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Hook up and haul away your AMT #Peterbilt 359 #Wrecker #ScaleModel Kit today from the links below! • Round2: https://www.autoworldstore.com/produc... • Modelroundup.com https://www.modelroundup.com/Peterbil... • Super Detailed Large 1/25 Scale. • Fully Detailed Cab, Engine, Drive Train, Interior and Chassis • Newly Tooled Tires with Pad Printed Firestone Sidewalls • Loads of Chrome Components with Over 250 Parts • • Special Features Include: • • Custom Wrecker Body • • 2 Piece Telescoping Boom • • Colorful New Decal Sheet • • Vintage Style Packaging • • Kit Accessories Include: • • Shovel • • Broom • • Fuel Cans • • Tool Chest • • Oil Drum • • Hydraulic Jack • • Fire Extinguisher • • Flags • • Bumper Guard • • Radio Complete with Hand Mic and Antenna • Peterbilt Motors Company, founded in 1939, is an American manufacturer of medium- and heavy-duty trucks. A subsidiary of Paccar, which also owns fellow heavy-duty truck manufacturer Kenworth. Peterbilt Motors is headquartered in Denton, Texas and operates manufacturing facilities in Denton, Texas and Sainte-Thérèse, Quebec. • From 1939 until the mid-1980s, the company was based in the East Bay area of Northern California. The original plant was in Oakland, which closed in 1960 and moved to nearby Newark. Truck production moved to Denton, Texas at the close of 1986, but division headquarters and engineering remained in California until 1992, when a new administrative complex and engineering department at the Denton plant was completed. The Madison/Nashville plant opened in 1969 in Madison, Tennessee, for the east coast market. Originally it only manufactured the 352/282 cabover, then conventional production began in the 1970s until it was closed in 2009. Production of Class 8 trucks continues at the Denton, Texas plant (www.peterbilt.com). • In the first third of the 20th century, logs for the lumber industry were floated downriver, hauled with steam tractors or horse teams. Tacoma, Washington plywood manufacturer and lumberman T.A. Peterman could not get his felled inventory to his lumber mill quickly or efficiently enough to suit his needs, so he looked at the then-nascent automobile technology for logging trucks that could do the job. • Peterman began by rebuilding surplus military trucks, improving the technology with each successive vehicle, such as replacing crank starters with battery powered ones. In 1938, near the end of the Great Depression, he purchased the assets of Fageol Motors of Oakland, California, which had gone into receivership in 1932 (near the depths of the Depression). With the ability to turn out custom built chassisPeterman initially produced two chain-drive logging trucks, which proved unsuccessful. In 1939, he began selling his trucks to the public. • • T. A. Peterman died in 1944. His wife, Ida, sold the company to seven individuals within the organization, but retained its land. They then expanded it into a major producer of heavy-duty trucks. In 1958, Ida Peterman announced plans to sell the property to develop a shopping center. The shareholders, not wanting to invest in a new manufacturing facility, sold the company in June 1958 to Pacific Car Foundry Co., then primarily a manufacturer of railroad freight cars, which had acquired the assets of heavy truck competitor Kenworth in 1944. One year later, Pacific Car and Foundry started construction of a modern 176,000-square-foot (16,400 m2) manufacturing facility in Newark, Calif. In August, 1960 Peterbilt moved to the new facility and became a division of the parent firm. Pacific Car and Foundry Co. changed its name officially to Paccar in 1972 • 359: Introduced in late 1967 this was the first wide-nosed conventional for Peterbilt, even though it did offer a tropic radiator wide-front 351 for export at the time(289 single drive). 359 was available in 119 and 127 long hood BBC configurations. The long hood was only available for specific engines such as the Detroit Diesel 12v71. In 1967–1972 it had the small-windowed Unilite cab. In 1973, the 1100 series cab with bulkhead-style doors debuted (late 1972) The Distinctive Dash of Class was developed in 1976. The 359 was in production until 1987, when it was replaced by its successor the model 379 . In late 1986 Peterbilt offered a special limited edition 359 Classic , a limited run of 359 trucks with numbered dash plaques, although more than 359 were built. The bulkhead style doors of the 1100 series cab are still used today. • Source: Wikipedia

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