away in 10 hours! I cannot even guess how much gasoline would go away?

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 5 lety +1

      Next time I see the foreman I'll ask him for ya.

    • @RedIron1066
      @RedIron1066 Před rokem

      Our local airport had one of these with gas engine for truck and a massive Climax Blue Streak gas engine for the blower.
      Guy out there told me that working it hard used a gallon/minute.

  • @NorthernMaineProductions
    @NorthernMaineProductions Před 12 lety +1

    WOW! thats a really cool old truck!

  • @charleschamplin2513
    @charleschamplin2513 Před 10 lety +11

    This goes to show American built quality, machines that kick ass and don't take names.

  • @lynheydt3304
    @lynheydt3304 Před 3 lety +4

    Nice. I guess in the summer you could use it as a wood chipper. Just kidding.That's when the made stuff to last.

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 3 lety

      This was bought by a local Oshkosh collector who lives close by....he has parked it in a mowed field along with at least 10 other Oshkosh trucks with v-plows. All been painted to the original colors.

  • @franmcmullen2115
    @franmcmullen2115 Před 9 lety +3

    So this old beast is still in service ? Awesome !
    :)

  • @michaelott1551
    @michaelott1551 Před rokem

    I operated a little bit newer one had a 330cat motor in front and a big v12 for a blower motor, would always break sheer pins.

  • @russheckert7340
    @russheckert7340 Před rokem

    Love to see the old time Snow equipment

  • @darrellepickering8433

    It's a wee mite daunting to meet 1 of these comin' your way. Wisconsin does handle snow well.

  • @l337pwnage
    @l337pwnage Před 5 lety +2

    Engineering ain't what it used to be. You'll see a lot of machines whose augers constantly throw snow out in front of the machine and they end up just pushing a big pile of snow. This blower has baffles which stop that. Someone knew what they were doing.

  • @2009deerejohn
    @2009deerejohn Před 11 lety +2

    The truck of trucks, I can't help and stop at S.A. Mclean's place done in Sanford to check out the old oskosh he has, he had one simpler to this a few years ago when I was down there

  • @bobd1805
    @bobd1805 Před rokem

    What a great sound! You gets get some serious snow.

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před rokem

      This was 2008 when we beat the snow record. And a lot had melted prior to this video. czcams.com/video/MQRFtuhfjHQ/video.html

    • @bobd1805
      @bobd1805 Před rokem +1

      I remember that winter. It seemed like it snowed every 2 days. I was on the snow crew for a small university in Springfield, MA . We were such zombies u

  • @rcfundyer5739
    @rcfundyer5739 Před 4 lety +1

    Sweet old truck

  • @tanukicyber
    @tanukicyber Před 5 lety +2

    I'd have liked to seen the engines especially the second engine for the rotary plow, but that's an impressive machine regardless.

  • @PeterATomich
    @PeterATomich Před 2 lety +1

    I toured the Oshkosh factory in the 2000s and they still were making huge snowplows for airports.

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 2 lety +1

      That must have been awesome to see!!

    • @tommenzel3591
      @tommenzel3591 Před 2 lety +5

      I had them build a new 1990 P1846 6 wheel drive with super singles ,18 speed , 855 Cummins , built for my logging around Lewiston Idaho , watched it get built , all black , their crew added lots of stainless & chrome , then a 27' self loader / crane , fun 1,769 mile trip , then worked it hard till 2002 ...right unit for hard country...

  • @1coppertop
    @1coppertop Před rokem +3

    I'm trying to picture a electric version of this in a 16 hour snowstorm. Maybe in 2033

    • @c0ldyloxproductions324
      @c0ldyloxproductions324 Před rokem

      Well probably never seen one batteries and cold don’t mix well, and the more strain u put on an electric motor the less range u get, plus an electric version would weigh so much I’d never be able to climb icy hills also the tires may not even be able to support the weight. Diesel and gas are the only reliable method for this type of work

    • @1coppertop
      @1coppertop Před rokem

      I was being sarcastic .They cannot even run the heat while charging thier new 100 thousand dollar ev car. Total Bs, i see all the videos showing all the failed ev experiences from respectable tubers. Keep on truckin.
      Nothing like good ole fashioned steel and diesel

    • @c0ldyloxproductions324
      @c0ldyloxproductions324 Před rokem +1

      @@1coppertop agreed

  • @williamdavidson9009
    @williamdavidson9009 Před 10 lety +22

    Back when men were men and the snow was scared!

