Found on road dead. Not this old F-750. I’ve seen it around town the past day or so hauling bobcats, soil and its own butt in a brisk manor. I can’t tell you much about other than the obvious like color and general shape. Probably a gasser under the hood. At one point in time you couldn’t flip through Truck Trader without seeing hundreds of these trucks. Today, not so much.
Archives
Categories
- At the Dealer
- Autocar Trucks
- Books
- Die Cast
- Diesel on TV
- eBay Finds
- Famous Trucks
- Free and Easy
- Heavy Equipment
- Ice Road Truckers
- Industry News
- International
- Know Your Diesels
- Lost and Found
- On the Job
- Snow Plows
- Still Working
- Truck Show
- Truck Spotting
- Vintage
- Vintage Ads
- Your Submissions
- Youtube Finds
Menu
Categories
- At the Dealer
- Autocar Trucks
- Books
- Die Cast
- Diesel on TV
- eBay Finds
- Famous Trucks
- Free and Easy
- Heavy Equipment
- Ice Road Truckers
- Industry News
- International
- Know Your Diesels
- Lost and Found
- On the Job
- Snow Plows
- Still Working
- Truck Show
- Truck Spotting
- Vintage
- Vintage Ads
- Your Submissions
- Youtube Finds
Recent Comments
- DAVID WELLNITZ on Lost and Found – Trojan Loader
- Merizier on CCI Mack Dump Trucks
- ❗ ATTENTION: You got 3.0 BTC! Click to accept → https://graph.org/Get-your-BTC-09-04?hs=68d94793c97044c1200d315bfd185594& on Autocar Mondays – So Close
- Joe Nardolillo on The Trucks of the Cardi Corporation
- M Sene on Classic Bulldozers – CAT D9 and International Harvester TD24
Contact
Meta
Ads


Every small general contractor in my area (north shore of Boston) rans Ford or Chevy gasser dumps thru the early 1980’s. Pavers, celler-hole excavators – “ubiquitous” doesn’t come close. If you couldn’t afford a diesel 10-wheeler (or didn’t really need one), Some companies kept at least 1 rebuilt engine and transmission in reserve, which was way cheaper than keeping a DD, Mack or Cummins on standby!