Trucking lore: Icing stations

Discussion in 'Road Stories' started by Ex-Trucker Alex, Aug 18, 2024.

  1. Ex-Trucker Alex

    Ex-Trucker Alex Road Train Member

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    Now, this was just dying out when I started driving, and I personally never drove such a load, but I DID see a few guys still doing this in the mid-late 80's. Maybe a few real old-timers can add more info...

    So, there is a lot of citrus that ships from Florida up to New York, especially along the I-95 corridor (and years before, up US 1) that needs to be kept cool. Reefer units have been around since probably the late 1930's, but they were expensive and unreliable, not to mention heavy. A cheaper and more flexible alternative was to buy an insulated trailer, so that when you DID haul a produce load, you could just ICE it; cover the tops of the bins with clean burlap, and spray ground ice all over the top.

    Of course, ice melts, and even the best insulated truck needs new ice at least once every day, so there were truckstops along the route where (for a price), they would have ice-sprayer machines to re-ice your load. Put a 100 lb block into the machine, turn the blower and the grinder on, and spray it allover the tops of the bins. Several large blocks were needed for each trailer.

    Places like these probably existed up to maybe 1990. Only a few non-reefers still were carrying such loads, and they probably mostly were used by guys who had broken-down reefer units by the end.
     
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  3. cuzzin it

    cuzzin it Road Train Member

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    I was hauling iced loads of corn out of okeechobee fl 15 years ago
    Dont know why they would do that but i guess it chilled corn faster
     
  4. ‘Olhand

    ‘Olhand Cantankerous Crusty

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    Actually to keep corn and many other fresh commodities from drying out and spoiling
    The ice melts as time goes on and produce stays moist
    Doesn’t start to wilt or wither
    @Ex-Trucker Alex
    If you’re goin back pre war….those were actually what was called a “Chipper-Blower”
    Reefers really didn’t exist as we know them today
    There was basically a big fan in front of wagon and an ice bin..,the fan blew across the ice and created cold air flow
    Still most produce was still top iced as is today….
    Citrus on the other hand being a fruit wasn’t then an isn’t now top iced
     
  5. NightWind

    NightWind Road Train Member

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    We did it for years hauling garbage (produce) and even now they ice down fresh chicken at the plant before it leaves
     
  6. IH Truck Guy

    IH Truck Guy Road Train Member

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    Loaded greens out of valley heading for the water market in Chicago.
    The main line on the compressor cracked and no TK dealers had 1 in stock.
    So back to the icehouse and had them blow 40 bars over the load and hauled arse.
    Stopped just short and fired up the unit just so they heard it running. Shut it down and got unloaded.
    The checker said it was one of the better loads he had seen in a long time. Lmao
     
    Speed_Drums Thanks this.
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