Ha, ha!....Reminds me of my youth in the 60s and 70s, living in suburban Cleveland, Ohio. Back then, two sanitation workers assisted the vacuum boom truck slowly creeping along. They'd trade off the tasks, one guy swung the vacuum, while another would rake stray leaves.The Vacuums were really noisy,...like a singular note, loud, hum or horn sound. Before they were all sucked into the hopper trucks, we'd play in volumous piles of leaves, curbside. Kids could get hurt, and routinely did, usually not seriously.
Greetings experts... I would like to know, these large companies that collect leaves, why do they do it? Do they sell them to incinerators to produce electricity? Do they use them to make compost? How do they collect money or who pays them???
@@CarbonRobloxide Being too close to a leaf vacuuming machine truck can be dangerous because the powerful suction can pull in debris at high speeds, which could cause injury. Additionally, the truck may need to make sudden movements or stops, posing a risk to anyone nearby. It’s always best to keep a safe distance from large machinery to avoid accidents.
Somehow this is surprisingly relaxing and enjoyable to watch
Glad you enjoyed the disappearing leaves
need to turn down the speed on the swing arm and it wont leave as much behind
If you slow it down it will block . I drive one ita a balance between blocking and getting the most in
Ha, ha!....Reminds me of my youth in the 60s and 70s, living in suburban Cleveland, Ohio. Back then, two sanitation workers assisted the vacuum boom truck slowly creeping along. They'd trade off the tasks, one guy swung the vacuum, while another would rake stray leaves.The Vacuums were really noisy,...like a singular note, loud, hum or horn sound. Before they were all sucked into the hopper trucks, we'd play in volumous piles of leaves, curbside. Kids could get hurt, and routinely did, usually not seriously.
great story - thanks for sharing!
I want to have a go!
Yes great job dude
Greetings experts... I would like to know, these large companies that collect leaves, why do they do it? Do they sell them to incinerators to produce electricity? Do they use them to make compost? How do they collect money or who pays them???
This is a township work crew. The leaves are brought to a township compost facility. Compost is free for township residents to pick up.
Needs googly eyes.
Ha, that would be funny
aaaaaand THAT'S why we put the leaves in the STREET/against the CURB instead of way up on the "terrace" where the village wants us to do. nincompoops
Slow it down
If you slow it down it blocks . Just like your vac at home if you suck a large pile of stuff in one go .
Not good!😢
Why?
You’re way too close to
Why?
@@CarbonRobloxide Being too close to a leaf vacuuming machine truck can be dangerous because the powerful suction can pull in debris at high speeds, which could cause injury. Additionally, the truck may need to make sudden movements or stops, posing a risk to anyone nearby. It’s always best to keep a safe distance from large machinery to avoid accidents.
@@dbdmountainlion9459 oh