  • @terryatpi
    @terryatpi Před rokem

    Talk about cool!….thanks for the vid

  • @pnwRC.
    @pnwRC. Před 3 lety +5

    They just don't make equipment like this no more. We'll be lucky to get 10 years from a new piece of equipment they make now!

  • @keithwarkentin
    @keithwarkentin Před rokem

    Wow very impressive I bet it would be a good $500 to fill both tanks and I bet the blower would use 3x as much gasoline as the travel engine! But really enjoyed that video!

  • @j.r.x3609
    @j.r.x3609 Před 9 lety +1

    That SnoGo kicks @$$!

  • @ericmccoy2158
    @ericmccoy2158 Před 7 lety +2

    too cool!

  • @RADIOACTIVEMASCULINITY

    So cool!

  • @stephenmitchell4393
    @stephenmitchell4393 Před 5 lety +2

    my bro vinny just picked up a 42 ford snogo.

  • @charlesbrown6925
    @charlesbrown6925 Před rokem

    Our town had one just like it. Although this one didn't have the "truck shute." I believe they sold it as it was getting too hard to find parts.

  • @cidertom5140
    @cidertom5140 Před 8 lety +5

    she sounds so sweet

  • @mikegreeley8563
    @mikegreeley8563 Před 3 lety +2

    That's a real truck.

  • @DOSTALED
    @DOSTALED Před 5 lety +3

    steering vanes, rear steer, power steering,diesel power up and down and fully chained.. is there some cheese to go with my wine?

  • @motorhead6763
    @motorhead6763 Před 7 lety +1

    Nice. A lot of gas burned. Probably a big Waukesha or Hercules etc.

  • @floodedcar123
    @floodedcar123 Před 6 lety +1

    What kind of engine dose it have?

  • @Scribles
    @Scribles Před 6 lety +2

    is that a florida license plate?

  • @keepontruckinoutlawlife1248

    Way kool

  • @toodjackson4438
    @toodjackson4438 Před rokem

    How come I feel the operator wishes he could blow that snow the other way

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před rokem

      It was a winding day and thats the way the wind blows 90% of the time and they were transferring snow from one side to the other. And also this was just a trial run, was pulled out of many many years of storage. Was sold off to a local collector that has around a dozen Oshkosh trucks with v plows in a open field on display.

  • @georgekelly5338
    @georgekelly5338 Před rokem

    That thing is a rolling Stephen King horror novel.😁

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před rokem

      Funny you say that, he lives about 1.5 hours south of me.

  • @johnnymitz
    @johnnymitz Před 5 lety +2

    I enjoyed watching this. It's great to see this old machine still going. But I must ask why blowing it in the opposite direction? Maybe I'm missing something here. Is its discharge chute always in a fixed position? Is its rotating feature broken or something? Does it even have a rotation feature?

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 5 lety +2

      I don't know alot about the old truck...my father had worked for the town and I just happened to show up when they took it out of storage...they took it out for a test drive and was transferring snow from one side of the road to the other to test it out.... it has now been sold to a osh gosh collector in the near buy town where it rests next to about 10 osh gosh trucks with v plows

    • @MRALBERT571
      @MRALBERT571 Před 2 lety

      The snow was drifted on that side and had to be moved otherwise it would just get worse so get it out of there so it don’t drift as bad for a while, he was blowing it the way the storms do but he got it across the road so it don’t close the road.

    • @ar-ks4vi
      @ar-ks4vi Před rokem

      Can't blow it through house windows

    • @dand3975
      @dand3975 Před rokem

      The drivers side needed to be close to the bank or curb to correctly judge where he was in relation to the edge of the roadway.

    • @bobd1805
      @bobd1805 Před rokem

      The power line will come down if you blow that much snow on them.

  • @martymarsh3937
    @martymarsh3937 Před 6 lety +1

    Blowing in to the wind, common.

  • @charlesjedlicka2725
    @charlesjedlicka2725 Před 3 lety +1

    I wonder how many mail boxes and utility peds that one can take out?

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 3 lety +1

      It's wouldn't never know it hit one 😂

  • @TheMajictech
    @TheMajictech Před rokem

    They just don’t make ‘em like they used to, that thing would probably eat tree stumps.

  • @540allison
    @540allison Před 6 lety +3

    i have an osh kosh.i can snow blow my driveway in 30 seconds

  • @andrewlewis955
    @andrewlewis955 Před 9 lety +17

    Why is it blowing the snow back into the roadway?

