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Rescuing a old REO truck that has been sitting for 35 years. Jacking it up, installing wheels on it, using 3 excavators to drag it to the street and load it on a trailer.
Awesome video! I love the drone shots and it was really cool to see y’all rescue this old truck. I loved watching your vid. about the old barn. You could kinda tell that there were living quarters in it. Loved watching you clear the land first. I love that you are careful, thorough, ya get down to business, no messing around, I saw that you’re doing a series of video. You are excellent , in your knowledge of how to fix and restore anything. Very impressive for a young man. I got goose bumps seeing this old big boy under the light of the sun and wind on the road again. Even if on trailer. Full respect for those peoples! Thank you guys and can't wait to hear him roaring! Subscribed! I thanked I've seen all of your videos. And I do mean ALL...I miss Levi like he was my own. I've had every color lab possible. Best dogs ever. I'm a plumber by trade and can operate most any equipment. I'm from Georgia so the land looks similar but the weather is definitely different. If you and Cody ever get to ga. Hit us up we'd be glad to meet yall. If you need any plumbing help I'm always available to help out another construction guy. Yall be safe and keep the videos coming... That tanker was probably used for dust control in what appears to be a big sand/gravel pit from that drone footage near the end of the video. May have been near the end of it's useful life when put to work there. When I was a young boy, I used to love seeing an REO on the road, they were old timers even back in the late 60's -70's and rare to see . . . . lol. That was a lot of work to get'r outa there. Good job guys! I hope to see it in it's next life sometime. Awesome job, Guys! Seeing the truck removed from the wood and parked at new place are feeling good about it. It would be also awesome seeing this truck back on the road after re-do the whole thing. That heating oil tanker (heating oil being used almost exclusively in the NE, DC north) was much heavier than those guys realized, even empty, by several tons. But they had the equipment and manpower, though it clearly cost them big bucks to haul it out.
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