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Dimensions User Comment; current: 10:17, 2 December 2006: 900 × 496 (96 KB) Alleganywiki (talk | contribs) Library of Congress: Prints and Photographs Division, LC-USZ62-24396. (The Conestoga wagons were first designed and built by German settlers in Pennsylvania)
The Conestoga station wagons were built on the Studebaker's 116.5 in (2,960 mm) wheelbase platform. One body style was available, a two-door wagon with a two-piece tailgate/liftgate configuration for accessing the cargo area. [1] The 1954 Conestoga's original base price was $2,095, and 3,074 were produced. [2]
Drop-deck trailers (also called step deck, or step-frame trailers) have a floor that drops down a level once clear of the tractor unit; the most common types of drop-deck trailers are flatbeds and curtain siders. Double deckers or deckers have either a fixed, hinged, or moveable second floor to enable them to carry more palletized goods.
Conestoga wagon toolbox painting, held at the National Gallery of Art. Note the heart motif at the toolbox's lid. Conestoga wagon production depended largely on the labors of blacksmiths and similar occupations since the colonial era of the United States, coinciding with increased land colonization and the rise of the American iron industry ...
File:Conestoga Wagon, about 1840-1850 - National Museum of American History - DSC06103.JPG. ... Size of this preview: 800 × 600 pixels. Other resolutions: ...
Headed by a canvas top supported on bow-shaped hoops or tilts. Either sprung or dead axle, up to a capacity of 3 tons. Lever brakes acted on both rear wheels. Drawn by either two or four horses in pole gear. First came to prominence during the gold rush period of the 1840’s. Not to be confused with the much larger Conestoga Wagon.
Low floor refers to a bus deck that is accessible from the sidewalk with only a single step with a small height difference, caused solely by the difference between the bus deck and sidewalk. This is distinct from high-floor , a bus deck design that requires climbing one or more steps (now known as step entrance) to access the interior floor ...
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