Steeler58
SILVER Star
Here we go! I have my wife to thank for finally setting things into motion on my 40 journey. For as long as we've been married (1996), I've casually made mention of my fascination with 40's and how great it would be to own one.
In the mid 90's, on my daily commute to a previous job, I would pass by an old light blue 40 sitting quietly beside a garage on PA route 209 East of Elizabethville. Every day I'd go by and take a long glance to my left to see that truck just sitting there begging for help. At one point all those years ago, I even stopped in to ask the owner how much he wanted for it. While he was willing to sell and the price was reasonable by today's standards, I had no place to work on it and it was pretty badly rusted out. I still think about that truck today and the impact it made. Over the years since then we've spotted various non-running 40's on family vacations to northern PA. For various reasons (mainly a family, the joy of home ownership, and the lack of extra funds) I never took the leap to own one. Fortunately, my wife was paying attention all those years and the seeds were sewn.
Fast forward to early November, 2013. On a road inspection as part of her job as a pavement engineer, my wife spotted this old 40 standing guard as "lawn art" in a fairly remote part of northern PA. She sent me a message that day with the approximate coordinates and I quickly found it on Google Maps. The 40 fire was lit.
In the mid 90's, on my daily commute to a previous job, I would pass by an old light blue 40 sitting quietly beside a garage on PA route 209 East of Elizabethville. Every day I'd go by and take a long glance to my left to see that truck just sitting there begging for help. At one point all those years ago, I even stopped in to ask the owner how much he wanted for it. While he was willing to sell and the price was reasonable by today's standards, I had no place to work on it and it was pretty badly rusted out. I still think about that truck today and the impact it made. Over the years since then we've spotted various non-running 40's on family vacations to northern PA. For various reasons (mainly a family, the joy of home ownership, and the lack of extra funds) I never took the leap to own one. Fortunately, my wife was paying attention all those years and the seeds were sewn.
Fast forward to early November, 2013. On a road inspection as part of her job as a pavement engineer, my wife spotted this old 40 standing guard as "lawn art" in a fairly remote part of northern PA. She sent me a message that day with the approximate coordinates and I quickly found it on Google Maps. The 40 fire was lit.
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