On the inside of some hearses I've seen a long bar, maybe 5' long, hanging along the inside. It looks like some kind of clamp (sorta hooks at both ends). Just wondering what it is / used for?
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what is it?
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Originally posted by Dasvigo View PostI think your talking about the bar that holds a removal cot in place
Would they mostly be in Combo Hearses (ones with a folding jump seat) ? Come to think of it, the coach I'm thinking of in question has operating back door windows and door latches to get out with - Combo?Last edited by Flymanj3; 10-15-2008, 04:11 AM.
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For a few decades pretty much all coaches had fully functioning doors and cot bars. What makes a combo a combo was like you mentioned jump seats, reversible roller panels that flip over to hold the wheels of a gurney, and also a removable beacon accessible through a zipper in the headliner of the drivers compartment. Oh and of course a siren behind the grill. They would also sometimes have more cabinets in the patient compartment.
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photo reference...
Here's a photo for you so you can see how the gurney clamp works. You roll in the gurney through the back door & guide the gurney into the stationary hook, then push in on the round handle on the gurney clamp & pivot the gurney into the unlatched clamp... release the handle and your patient is loaded & secured! The photo is of the "business end" of my 1951 Cadillac Superior combination coach that still has it's original gurney & nurse's seat. Thanks for asking... hope my description & photo helps...Attached Files
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Originally posted by hotroddwayne View PostHere's a photo for you so you can see how the gurney clamp works.
Now I can tell Joe what the hell it is
Don't think he has a fold down seat, but it is a '71 with landaus - so I don't think it's a combo
Thanks everyone (man this place is great).
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