Just wanted to publicly thank you for your hospitality when I got to Winnipeg. If I had been thinking I would have stayed on a couple of more days after the conference. I was busy as hell the whole time.
I will be back to visit with you properly.
Cheers,
Rob
BTW.... the local Calgary Pierce dealer is letting me take pictures of their new deliveries for them from now on. There's a PUC for Edmonton airport and a quint for Golden set to arrive next week. I'll post as soon as I can.
Besides the trucks from Newfoundland I just posted in the Relics thread, I got one or two others while I was driving all over the eastern half of the province being a radio operator for the volunteer teams running the Targa Newfoundland rally. As I was "working", there was not much time to take any decent pics or track down details on the truck. Sorry.
This was in Leading Tickles, Newfoundland - a village right on the coast of the North Atlantic. I shot an old Dodge 500/la France parked in a field in that same town, see the "Relics" thread. Anyway, while the rally was going on, the fire department actually had an incident. (Would've been nice to know more of it earlier than just hearing sirens coming up the closed rally stage road, but whatever..) Anyway, upon their return, I had presence of mind to grab my Blackberry and snap a pic of one of their trucks. This is the only full-size truck they went out with - they had four members respond, one in each of 3 trucks, and one in his POV. Their other two trucks are an old cube van looking like it's outfitted for rescue (the back door was open and there were SCBA mounted on the wall above a bench), and an older Ford F100 with a water tank, hose, and a Q (!). This here is obviously a GMC TopKick, maybe a tanker-pumper, hard to tell.
The thing on the hood/cowl is a remote controlled spotlight.
EDIT: Above the GMC logo on the hood/cowl.. that might be a Fort Garry logo. Rob? Thoughts?
[quote name='Jay911' date='24 September 2009 - 11:20 PM' timestamp='1253844014' post='338803']
Besides the trucks from Newfoundland I just posted in the Relics thread, I got one or two others while I was driving all over the eastern half of the province being a radio operator for the volunteer teams running the Targa Newfoundland rally. As I was "working", there was not much time to take any decent pics or track down details on the truck. Sorry.
This was in Leading Tickles, Newfoundland - a village right on the coast of the North Atlantic. I shot an old Dodge 500/la France parked in a field in that same town, see the "Relics" thread. Anyway, while the rally was going on, the fire department actually had an incident. (Would've been nice to know more of it earlier than just hearing sirens coming up the closed rally stage road, but whatever..) Anyway, upon their return, I had presence of mind to grab my Blackberry and snap a pic of one of their trucks. This is the only full-size truck they went out with - they had four members respond, one in each of 3 trucks, and one in his POV. Their other two trucks are an old cube van looking like it's outfitted for rescue (the back door was open and there were SCBA mounted on the wall above a bench), and an older Ford F100 with a water tank, hose, and a Q (!). This here is obviously a GMC TopKick, maybe a tanker-pumper, hard to tell.
The thing on the hood/cowl is a remote controlled spotlight.
EDIT: Above the GMC logo on the hood/cowl.. that might be a Fort Garry logo. Rob? Thoughts?
[/quote]
This is the information I have for Leading Tickles NFLD.....
Agreed! I like the flag as well. IMO the Moncton HME/Smeal (page 5 or 6) is a fantastic looking truck, what a firetruck should look like and what (I'm sure) people picture when they think of fire trucks. Those who don't know much about them, that is.
I found this old truck out back of a commercial property in Mississauga. Anyone know where/what/when or anything related to it? Sorry for the quality, it was from my 2mp cell phone (I was at work).
It looks like a 1941 Code 33 (redesignated G15) crash tender which was the Royal Canadian Air Forces' most widely used airport crash vehicle of the Second World War. Built on a Ford chassis with Marmon-Herrington drive train, it carried 300 gallons of water and had a rotary gear pump of 350 gpm. Air aspirating play-pipe nozzles attached to 2x 100' hoselines gave the truck a faom-producing capability. It also had a 2 x 100 pound C02 extinguishing system with 2 high pressure hose reels. Information from: "Standing Against Fire" by Lt. Colonel (Rtd) Lorne MacLean.
It looks like a 1941 Code 33 (redesignated G15) crash tender which was the Royal Canadian Air Forces' most widely used airport crash vehicle of the Second World War. Built on a Ford chassis with Marmon-Herrington drive train, it carried 300 gallons of water and had a rotary gear pump of 350 gpm. Air aspirating play-pipe nozzles attached to 2x 100' hoselines gave the truck a faom-producing capability. It also had a 2 x 100 pound C02 extinguishing system with 2 high pressure hose reels. Information from: "Standing Against Fire" by Lt. Colonel (Rtd) Lorne MacLean.
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That's exactly what it is Dave. Gloucester, Ontario ran one that they acquired from the Air Force after the war, but it was long gone before I started work there.