67hat34c
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2005
- Messages
- 1,929
- Status
- OTHER
- Hatteras Model
- Not Currently A Hatteras Owner
Here is a link for another one
http://powerboatlistings.com/view/1720
http://powerboatlistings.com/view/1720
johngalt said:67hat34c ,Did you read the entire sales blurb? That is a genuine Trans-Atlantic craft? That seems hard to believe. Could a boat that design/size carry enough fuel for 3000 miles? It says unassisted.
67hat34c said:I could see owning one of these if you were boating in.............. well mabe if you wanted to ................ or if you were going to .................or if you liked the looks of the ................. well hell cant think of a single reason why anyone would want one.
As well this is the only type of boat of its size and class to cross the Atlantic from New York to Paris unassisted.
yachtsmanbill said:Kinda like riding a HONDA -- Feels good until someone you knows sees you doing it... LOL ws
GaryNW said:Umm..., the guy is wearing a fanny pack. He also looks like he may be French. That thing could be planted on my acreage in eastern Wa as a hunting cabin, but I suppose all the deer would flee the area.
Gary
(Nobody You Know) said:Gee wizz, and to think, all this time I had imagined that you probably drove a '53 Nash Rambler!![]()
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No dull moments. None whatsoever!
Isn' that the plant with the stack that says "overland" in bricks vertically on the stack?? I am amased how few people know what "Overland" was. I guess it means I am old.Trojan said:We used to build thousands of military Jeeps and trucks until AMG came along. Almost went to work for them. I worked on the prototype of the 715 military truck and the 101 Jeepster. When I first started at Kaiser jeep. I almost got to work for willies Overland. My dad started in 1940 at Willies, I started in 1964. The whole Jeep plant was torn down last year. The only thing still standing is the press shop and power house. Everything being made today is made at the brand new plant about 5 miles away. There starting to remove my old power house. The one boiler we had just put in. It can't be over 12 years old at a cost of 600'000.bucks. State of the art then. How can they make money doing things like that. Bill you would have liked to have seen my power house. You like the big stuff. 14 Big boilers. 2 big steam air compressors. Each the size of a semi and 2 big electric air compressors, Each the size of a car. It would take 7 days just to shut down a boiler. Each boiler filled a spaces about 100' x 200' and 4 stories up. During the war they generated there own electric. I worked in every division in that place. A little of nostalgia.![]()
BILL