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One of mine is also a pumper, but the last owner took the tank off and sold it separately. Thankfully he left the PTO assembly on. It has the front and rear outputs.Deuce pumper:
- Never seen one of those.
Very cool.
I'm guessing that whoever drilled those holes had a BUICK fetish. Buick designers thought those hood/fender-faux-exhaust-ports made their cars "look" as fast as a P-51 Mustang fighter plane.You can see some ghosting on the side of the engine compartment:
- "Antioch"
Also looks like somebody gave her some custom ventilating (drilled three nice round holes); those aren't normal there, are they?
Wonder what's her story. Do you have any idea?
That an actual story? The reasoning behind that Buick feature!?I'm guessing that whoever drilled those holes had a BUICK fetish. Buick designers thought those hood/fender-faux-exhaust-ports made their cars "look" as fast as a P-51 Mustang fighter plane.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BuickThat an actual story? The reasoning behind that Buick feature!?
I'll be dipped...never knew all this. How cool is that!?A traditional Buick styling cue dating to 1949 is a series of three or four vents on the front fender behind the front wheels. The source of this design feature was a custom car of Buick stylist Ned Nickles, which in addition had a flashing light within each hole each synchronized with a specific spark plug simulating the flames from the exhaust stack of a fighter airplane. Combined with the bombsight mascot (introduced in 1946), VentiPorts put the driver at the controls of an imaginary fighter airplane. The flashing light feature was not used by Buick in production, but VentiPorts remained as nonfunctional ornamentation.
The installation of VentiPorts was a reference to Buick having participated in the war effort by supplying over 74,000 Pratt & Whitneyradial engines that were installed in B-24 Liberator aircraft. Buick also supplied Pratt & Whitney engines in the Douglas C-47 Skytrain and Douglas C-54 Skymaster.[SUP][36][/SUP][SUP][37][/SUP] GM also had a controlling interest in North American Aviation from 1933 until 1948, the company that built the P51 Mustang fighter plane. GM also owned the Allison Engine Company, the manufacturer of the Allison V-1710 V-12 engine that was used in the Lockheed P-38, Bell P-39 and Curtiss P-40.
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