Report this forum post

I will be at one of our local Casino's tonight playing in a Hol'm tourney and I am sure they will have the game on the Big Screen, so should be a good night at the Casino. As for the Single/Double Lift, I can see their use but I would rather solve some of our other Forklift issues before introducing a new unit...oh well, nice Vet....I am somewhat of a "motor head", like my motorcycles and classics, buy, fix up, show and sale...just picked up...now hold on......a 1977 Ford Maverick..I know, not your typical "muscle car", but this thing is pretty clean, original owner, on a 1-10 comes in right around a 7-8 in condition. Picked her up in Toledo, drove it home to Canfield, Ohio, about a 200 miles trip, 70 MPH, straight and true...thanks for the comments, take care.
  • Posted 9 Sep 2011 05:09
  • By ICSConsulting
  • joined 2 Dec'10 - 13 messages
  • Ohio, United States

This is ONLY to be used to report flooding, spam, advertising and problematic (harassing, abusive or crude) posts.

Indicates mandatory field
Global Industry News
edition #1237 - 3 July 2025
While innovation and new technology are evolving at what seems to be an ever-increasing pace, the need to capture the data (telemetry) from this tech, and the ability to utilise it (telematics) for efficiency and cost savings, is one area attracting more and more attention ... Continue reading
Upcoming industry events …
October 6-9, 2025 - Detroit, MI, United States
October 6-9, 2025 - Detroit, MI, United States
November 14, 2025 - Melbourne, Australia
Fact of the week
The use of "hello" as a telephone greeting is attributed to Thomas Edison. He is said to have suggested it as a simpler alternative to other greetings, such as "Do I get you?" or "Are you there?".
TOC Europe wraps up Rotterdam, Netherlands
Upcoming industry events …
October 6-9, 2025 - Detroit, MI, United States
October 6-9, 2025 - Detroit, MI, United States
November 14, 2025 - Melbourne, Australia
Fact of the week
The use of "hello" as a telephone greeting is attributed to Thomas Edison. He is said to have suggested it as a simpler alternative to other greetings, such as "Do I get you?" or "Are you there?".