http://www.mtfca.com/discus/messages/411944/494083.html?1416110314
Saturday, May 08, 2021
if you didn't have to heat your home with wood, you probably don't know what a buzz rig is... for those who know that they are mostly anything that was welded outside a local garage, with anything that could power a spinning wood cutting saw, this is no surprise, but it's got a really fun saw blade cover
I finally got some details on my paternal grand dad, he was a navigator on a C47 toward the end of WW2, dropping paratroopers into France and 2 weeks after D Day his C47 was shot down near Sainte-Mère-Église, France.
he'd been in the CCCs since 1937
Bob was selected for Officer Training school and became a 2ndLt and went to Navigator school after that.
He navigated a A-20 aircraft from the US to England in April 1944. They had been doing submarine patrols over the Atlantic for several month then.
When his plane was shot down, he was injured pretty bad, and had a glass eye the rest of his life. When he got out of the hospital, he taught navigation and math to the new guys who we're going to be doing that job in the Army.
image from https://www.historynet.com/aviation-history-interview-with-world-war-ii-c-47-pilot-russell-chandler.htm where you can read a C 47 pilot tell how he was flying the 82nd airborne into France
His plane crashed near Saint Mere Eglise after D Day, and that means he was likely in the 313th Troop Carrier Group carrying troops of the 82nd Airborne Division, as he was on a C-47.
The 313th moved to North Africa, in Apr-May 1943, and was assigned to Twelfth AF.Resumed transport activities in the theater until Feb 1944, and then joined Ninth AF in England. Prepared for the invasion of France and on D-Day 1944, released paratroops near Picauville; dropped reinforcements over the same area on 7 Jun. http://www.americanairmuseum.com/unit/261
a Worthington in West Bend used as a yard tractor to move around a belly tanker among other things (thanks Darold!)
https://www.facebook.com/groups/1111567445695404/user/1217662711
originally called the Shawnee Mower Factory, produced lawn mowers and light-duty tractors in the United States from the early 1920s until around 1959. Founded by Brooklyn born Charles C Worthington and run as a family business until he died in 1944, it was sold to the Jacobsen mower (Racine Wisconsin) company about 1953
Jake carried the line for many, many years under their name. They were primarily built to tow the ground driven reel mowers used on golf courses and other large tracts.
It uses the 8N industrial power unit consisting of the Ford engine, radiator, front support and hood and grille.
The front axle and steering gear are from a Ford 1/2 ton pickup while the 4 speed transmission and rear end are from a Ford 3/4 ton pickup. The frame is made from channel iron. The tractor has hydraulic brakes and a spring and shock type E-Z Ride seat.
The 2 most common options on the tractor itself were dual rear wheels and a PTO.
The most common attachment for the tractor was the gang mower, but a sickle bar mower, front snow blade, heavy duty loader, and rotary highway sweeper brush were also available.
The tractor has a wheelbase of 57 inches, it weighs 2110 pounds, and the turning radius is 5-1/2 feet. Top speed in first gear is 6 mph. Top speed in fourth gear is 40 mph.
C.C. Worthington is also the same Worthington that had the Worthington Pump and Compressor Co.
He also built the Shawnee Inn and Country Club (1907) in eastern PA and caused the formation of the PGA
Charles Campbell Worthington (1854–1944) was a successful businessman whose father had invented the first direct-acting steam pump in 1840.
In the late 1890s he began to spend an increasing amount of time at his country home in Shawnee, on the Delaware river, in the Pennsylvania Poconos, west of New York.
He built his first small golf course around 1898 and in 1900 retired to live in the country.
Worthington remained an active mechanical engineer and founded the Worthington Automobile Company, which built several steam automobiles to his designs.
Near Shawnee he built the Buckwood Inn on 8000 acres, an exclusive resort with an eighteen-hole golf course. This later became the Shawnee Country club. The course was completed around 1910.
In 1912 Worthington invited professional golfers to compete on his course, and this led to the foundation of the Professional Golfers' Association of America.
