We're as shocked as you to see it parked next to a trailer
There are trucks, and then there are trucks.
This is the latter. It was used to plow snow, but it’s been sitting for a while. According to the seller, the rust is light. In our minds, it’s really a toss-up between getting that old International V8 spinning again and swapping in something more Cummins flavored. Either way, no repainting allowed.
Link: eBay Motors
The question, sir, is how much are they asking.
Odds are the tractor eight needs nothing but a tap on the fuel pump and some fresh gas.
I want.
And if it does need a motor, the list of donors includes other Light Line models, the Loadstar trucks, and even some of the combines. (Or if you want something really crazy, the tractors used a 550ci engine in the 1468/1568 and an 800ci
unreliable boat anchormonster in the 4586/4786 4wds.)Rebuilt correctly, this would be the perfect BOV for TEOTWAWKI.
Holy crap! Did anyone click the link to the rest of his vehicular stash on the ebay page? The dude is sitting on a mountain of potential LeMons racers!
I don't mind admitting if I bought this, it'd get a new paint job. Salt isn't kind to unpainted metal.
Just, are rollers or brushes the preferred applicator?
Rollers. Because time is money.
This is what the guy in the Subaru commercial SHOULD have been driving.
Yeah…you'll be seeing a few selections from there in a few more posts…
I'm digging it. If I were a plumber, painter, handyman or some such tradesman this would totally be my truck. There's a guy around here driving an old International Harvester R-series (I think) delivery truck. I've seen it twice, neither time I had my camera handy.
Of course, the practical answer for small business people that need to carry stuff is a Ford Transit Connect, but if I were practical I wouldn't be here.
We roller-painted the Uberbird and it came out surprisingly well:
<img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2747/4140449963_99feef159a.jpg">
4200 pounds is the weight limit. This beast has got to come in at 5500 at least. That's real steel, after all.
Amen.
Man, I'd love to have this truck. I have no need for a snowplow, living in Southern Arizona, but this truck could take the kind of lousy desert roads I like to explore. Paint? Not with the mesquite, creosote bushes, and catclaw along those roads. Major thorns. Tears the hell out of a paint job.
I would add a winch however. Getting this thing stuck would be a real bummer.
No need for a winch, my friend! The IH is the Chuck Norris of the truck world…no lie!
I can only imagine the neighbors reaction if I had that truck parked out front….. but I think that'd be part of the glory of owning it!
I would take that as a challenge. I remember a time I decided I was invulnerable to mud since I was driving a '73 Irrational 1/2-ton 4×4. And promptly got stuck in a ditch after deciding that driveways were optional, and we had to go get a tractor to pull me out.
With enough of these in driveways across the country, the real estate bubble could have been completely avoided!
I agree, this is the Chuck Norris, or maybe the Henry Rollins or Hank Williams of trucks, not to mention the Frank Zappa and Hunter S. Thompson but not necessarily the Donald Fagan. However, this can get just as stuck as anything else, and I'm a believer in having a winch when you're going deep into the desert. We winched a Jeep out of a deep rut a few weeks ago, took minutes, as opposed to taking the rest of the afternoon jacking it up and stuffing shit under the tires to get it un-high-centered. If you're not afraid of catastrophes like this, you can keep your peace of mind out in the middle of nowhere. And not spill your beer fucking around with high lift jacks.
I was trying my best with the 95 F150, but yeah, it doesn't have what this truck does!
I'm only one man, doing my best!
Ah, sorry.
Starting bid is $3000, buy it now is $4500
How many gallons per mile?
And are there any size restrictions for LeMons? Not neccesarily for this example in particular, but I'd have to guess that a big old full-size truck wouldn't be too bad of a choice. Slow, but reliable.
My god that is excellent! Personally, I'd keep it all International by dropping in a 7.3L Powerstroke.
I thought for sure it was a Travelette that my Dad had when I was a little kid, but when I was calling my older brother about Mom's Toronado because of that Steve McQueen post, he said it was a GMC. When I said I didn't think GMC made crew-cabs back then, he said, "They didn't. It was some weird factory-approved special-order limited-edition thing", and he wasn't really sure how Dad got it, or what happened to it. I'll call him tomorrow and see if I can track it down. He also knows a guy who has an old Dodge Palomino Crew-Cab that's in pretty good shape that I'll get some pics of next time I'm down south. Thanks for all the old truck love, this is really great!
My best friends Dad spent 25+ years as a surveyor for the USGS, mostly here in AZ, putting in those benchmarks and monuments that you find on top of mountains and other seemingly random places all over. He always said, " 2-wheel drive was to go as far as you could until you got stuck, then you used 4-wheel drive to back out, turn around, and then you started hiking. If you kept going until you got stuck in 4-wheel drive and couldn't get yourself out, you'd be so far away from help that the hike back could kill you." They didn't have sat/cell-phones back then, but I still use that as a rule, because that high-lift can stay where it's mounted forever in my book
Edward Abbey once wrote something similar to that. I can get pretty far in my two wheel drive F100, but four wheel drive gets you stuck further. When I lived in Utah, I got that truck mired in the only mudhole I've ever seen in the West Desert. Took all morning to get it jacked up and wood and rocks stuffed under the wheels so I could drive it out of there. Yeah, you've got to be careful out in the boonies. It's best to convoy with a few vehicles, but aside from that never get too brave. That's why a winch is a good idea, it'll get you or your buddy out of a hole.
However, the aforementioned Jeep was owned and driven by a bonehead, and he wouldn't have gotten stuck if he had had a lick of sense. He shall remain nameless, and is not a Hoon.
Tires even look kinda like they will hold air. The Jeep will bow to only a few vehicles, the IH is one of them.
'73 Wagonmaster for sale near me
http://humboldt.craigslist.org/cto/1471099844.htm...
Down to $2500
'73 Wagonmaster for sale near me
http://humboldt.craigslist.org/cto/1471099844.htm...
Down to $2500
[...] it’s Classic Truck Day or something. Nowadays we’re all used to fancy-dance trucks that never see a day of hard work [...]