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- #61
finally, I am a little disappointed in the truck but the photos told the story for the most part so it is my fault. Also pigs are hard to clean... But at the same time it is still clean and way cleaner than my last pig, that is for sure (see thread link in sig). I am now looking into the hot bath and/or media blast options to bring it down to bare metal. I am hoping to have at least the 80 series chopped up this week some time and the frame ready to go. Then have the 55 removed off its frame and all torn down sometime next week if all goes to plan. Plan tonight is to completely clean up the shop and liquidate the hundreds of weird spare parts and you name it all over the place and sell them here and ebay and a big dump run as well... Look for a thread shortly with all this stuff for sale 
Some more random pics:
Some Utah "contriband" that we snuck accross the border. Managed to stop by the Full Sail brewery twice actually, also the beer was on sale. And we can't get two-buck chuck in Utah (three buck now actually) so we scored up. Also my buddy with the BJ42 was also loaded down with all sorts of booze from his old man, for some reason we have a bad rep of beer and booze being hard to get here
Also random pic of yours truly in one of the massive tree farms on the way home, growing millions of poplar trees for TP and paper and pulp and lots of other consumables. Pretty trippy, this forest literally went back miles and miles in a perfectly straight row about 12 miles wide. Literally millions of trees...

Some more random pics:
Some Utah "contriband" that we snuck accross the border. Managed to stop by the Full Sail brewery twice actually, also the beer was on sale. And we can't get two-buck chuck in Utah (three buck now actually) so we scored up. Also my buddy with the BJ42 was also loaded down with all sorts of booze from his old man, for some reason we have a bad rep of beer and booze being hard to get here

Also random pic of yours truly in one of the massive tree farms on the way home, growing millions of poplar trees for TP and paper and pulp and lots of other consumables. Pretty trippy, this forest literally went back miles and miles in a perfectly straight row about 12 miles wide. Literally millions of trees...