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 9 lety +6

      they took it out of storage to play around, it hadnt run in years....they were blowing it to the otherside of the road but wasn't making it all the way over...they took a plow and plowed it across

    • @jordanwicinski2141
      @jordanwicinski2141 Před 8 lety +1

      to keep the ground frozen. Do you live in the frozen parts? I didn't think so, or maybe your daddy and mommy take care of it for you!

    • @deanmeyer1815
      @deanmeyer1815 Před 7 lety +2

      he is actually blowing snow to down wind side of the road so it doesn't drift in deeper. East-West roads to the south side, North-South roads to the East side

    • @brucekwak2420
      @brucekwak2420 Před 5 lety

      Andrew Lewis cuzz he is a half a tard

    • @edpiner4960
      @edpiner4960 Před 5 lety

      sorry but it appears the wind what little there is is blowing back across the road.

  • @MustangsTrainsMowers
    @MustangsTrainsMowers Před 4 lety

    Can they adjust the angle of the discharge chute?

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 4 lety

      I don't believe they were able to...it was pulled out of storage and tested...it is now owned by a collector

  • @waiting4aliens
    @waiting4aliens Před 5 lety +1

    To be used in the next zombie or sharknado flick

  • @johnnersinger5075
    @johnnersinger5075 Před 3 lety

    I got one just like that

  • @teejay5688
    @teejay5688 Před 3 lety

    I hope they had a can of "sterno" for a defroster... and enough shear bolts .. Long underware , OMG the agony just watching ... our highway dept had one,,, maybe your department bought it ..... looks the same ......

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 3 lety +1

      My father used to work for the town, this was in storage for over 20 years and was brought out to play around with it. Not sure when the town acquired it, I'm assuming way back in the day. This is now owned by a local Oshkosh collector and rest in a meadow with around 8 or 10 repainted Oshkosh trucks with v plows.

  • @raymondcote6669
    @raymondcote6669 Před 5 lety +1

    40’s Oshkosh what is wring with the driver. He is blowing all the snow up wind.

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 5 lety

      Was taken out of storage for a test run...he was transferring it to the other side of the road...after they ended up cleaning it up with the plow truck. They normally put wind rows in the potato field using the loader with a v plow which helps trap the blowing snow...i have a video showing my father placing the rows on the fields....again the old truck was taken out for a trial run just to see how it ran.

  • @marcfournier823
    @marcfournier823 Před 3 lety

    No lights working? I almost bought one of these a couple of years ago . Sorry I didn't.

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 3 lety +1

      I'm unsure why the lights weren't on, I know they just took Out of storage and they were just doing a test run on a side road. It now owed buy a local Oshkosh collector, it now rest in a mowed field along with at least 10 other vplow Oshkosh trucks.

  • @daw162
    @daw162 Před rokem

    Sounds like large displacement gas engine. Is it? I'd make a comment about how much it would cost to run, but with diesel running 50% more than gas here , it'd be even cost in early 2023.

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před rokem

      Its gas, two gas engines, one for the truck and the one in the back for the blower. My father said the pistons were the size of my head. Can't remember how many cylinders

  • @Ssssssnake1
    @Ssssssnake1 Před 7 lety +1

    kind of trying to spit up wind

  • @65bug519
    @65bug519 Před 6 lety +8

    nice machine but I bet it makes gasoline go away as fast as the snow

    • @randr10
      @randr10 Před 5 lety

      My dad had one of these with a Waukesha gas engine in front and I can't remember what the rear engine was. Both were big cube, low compression inline sixes that ran really smooth. The front one idled at a very low RPM so that you could almost see the individual fan blades rotating. The rear one had dual stacks and would shoot steady blue flames when under load (until he decided to put a y-pipe and a muffler on it) which was pretty cool. For the amount of snow they move, they're pretty fuel efficient. Took about 3 payloaders to keep up with ours when we were running it after a blizzard in Buffalo back in the late 90s.

    • @redpower1466
      @redpower1466 Před 5 lety

      Phillip Holstein it says gas on both the truck and rear engine so I'm guessing this one is gas.

  • @magnum8264
    @magnum8264 Před 5 lety +2

    Put some power steering on the old girl!

