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Thread: Vintage work crew photos

  1. #561
    Jon
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    Torpedo tube installation during the construction of USS Grayback (SSG-574), 18 November 1955
    Fullsize image: https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...n_fullsize.jpg


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    Supporting Member Clockguy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ralphxyz View Post
    of course the Susquehanna River was not named after a indigenous tribe of Indians that lived in the river basin
    but after a tribe (Susquehanna) that was moved into the river basin by our government to sell their native lands.

    Ralph
    It most certainly was, but I guess I missed your point in this discussion. I was merely reliving a few moments of my childhood, not trying to disparage a group of original "Native Americans".

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    Jon
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    Workers making chewing gum at the D.L. Clark Company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1948.
    Fullsize image: https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...w_fullsize.jpg


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    Supporting Member ranald's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Toolmaker51 View Post
    Axe factory, I buy. Side job for Broadway actors, instead of waiting tables? Dunno
    But WTH is this? Bullet-proof chamber pot? R&D 'Fat Man' prototype? An early Reuben Garrett Lucius Goldberg [#1] device with contributing designers? No, wait he'd only be 2 years old by then...
    Attachment 28598
    R2D2's great-great-great grandfather? Notice casters hadn't been invented [or available] yet.
    I have made a couple of real mistakes with this block making machine. As a youngen I'd help dad mix concrete for the back yard. Each time some mix was left over we would make concrete blocks. 5 decades on i needed a spot to store the machine (big mistake number 1= I stored it in a shed I had converted from a badly leaking concrete water tank that i converted into a shed complete with wooden hinged door, glass side panel for loght to see the jo blakes & an awning over the doorway: the humidity in ten years has almost destroyed it). Mistake number2 = I decided to restore it by chelating (10%molasses & bal water). I didn't have a container big enough so dug a large hole and lined with viscreen (very durable plastic sheet used under concrete slabs etc). I had help to lower the heavy inem into its temperory home. Alas we had a very big wet and suffered a small land slip of shale & clay which almost buried it.
    Vintage work crew photos-rsz_1dsc_0814.jpg

    When I went to dig it out there was a dangerous resident in the black plastic so i left well alone until my son visited and we dug & lifted it out. Rather than land fill I have advertised it for restoration or as a garden ornament that a Pandora or other vine can crawl over.

    Vintage work crew photos-rsz_dsc_0841-1-.jpgVintage work crew photos-rsz_dsc_0840-1-.jpgVintage work crew photos-rsz_dsc_0925-1-.jpg

    If I had the time & space I could make many parts (using rusted ones as templates) from quality hardwood but that isn't the case here. I'm culling and storage is a big issue.

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    Thats an interestingly shaped counterweight on the flow control from the hopper.

  8. #566
    Jon
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    A nice work crew photo from the Mesta Machine Company. I believe this is one of their smaller forging presses. 1950s.

    Fullsize image: https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...w_fullsize.jpg


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  10. #567
    Jon
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    Production of 155-mm artillery shells at the American “Pullman-Standard” plant in Hammond, Indiana. 1943-44.
    Fullsize image: https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...w_fullsize.jpg


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  12. #568
    Supporting Member ranald's Avatar
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    seems the only one not wearing glasses is the guy with the torch.

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    That's not a torch it is a pint gun in the spray booth
    Never try to tell me it can't be done
    When I have to paint I use KBS products

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    Supporting Member ranald's Avatar
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    One would think that of all there he would need a mask/ppe with such a small booth. guy on left must be subjected to the fumes etc.

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