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  #1  
Old 10-23-2008, 12:06 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nowhere Man 1966
Hmmm, if you want motorized form of transport, a "SEEP" (amphibious jeep) would be cool and if you can make enough fuel, an amphibious DUKW (Duck" with 6 wheels) would even be better. Would be cool to make a motorhome out of a DUKW too and it would double as a houseboat. I even saw a late 1940's era magazine that suggested turning a DUKW into an RV. There was also a civilian "Amphibicar" made in Germany too, early 1960's, one of our local radio stations had one back then too.

Chuck M.
I have always wondered what happened to the DUKWs that are used for tourism in the Wisconsin Dells, in the T2k world. I think there are about 100. I remember during the tour they discussed that they used their own machine shops to manufacture parts as they are difficult to find. This bodes well for their continued operation.

Game wise they might have been commandeered by the 1st Brigade 49th Armored as they would have passed through the dells on their way from Chicago to Fort McCoy. Perhaps they were then used by the division for transport down the Mississippi once the division was directed against the Mexican forces.

Last edited by kato13; 10-23-2008 at 12:31 AM.
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Old 10-23-2008, 06:35 PM
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dog cart with real dog's, or goat cart (those son'bit live on anything).

Last edited by firewalker; 10-23-2008 at 06:40 PM.
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Old 10-24-2008, 12:51 AM
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Originally Posted by firewalker
dog cart with real dog's, or goat cart (those son'bit live on anything).
A goat cart. Wild, man, just wild. I'm so going to have a dude on a goat cart turn up in my campaign. When it happens I'll think of you Firewalker.
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Old 10-24-2008, 08:09 AM
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Originally Posted by Targan
A goat cart. Wild, man, just wild. I'm so going to have a dude on a goat cart turn up in my campaign. When it happens I'll think of you Firewalker.
I find the symbolism of a person using goats as a conveyance in in a post-apocalyptic setting mildly ironic and amusing
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Old 10-24-2008, 09:33 AM
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Goats are the cockroaches of the ruminated world ……and thay come with milk
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Old 11-17-2008, 02:09 PM
Graebarde Graebarde is offline
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Originally Posted by firewalker
Goats are the cockroaches of the ruminated world ……and thay come with milk
CABRITO!!!!!!!!! Milk hell, that's good eats. Besides ya don't milk a billy LOL. Seriously, that is a good idea. Depending on breed, though it would be a light load, maybe garden cart sized at max with one goat.


As for my selected mode of transit. In character horse for first choice or foot. Perhaps not as fast as vehicle, but gotta eat anyways, and as the old grunt saying goes, "If ya can't carry it ya don't need it. Light and flexible."

But since they are NOT on the catagorie list it would be a small 'common' civilian off-road type such as the Toyota 4x4 pickup or 4-runner size. (god I loved my toy SR5.)

Grae

Last edited by Graebarde; 11-17-2008 at 02:13 PM.
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Old 10-24-2008, 12:44 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kato13
I have always wondered what happened to the DUKWs that are used for tourism in the Wisconsin Dells, in the T2k world. I think there are about 100. I remember during the tour they discussed that they used their own machine shops to manufacture parts as they are difficult to find. This bodes well for their continued operation.

Game wise they might have been commandeered by the 1st Brigade 49th Armored as they would have passed through the dells on their way from Chicago to Fort McCoy. Perhaps they were then used by the division for transport down the Mississippi once the division was directed against the Mexican forces.
You'll find several also in Boston and I'm sure that a number of Russian version (BAV-485, I think) are still running. By the way I just watched the movie "second civil war" yesterday. They had an interesting idea about old type equipments that would be used again (M24 chaffee, M4 Sherman). That was developped in T2K but I would expect to find some of these all over. Not only seep but also jeep, beep, half-track..., the rare Schwimmwagen also

Last edited by Mohoender; 10-24-2008 at 12:49 AM.
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Old 10-26-2008, 09:31 PM
spielmeister spielmeister is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kato13
I have always wondered what happened to the DUKWs that are used for tourism in the Wisconsin Dells, in the T2k world. I think there are about 100. I remember during the tour they discussed that they used their own machine shops to manufacture parts as they are difficult to find. This bodes well for their continued operation.

Game wise they might have been commandeered by the 1st Brigade 49th Armored as they would have passed through the dells on their way from Chicago to Fort McCoy. Perhaps they were then used by the division for transport down the Mississippi once the division was directed against the Mexican forces.
Speaking of DUKWs, I've seen a few of them still running somewhere near where I live. There's a district northeast of Manila called Malabon where my wife's family hails from. It floods there almost 24/7, mostly due to a combination of its low-lying location next to the sea and the choked up estuaries and canals which are not enough to drain the water from the streets.

I drove my wife over there once and saw what her relatives termed as an 'amphibian'. Upon closer observation, I noted that it was a modified DUKW. It seems the local businessmen bought up a lot of old US-issue mil vehicles and used them for their fishing operations.
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Old 11-17-2008, 02:41 PM
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Originally Posted by spielmeister
Speaking of DUKWs, I've seen a few of them still running somewhere near where I live. There's a district northeast of Manila called Malabon where my wife's family hails from. It floods there almost 24/7, mostly due to a combination of its low-lying location next to the sea and the choked up estuaries and canals which are not enough to drain the water from the streets.

I drove my wife over there once and saw what her relatives termed as an 'amphibian'. Upon closer observation, I noted that it was a modified DUKW. It seems the local businessmen bought up a lot of old US-issue mil vehicles and used them for their fishing operations.
I ride past a dump for old DUKW's on my way to work... there is a company that maintains a few in operation for tourists in DC (I've never seen them in the water, but they might...) and has a few extra (in horrid condition) as spare parts sources.
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