  • @jameslindley924
    @jameslindley924 Před 3 lety

    You would think the driver would blow with the wind as opposed to against it !! looks like 25 % is landing on the road !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!- Council operator !!lol

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 3 lety

      They just took out of many many years of storage, they were just trying it out, they were transferring one side to the other side. They went back with the plow truck and cleaned up what didn't make it to the other side. This was sold to a local collector.

  • @TheAnarchistPrince
    @TheAnarchistPrince Před 7 lety

    What powers it Wakeshau engines?

    • @pootubedoodle9467
      @pootubedoodle9467 Před 6 lety +1

      Thus Spake Zarathustra Production
      This appears to be the same model I ran. Yes a big inline 6 waukesha gas motor.
      IIRC avg was about 25gal/hr

    • @TheBigdog1207
      @TheBigdog1207 Před 4 lety

      25 gal/hr.... gotta love it

  • @samgarofalo2461
    @samgarofalo2461 Před 5 lety +2

    LET HER EAT !!!

  • @katherinelavigne3818
    @katherinelavigne3818 Před 2 lety

    Looks like hes pissing into the wind! Work with the wind not against

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 2 lety

      It was just a trial run, just came out of many years of storage and was being sold.

  • @npsit1
    @npsit1 Před 7 lety +1

    Seems like all of these people throw the snow upwind.. That doesn't make a lot of sense to me. I suppose if you are trying to avoid houses or buildings it does.. But otherwise it seems almost counterproductive.

  • @5020Chris
    @5020Chris Před 9 lety

    Anyone know the type of engine running the snow blower ?

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 9 lety

      just called and asked my father and he couldn't remember the size of the gas engine in the back that runs the blower but he said it had 4 huge pistons and thought there was a spark plug on each side of it for 2 spark plugs per piston. I will find out more info from the town foreman about it and maybe get a close up video of the engine compartment

    • @5020Chris
      @5020Chris Před 9 lety

      ChiefWiggim that would be great !

    • @franmcmullen2115
      @franmcmullen2115 Před 9 lety +1

      Probably a big old Waukesha engine.

    • @dregenius
      @dregenius Před 9 lety

      ChiefWiggim They used a gas engine in these things and the city didn't go bankrupt fueling a gas engine at wide open throttle and then rebuilding it when it wore out every season? I saw it said "GAS" on the side but I was hoping they were joking or something…

    • @SpaceMountainLarry
      @SpaceMountainLarry Před 9 lety

      dregenius They probably used gas instead of diesel because diesel can't reach high enough speeds to fling the snow

  • @thedocisin3204
    @thedocisin3204 Před rokem

    I think it just spit out a cow!

  • @MrWayneJohn1
    @MrWayneJohn1 Před 3 lety

    Turning radius? What turning radius?!

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 3 lety

      I'm unsure, I do know it was not power steering and wore you out. From what my father's boss told me.

  • @sunside79334
    @sunside79334 Před 5 lety

    those sad excuses for snow chains tho.

    • @ericl2969
      @ericl2969 Před 3 lety

      Oh, really? There could be twice as many cross links justified for plowing, but you don't need extreme traction to crawl along pushing a blower. And on tires like that there's no need for fancy diamond patterns (machines having tires with tractor lugs are another story, but that's not what we see here). Have you ever seen an Oskosh truck push snow? I'm guessing you never have or you wouldn't be worried about less-than-the-best tire chains. Oshkosh trucks at airports push with plows that are 20 feet wide, and even not using tire chains they are just about unstoppable.

  • @levak8740
    @levak8740 Před rokem

    That is not the 1940 truck period!

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před rokem

      Why isn't it? It was a military truck, built between 1943-45 time frame. Google it

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před rokem

      usautoindustryworldwartwo.com/oshkoshmotortruck.htm

  • @christophergaff6992
    @christophergaff6992 Před rokem

    Why send it to the junk yard all city wants NEW truck it runs doesn't it

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před rokem

      Wasn't sent to junk, a collector bought it, town used the money to purchase other needed items. This hadn't been used in many many years and was taking up inside storage...the collect who bought it has a huge row of Oshkosh trucks on display.

  • @albertkenley3032
    @albertkenley3032 Před 4 lety

    Ml

  • @markaraujo06
    @markaraujo06 Před 5 lety

    not good what a mess

    • @ChiefWiggim
      @ChiefWiggim  Před 5 lety

      They just pulled it out from many years of storage, they were just trying it out. It now sits in a field in a collection display of many osh gosh vplow trucks in crouseville maine