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The Tread Thread

One evening when we held our no show show, the guys with the excavators held a track machine pull.

I was witness to a D9G hitched to to a D8 and a D7.

They snapped an inch and a half cable many times until they upgraded to using a huge chain.
I was one of many that hid behind a pan in order to not get hit with the carnage :p
 
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Both of them being pulled? Holy mackerel.

Against a snowy backdrop, too, it must’ve been incredible.
There wasn't any snow involved, it was a no show show, aka the only time those of us that put on the displays get to see each other play with our toys.
 
Bombardier belt car :) These are still used here. It has a Chevrolet 350 5.7 liter V8 310 horsepower engine. And skis.

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The 9 took down the 8 and the 7
Then they switched up to the 9 against two 8s
The 9 outweighed the 8 and the 7 combo but was lighter than the twin 8s.
The D9G came out on top.
 
There wasn't any snow involved, it was a no show show, aka the only time those of us that put on the displays get to see each other play with our toys.
I see now. I misread it as the “snow show.” Would be pretty interesting trying to pull such things in the snow.

Sounds like a fascinating culture and community of people that has been built up around these incredible machines.
 
I see now. I misread it as the “snow show.” Would be pretty interesting trying to pull such things in the snow.

Sounds like a fascinating culture and community of people that has been built up around these incredible machines.
We all have a lot of fun there while educating the public about how some work was performed from days gone by.
 
Our past three shows were the first ones I attended in over 20 years that I really didn't get to see.

The Fred R. Clark Machineworks, the oldschool machineshop keeps me busy during the entire show.
 
Our past three shows were the first ones I attended in over 20 years that I really didn't get to see.
I can see why the no show show becomes important.

The Fred R. Clark Machineworks, the oldschool machineshop keeps me busy during the entire show.
Yes, your thread on this tells us all that it keeps you very busy. It’s a shop full of intriguing and useful things.
 
Matt is another member of the NPSGAHA

“Back before OSHA was a thing.” That’s for sure!

Wonderful video. It’s amazing that he could do all that work in those tight spaces and have such a clear video throughout. Fascinating project.
 
I have always been fascinated by tire treads. Especially the big trackor tires. Even the patterns they leave can stop me to staring for a little while.

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I'm beginning to suspect that if Nitro ever needs blood, they won't get it from the blood bank. They will send someone to a Napa Auto parts store.

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;)
 

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