Photo Gallery: Mack Truck
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A Real Old Timer
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
This is an old 1949 Mack truck that is owned by Macungie employee and Mack truck collector, Jeff Manty. He houses this truck in his private garage and hopes to refurbish it. The Mack Brothers Company was incorporated in New York in 1900, two years before Henry Ford incorporated the Ford Motor Company. Mack built 4,100 1918 AC model Mack trucks for the Allied powers during World War I.
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UPS Truck
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
A UPS truck in the Macungie facility. The Macungie Plant is massive, covering 283 acres in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. This car is finished and about to drive off the line.
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Trucks on the Line
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
A row of a variety of Mack trucks still on the line being assembled. The Macungie plant is massive, covering 283 acres in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. The Macungie plant has attempted to "green" its production process. Between 2005 and 2009, there was a 40 percent reduction in landfill waste.
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Signature Bull Dog
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
A close-up of the Mack bull dog on the hood of a truck. The first bull dog ornament appeared on Mack truck hoods in 1932.
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Shiny New Truck
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
A close-up of a red Titan by Mack inside the Macungie facility as it is preparing to drive off of the production line.
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Room For Rims
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
The tire room in the Macungie facility shows the stock of rims. The Macungie plant has attempted to "green" its production process. Between 2005 and 2009, there was a 40 percent reduction in landfill waste.
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Ready to Ship
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
A stack of UPS top hoods for the cans next to a poster of the Mack bulldog.
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Painting Preparations
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
Mack truck cabs and cab parts go into the painting area. The Macungie plant uses paints that do not contain toxic lead and chromium compounds.
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Non-Toxic Paint Job
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
Mack truck cabs and cab parts being painted. The Macungie plant uses paints that do not contain toxic lead and chromium compounds.
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Mack Truck Fleet
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
Three Mack trucks lined up to enter the Dyno testing room. The center truck is the Titan by Mack. The two other trucks are Pinnacles.
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Newly Assembled Trucks
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
Two Mack trucks lined up inside the Mack Customer Care Center in Allentown, PA. The truck in the front is a Titan by Mack.
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Massive Mack Engine
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
A Macungie employee moving a finished engine off of the production line. The Macungie plant is massive, covering 283 acres in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. The Macungie plant has attempted to "green" its production process. Between 2005 and 2009, there was a 40 percent reduction in landfill waste.
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Wall to Wall Robots
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
The robots that help build the Mack engines in a factory in Hagerstown, MD. The Mack's MP10 engine is intricately assembled by machines, much different from the hands-on operation at the Macungie plant.
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Engine Building Robots
Photo by NGT / Francis Cordero Ramirez
The robots that help build the Mack engines in a factory in Hagerstown, MD. The Mack's MP10 engine is intricately assembled by machines, much different from the hands-on operation at the Macungie plant.
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