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Someone likes their JimmysThe Grenadier actually works as a farm truck. Not as cool as overlanding or crawling, but day to day this thing has been doing work for me and I have no complaints. It’s a good truck. Horrible car, but good truck.
Nice to see them being used as work vehicles rather than just leisure or posing. Gives them real credibilityView attachment 7887669
The Grenadier actually works as a farm truck. Not as cool as overlanding or crawling, but day to day this thing has been doing work for me and I have no complaints. It’s a good truck. Horrible car, but good truck.
Is that you employing?I'm trying hard not to go down the economic migrant rabbit hole.....
We raise cattle and sheep. We are a family farm, and don’t have any employees unless you count my family: that’s my dad cutting ice while I stood back like the lazy millennial I am /s.Is that you employing?
You probably don't have any choice. If you find good ones then you will have reliable, hardworking & loyal employees. Farmers I know, and other employers have generally been successful but they are changing their mentality towards the UK 'workers' way of thinking.
What farming do you all do?
Honestly, we don’t run 71s anymore since we got out of row crop. But way back when I had to choose an online handle and I picked one no one else had. 71s are my fav engine just because they go like hell if you tune them right and that sound is epic. I have fond memories of splitting axles hauling silage.DD8V71, what have you got the 71 in? I got to work on a few of them in barges and small locos before most people phased them out for 92s, Series 60 and MTUs.
I worked for DD for a while, very few similar sized diesel engines gave the same satisfaction of completing a good tune as a full mechanical two stroke Detroit like the 8V71. DDEC took the challenge of doing a good tune away but made work a lot easier especially on a V12 or V16.Honestly, we don’t run 71s anymore since we got out of row crop. But way back when I had to choose an online handle and I picked one no one else had. 71s are my fav engine just because they go like hell if you tune them right and that sound is epic. I have fond memories of splitting axles hauling silage.
Agreed. DDEC made life easier for fleet techs but took the art out of it. I’ve done this for nearly 20 years and I appreciate that tech has done some good changes but I still like messing with pumps and injectors. My main farm truck, aside from the grenadier, is a dodge 12v 6bt. I don’t mind the fancy b58 shit in the grenadier, but I’m looking forward to smarter people than me hacking that INEOS software so I can mess with it. Mostly I need to make some serious changes to the bullshit HVAC system once somebody roots the code.I worked for DD for a while, very few similar sized diesel engines gave the same satisfaction of completing a good tune as a full mechanical two stroke Detroit like the 8V71. DDEC took the challenge of doing a good tune away but made work a lot easier especially on a V12 or V16.
UK struggles to get people who will do hard work, they would rather claim benefits than do farm work, therefore we got lots of economic migration from Europe which contributed towards UK voting to leave EU. The workers that were already here could get UK citizenship rather than go to their original country. Now they have been here for a long period, or their children moving into the work place, they have realised that they also do not need to do the hard jobs as the benefit system will be there to help, forever, plus lots of other things workers have to pay for become free when on benefits.Curious to know what you mean by “workers way of thinking.”
I am guessing there would be people would not know what is being talked about. 8V71 is a V8 71 cubic inch per cylinder 2 stroke diesel built by General Motors Detroit Diesel then Detroit Diesel became it's own company owned by Roger Penske now the company is owned by Daimler. The engine was developed during the late 1930's by GM and was one of the most used diesel engines in the 6 71 form, inline 6 cylinder, during WWII.Agreed. DDEC made life easier for fleet techs but took the art out of it. I’ve done this for nearly 20 years and I appreciate that tech has done some good changes but I still like messing with pumps and injectors. My main farm truck, aside from the grenadier, is a dodge 12v 6bt. I don’t mind the fancy b58 shit in the grenadier, but I’m looking forward to smarter people than me hacking that INEOS software so I can mess with it. Mostly I need to make some serious changes to the bullshit HVAC system once somebody roots the code.