After trying unsuccessfully to keep the fairways in shape by grazing sheep on them, Worthington designed the gang mower with three moving wheels.
He launched the Shawnee Mower Factory to manufacture it, later this became the Worthington Mower Company, based in nearby Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania.
The first Worthington gang mower was three-wheeled, pulled by horses with their hooves covered in leather to prevent damage to the grass.
In 1919 Worthington designed and built a gasoline-powered tractor to pull the mowers.
The Worthington tractors were assembled using parts from the Model T
Worthington produced the Worthington Model T until 1930, and then the Worthington Model A based on components from the Ford Model A.
The company introduced the triplex Overgreen mower in 1928, powered by an engine made for them by the Indian Motocycle Company of Springfield, Massachusetts.
The next year they began using engines made specially for them by Harley Davidson, and in the late 1930s, Worthington produced the Model C using a Chrysler six-cylinder engine and transmission and axles from the Dodge pick-up.
In 1935 Worthington won a case against a competitor for infringing his patents after taking the case to appeal. The gang mowers were adopted by golf courses across the country.
In 1930 the company won a contract to supply mowers to the Air Corps for mowing airfields based on technical superiority, despite not being the lowest bid. After appeal, the contract was cancelled on the grounds that the specifications had been devised so that only Worthington could qualify.
Production continued during World War II, and the company earned 'E' and 'Star' awards from the Army-Navy.
As well as being used to maintain the grass on airfields, the tractors were used to pull airplanes and trailers carrying bombs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worthington_Mower_Company
http://theironmule.blogspot.com/2016/06/the-worthington-parkover.html
sometimes I get lucky, and lear a lot of cool stuff.
I can tell you for certain, I got no idea where anything leads, and I do not even try to make a story from nothing, it just happens sometimes
Darold saw this post, and recalled that a neighbor with a small used car lot and junkyard uses this following Worthington to move cars around, and sent me these photos
dedicated to the B-24 his Great Uncle was on in WWII, the Sans Souci (no worry).
The plane did not have any nose art, so he commissioned a friend who has done WWII style nose art on planes to draw something up.
I dig this, I've never been around many kids toys sing I aged out of them, so, maybe these are common... I doubt it, and I've never seen one before.
https://www.facebook.com/rominchariots.scott/posts/4493747427321556
Now you know why the kid gets the small one... dad is pretty darn proud of the F100 in the driveway, and the kiddo is now 3rd generation F100
cause this is his paternal grandpa in 1978!
damn, I've never seen this trick before!
Good one! Cheaper than buying a 3 foot long funnel, I assure you, as mine was used once 30 years ago and still takes up space in my garage
ha! Good trick, and attention getter
Press play to see the Jeep getting attention at the beach, followed by a master lot porter making parking lot magic happen
3 weeks of Army bootcamp, was all this New Jersey putz could take, before he scaled the fence and got the hell out, with an Army M4, and hijacked a school bus, with a load of kids, that pestered him with questions he couldn't take, so he made his grade school hostages get off the bus.. their questions were more than he could handle
I don't know what kind of mama's boy this jackass is, but you can guess based on that he's a 23 year old punk from New Jersey joining the Army instead of 1) joining the Marines, 2) getting a job 3) escaping from bootcamp in 2021
Brigadier General Milford Beagle said the recruit jumped the fence at Fort Jackson South Carolina, in an attempt to return home.
The elementary school students on the bus were more than he could handle. "The kids started asking lots of questions to the suspect," Lott said. "The suspect got a little frustrated."
"The kids questions; 'Are you gonna hurt us?' 'Are you a soldier?' 'Are you a bus driver?'
Lott said the trainee let the children and the driver off the bus then continued to drive for a couple more miles. He eventually left the rifle on the bus and went through neighborhoods attempting to get rides and clothes, Lott said.
