post_apocalypse_story/ph-diesel_creek.html

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<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title> Diesel Creek </title><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="html_resources/style.css"></head><body><div class="back"><a href="index.html">&lt;</a></div>
<h1> Diesel Creek </h1>
<p>
Michelle asks: <span class="quote speech">And you really expect to find
machines here that can be salvaged?</span><br />
The four are walking into a valley in a large forested area.<br />
Jack replies: <span class="quote speech">Right now, I&apos;m not even
sure this is the place &ndash; everything looks so different &ndash; but,
if it is, we&apos;ll have plenty to choose from and a bunch more for
spare parts.</span><br />
James gestures to the side, saying:
<span class="quote speech">Look, over there.</span><br />
He points out a group of very rusty and completely overgrown machines.
<br />
Annie wonders: <span class="quote speech">How did they get inbetween
the trees?</span><br />
Jack says: <span class="quote speech">They didn&apos;t. The machines
came first, the trees grew after. This wasn&apos;t a forest
back then.</span><br />
They make their way over to take a closer look.
</p>
<p>
Jack says: <span class="quote speech">Looks like these were already
out of order before they were abandoned.</span><br />
He turns to Annie and James:
<span class="quote speech">This is an excavator. We&apos;re looking for
a big one like this, maybe a bit smaller, but not as small as that one
over there &ndash; and preferably without trees growing out of
it...</span><br />
He points to a small excavator that sits askew on a thick tree trunk
that had grown thrugh the floor and out the side.
<span class="comment">Do these tiny excavators with large glass cabs
have a specific name?</span><br />
James asks: <span class="quote speech">Why not just use this one?
What&apos;s wrong with it?</span><br />
<span class="quote speech">This thing&apos;s just done for. Apart from it
being a pile of rust, it&apos;s missing its tracks <span class="comment">
treads?</span>, the hydraulics for moving the bucket, and it looks like
the inside of the cab got completely dismantled.</span><br />
They take a quick look at the other machines around them. There is the
other, much smaller excavator, a <span class="comment">Kipper?</span>,
a <span class="comment">Wie hei&szlig;t diese Maschine mit
F&ouml;rderband, die Material sortiert?</span>, and two
<span class="comment">Radlader? Baccos?</span>. All of them are rusted
beyond repair and missing integral parts.<br />
</p>
<p>
A bit further down the valley, they approach a much larger collection of
machines, parked in rows and parted out like the first ones they saw.
<br />
Jack says: <span class="quote speech">Welcome to the machine graveyard.
If memory serves right, there should be a few buildings back there and
one of the main parking lots behind them.</span><br />
While they make their way through between the machines, Annie asks:<br />
<span class="quote speech">So these machines dug out the dome?</span>
<br />
<span class="quote speech">Well... no. That was mostly done using
explosives, conveyor belts, and trains. They used <span class="comment">
Radlader? Baccos?</span> to load stuff onto the conveyors but most of
the machines here were used in construction after the digging was
done.</span><br />
</p>
<p class="comment">
research that needs to be done:
When were hydraulic excavators invented?
When did they get the ability to use a jackhammer attachment?
When did the cable-driven ones go out of fashion?
</p>
<p>
<span class="comment">missing section</span>
</p>
<p>
Annie calls the others over to one of the buildings.<br />
<span class="quote speech">Look what I found...</span><br />
Michelle arrives before Jack and she laughs. He arrives a moment
later and peeks inside. There sits a <span class="comment">
cable shovel?</span>, partially covered in rubble from the caved-in
roof &ndash; rusty but surprisingly intact.<br />
Jack says: <span class="quote speech">That&apos;s ... uhhh ... kind of
a historical artifact.</span><br />
<!--
There is also a kinda small hydraulic excavator.
They decide to make both work.
-->
</p>
<p>
<span class="comment">missing section</span>
</p>
<p>
<span class="comment">
Things that need research: Did early hydraulic excavators have starter
engines (what were they called again?) or was that a thing of the past
by then?<br />
Events:<br />
-> they take off some access panels<br />
-> they manage to get the starte engine going<br />
-> large engine won't start (why?)<br />
</span>
</p>
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