MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch
I went to Thomas Muir's scrapyard in Kirkcaldy this morning to find some corrugated roofing sheets for my woodshed. It is an old school scrap yard. They had everything from huge radial aero engines, vintage tractors, wartime heavy haulage and lifting trucks. I saw axles and artillery wheels from veteran cars and mountains of chains with links the size of a refrigerator.
The roof sheeting was described as heavy duty. I could barely lift a 9'x3' sheet. It was so strong I could stand in the middle of an eight foot span of it and it doesn't bend. I weigh about fourteen stones. They must have been made ages ago. The galvanizing was still perfect. You couldn't buy material of that quality nowadays. Long live the serial salvors.
Does anyone else feel the love for lost places like these?
I spent my teenage years mucking about in scrap yards. I used to love studying the engines of crazy old cars. I love salvage yards!
Yes, love these places!
A few years back I was rough camping near Alston and had to cut through a scrap yard back to where I'd left my kit in the woods.
Sitting there was a series 3 landie with the rear wheels & axles removed and replaced with a double cat track. I have a photie somewhere....
Somewhere in Lincolnshire I found a big car parts yard, beyond the back of which (if you ignored the keep out signs) was all manner of weird military salvage including some zany swamp vehicle driven by big corkscrews.
Something a little like this? http://jalopnik.com/5790538/weird-screw-drive-vehicle-found-in-russian-junkyard
like that, but smaller and more open, like a boat, on the top
WANT

