![webshots community archive webshots community archive](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/17/fe/85/17fe8508dd227ad81ba358569c0f6047--paper-dolls-paper-crafts.jpg)
Here is Baltimore Reserve Ladder 18 with a 1941 Mack tractor, serial #19LS-1021, which I believe is pulling an Ahrens-Fox 85-foot aerial ladder. They also purchased a Mack LS chassis which the shops used to replace a straight frame 1917 Mack Bulldog City Service Ladder truck that same year. Here, you can easily find videos with the respective upload date. Step 4: It will open the upload history of the YouTube video. It's a Marine tank, with a 'new style' of protection for the crew. I went and start looking at some of the other photos on the site an dfound this one.
![webshots community archive webshots community archive](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/14/8a/a5/148aa593687bdf6101ee5ad130c4aa13.jpg)
Step 3: Now, if you have the URL, go to the Wayback Machine website and paste it in the search bar and tap on the option browse history. After looking at the webshots photo from a few post up. In 1941 Baltimore purchased seven more Mack aerial ladder tractors on LS chassis. But you will not be able to play the video via URL. From 1941 on, the Mack LS model tractors were very common. There were many Mack AC models (Bulldogs) in the Baltimore City fleet over the years. The Baltimore FD periodically replaced many of the aerial tractors on their old tractor-drawn aerials (TDA) with Mack tractors from the teens through the 40s.
![webshots community archive webshots community archive](http://limbermen.com/crossindex4/43850908KXmvmD_fs.jpg)
One 1888 Hayes aerial ladder, which had been up-graded with a Dahill compressed air hoist, was in service for 85 years! They have about 9/32's of tread left, I had them for about a year before I went to my SSR's. I have a set of 4,30' BFG AT KO's but I am in NYC.
#WEBSHOTS COMMUNITY ARCHIVE ARCHIVE#
Baltimore converted many of its older spring hoist aerials to Dahill compressed air hoists. Archive wanted: 30x9:50's (or 235/75/15's) North Atlantic Chapter. I stumbled across the free images service (and have been pleasantly surprised - theres a large community area of free up/downloads for images, all sorted by topic and creator, as well as the commercial area of similar high quality images available for download. The Baltimore City FD kept its Holloway and Hayes aerial ladders, which had been purchased during the horse-drawn era, in service for many, many years. I highly recommend this outstanding soft-cover book, which is now out of print, to any “big city” fire apparatus buffs. This wonderful publication, printed by Krause Publications in 1996, has 336 pages, and contains hundreds of black and white photographs. Other information that I will use comes from “Big City Fire Trucks – 1900 to 1950” by Donald F. I've done a fair amount of research on Baltimore, goin through museum-owned copies of the "Unheralded Heros" and the very informative "Rigs of the Unheralded Heroes", both purchased by Duane Troxel before his death and now part of the "Duane Troxel Memorial Library" in the Firefighters Hall & Museum here in Minneapolis. Please feel free to add anything and to correct me if I'm wrong. You probably know a lot more about Baltimore City fire apparatus than I do. Gfd1- Thank you for the very interesting information. I'm sure he had a story to go along with many of these photos. I sure wish Duane could be around for his input on these great old photos he took. Merry christmas y'all i should get to bed so i don't disturb the rain deer.Hawkins point- Thanks for the info on the 1933 Mack tractored Water Tower. dr has much more expensive equipment but i at least don't know enough to make it worth the extra cash. i have the sb-600 which is nice but can not be used as a slave flash with the d40. if you think this is all the camera you will have for some time i would get the sb-400. also you will find that a flash that you can bounce will improve your pictures no end. they are at least gettable these last few months and i wish i had shopped around till i got it.
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i got the d40x with the 18-135 lens because that one was very hard to get due to demand. I appreciate the info.Ī Nikon18-200mm VR lens is the "it" lens for your d40 for someone who is still at the "auto" stage. I probably should have spent the extra money and gotten the X model, but I think this one will do everything I need it for. Thanks Leon, I got the 18-55 and 55-200 with mine, but your lens sounds ideal.