I went through bootcamp in 1989, Navy. Sure, the Army has a bit different way, but seriously, in 2021, it's milk toast, and cream puffs.... you won't believe me unless you've got a relative that has been through recently, they spend about an hour a day just posting online how it's going, I shit you not. My nephew went through Army bootcamp last year, and I can assure you, not only is it coed, the DIs can't even make scary faces anymore. It's a lot more more like phys ed class than Full Metal Jacket.
Seriously, 18 th grade kids pestered this poser so bad he made them get off the bus so he could get some relief. This is a punk who thought he "deserved respect" for being
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jovan-collazo-school-bus-hicjacking-south-carolina/
He has been charged with 19 counts of kidnapping and numerous additional charges of carjacking, possessing a weapon on school property, armed robbery and weapons possession during a violent crime.
This putz is now going to be in prison for at least a decade, Army prison, and he's going to be famous there, for threatening 18 kids with a rifle. I bet he'll regret not just gutting it out in the regular army for the rest of his miserable life
Damon Scott at 86th street, wow, train station music is a daily experience for some people, that the rest of us can only find on youtube. Compliments to Damon! Proof that you never know who you're going to meet, or what they've accomplished
next is short documentary he did, skip to 1:15 for the narrative
His mom is the Earth Wind and Fire vocalist Sherry Scott, I bet you didn't expect that!
fwiw, one of my favorite pieces of instrumental music is from another train station group, Too Many Zoos who played at Union Station https://youtu.be/JD8ZO5P9yzQ
so teach your kids music, so they will never ever go hungry. They'll always be able to work and earn a living with nothing more than music.
For other cool stuff, click on my tab "street entertainment"
Friday, May 07, 2021
A car driving at night suddenly overtook a cyclist in the road not using any lights or reflectors, had to swerve, and flipped on it's side, all caught on dash cam
Use your high beams when possible, and be as safe as you can
more than 275,000 people have subscribed to a live video feed of a Salem MA intersection, to see, or place bets on, whether vehicles will come to a full stop at the intersection’s stop sign, or roll through
https://www.twitch.tv/stopsigncam
and most people do not stop. They just roll through, whether they make a left, or a right, they mostly just roll through
Ohio state senator Brenner used a cgi background of his home office during a Zoom call, while driving with a seatbelt clearly across his chest, to vote on a bill about banning distracted driving
The footage of the meeting, which was streamed live to the public via the state’s broadcaster on Monday, came on the same day Ohio legislators introduced a bill to crack down on dangerous driving, including introducing penalties for texting and livestreaming while behind the wheel.
At the start of the video conference of the board, which makes adjustments to the state budget, Brenner appeared in a parked car. A few minutes later, he left the call before reappearing with a different background featuring wooden cabinets, hanging artwork and a houseplant.The Republican, who represents a district north of the state capital Columbus, continued to participate in the call, listening and responding to questions while keeping his eyes mostly on the road ahead.
Thursday, May 06, 2021
the terrific airplane art of Umberto Di Lazzaro, 1898 - 1968
During Benito Mussolini's 10th year in power he commissioned 24 planes to travel to Chicago for the 1933 'Century of Progress' World's Fair. The squadron, led by General Italo Balbo (1896-1940) flew in a skillful formation accross Europe to the U.S and then back to Rome. The planes descended on Chicago in a dramatic swoop and received an enthusiastic welcome from the public causing a media sensation. This landmark event was a highly successful public relations exercise for Italy's facist government and this poster was used to convey the "increasing friendship between the people of Italy and the people of the United States"(Balbo in The New York Times, 16 July 1934).
Umberto Di Lazzaro, active for just over a decade at the turn of the twenties and thirties of the twentieth century, with a known production that does not reach fifteen posters. And despite this, it's a fact that there is no publication or exhibition dealing with aeropainting that does not mention him.
this is an enormous image, so, click on it for full size to really get the detail
https://heritageitaly.blogspot.com/2016/07/umberto-di-lazzaro-1898-1968.html
a ready yacht for the traveler who insists on getting across the lake in style, not speed
As soon as this guy figured out steam power, I bet he quit using this exercise contraption