tylstruck
Canadian diisabled Yuppie
Here's what the truck looked like back when U-haul had it;
Oddly, the truck was built on July 4, 1979 at the Oakville plant in Ontario. The production cost was $11,701.53. It was put into service for U-Haul on July 1 1980 at a dealership in Edmonton, Alberta.
I wished theU-haul technician that I got these records from, could have had the logbook also. It would be interesting to see all the truck's rentals/treks. U-haul iincl;udes the logbooks when they sell their trucks. Unfortunately, I wasn't the truck's first private owner,. and the log was lost or destroyed.
The truck was pulled out of service on November 27, 1997. That same year, it was sold to a dentist who used the truck for storage. He bought the truck for $2,996.
A while afterwards, the truck was sold again to a heavy duty mechanic working for a trucking firm in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He removed the aluminum box to make way for a 12' long x 8' wide steel flatbed. He also installed a hydrolic motor or pump on the firewall, just beside the fan motor for the heater vents. On the front left side of the bed is a large tunnel for a base for his hyudrolic grapple. He would use the grapple to pick up or opffload heavy truck pieces and transport them back and fourth.
I bought the trucxk from him in April 2006 for $2,000. Was asking for more, but I negotiated with him. The way I figure it, the flatbed alone would have cost about that. Unfortunately the grapple wasn't included. Only the base, the motor or pump and some cut hoses remain of that. That gentleman was now retired and had no use for the truck except to haul wood at his cabin.
I don't have much use for it either, don't have a valid driver's license. I enjoy it, the classic automotive hobby/culture. That's a story itself, for a rainy day.
Since owning the truck, I have added 3' extra inclined fleet to the bed, thus a length of 15'. Added a trailer hitch with trailer lights, an air-tight storage bo, a rear window protector, a new cassette player radio, 5 oem cab lights, cargo light and other small upgrades and mechanical work.
That's a pic taken at last year's car event. I have my friend's 1978 Harley-Davidson bike on the flatbed. Ken owns a bike business, called Death Row Cycles. He also has a 1960 Ford panel van that used to be a military van in BC. It is unknown if it was a military ambulance or a troop carrier/transporter. Ken uses the van as his business vehicle.
Tyl

Oddly, the truck was built on July 4, 1979 at the Oakville plant in Ontario. The production cost was $11,701.53. It was put into service for U-Haul on July 1 1980 at a dealership in Edmonton, Alberta.
I wished theU-haul technician that I got these records from, could have had the logbook also. It would be interesting to see all the truck's rentals/treks. U-haul iincl;udes the logbooks when they sell their trucks. Unfortunately, I wasn't the truck's first private owner,. and the log was lost or destroyed.
The truck was pulled out of service on November 27, 1997. That same year, it was sold to a dentist who used the truck for storage. He bought the truck for $2,996.
A while afterwards, the truck was sold again to a heavy duty mechanic working for a trucking firm in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He removed the aluminum box to make way for a 12' long x 8' wide steel flatbed. He also installed a hydrolic motor or pump on the firewall, just beside the fan motor for the heater vents. On the front left side of the bed is a large tunnel for a base for his hyudrolic grapple. He would use the grapple to pick up or opffload heavy truck pieces and transport them back and fourth.

I bought the trucxk from him in April 2006 for $2,000. Was asking for more, but I negotiated with him. The way I figure it, the flatbed alone would have cost about that. Unfortunately the grapple wasn't included. Only the base, the motor or pump and some cut hoses remain of that. That gentleman was now retired and had no use for the truck except to haul wood at his cabin.
I don't have much use for it either, don't have a valid driver's license. I enjoy it, the classic automotive hobby/culture. That's a story itself, for a rainy day.
Since owning the truck, I have added 3' extra inclined fleet to the bed, thus a length of 15'. Added a trailer hitch with trailer lights, an air-tight storage bo, a rear window protector, a new cassette player radio, 5 oem cab lights, cargo light and other small upgrades and mechanical work.

That's a pic taken at last year's car event. I have my friend's 1978 Harley-Davidson bike on the flatbed. Ken owns a bike business, called Death Row Cycles. He also has a 1960 Ford panel van that used to be a military van in BC. It is unknown if it was a military ambulance or a troop carrier/transporter. Ken uses the van as his business vehicle.
Tyl