New Zealand Truck & Driver

Deadliest Catch

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WITH ITS NAME INSPIRED BY THE TV FISHING SERIES SET in the turbulent Bering Sea, Northchill’s ‘Northweste­rn’ is an iconic Kenworth K104 2.9m Fatcab that’s said to be the last to roll off the production line.

However, its ‘Deadliest Catch’ reference could have taken on a whole new meaning when its owner Graham Redington introduced its ‘unexpected arrival’ to his wife.

The big K104 itself was first registered in NZ in 2005, by Steve Gutshlag from Palmerston North, but Redington got involved with it several years later, when in 2010 Southpac’s truck salesmen

Steve Herring gave him a call.

“I had just bought an ex-hall’s T404 Kenworth,” begins Redington, “But Herring said, `this truck’s coming on the market, it was the last one ever built, and did I want it?’

“I said yes. And this is where the story gets curly, because I never told my wife.”

Redington says that he had basically bought two trucks in one day, one was planned but evidently the K104 was not. He recalls that he got off the phone and thought how the f##k am I going to tell Michelle? And in fact, he didn’t for a while.

“Anyway, we had some friends come over from Aussie to stay and after a couple of wines over dinner I thought I’d just drop it into the conversati­on - that was the worst thing I ever did, and I’ll never do that again. To this day, [12 years later] this is still a raw subject.”

Despite the flack, Redington had little regret over his purchase, he says “You learn with your f##k ups, but it was too significan­t not to take it,” adding, “when people found out I got it I was offered $30k more than I paid for it.”

What makes this truck so desirable is both its size and scarcity. Nowadays the ‘big cab’ Kenworth’s are 2.8m and this one is 2.9m, so it’s a bigger truck cab with windows in the sleeper. What’s more, Redington believes that there are only nine in the country, making it very rare indeed.

Once the ‘introducti­on’ dust had settled, they sat on it for about four months, ‘as we didn’t know what we were going to do with it’, then they painted it white and green and got it to tow their chemical tankers.

According to Redington, despite the engine ‘sh##ing itself’ at the pink pig (SH27) one morning a couple of years after getting it, (meaning they had to drop in a brand new 14L Cummins signature 620) the Kenworth has worked well for over a decade, but earlier this year he decided it needed a full rebuild - and for that he turned to his workshop supervisor Mark Dodds.

“We did the full resto here in our workshop, we’ve got four mechanics here with Mark in charge of the whole rebuild. Mark is

just a guru; he just gets me and knows how I like sh##. He dealt with the painters and just knew what I wanted.”

They stripped the Kenworth right back to bare metal, ‘chassis and everything’, wrapped all the fuel tanks, put in a remaned18s­peed Roadranger gearbox, added new diffs, and changed the ratios.

“We brought them back; they were too low. So, at 90kph it was doing 1,700rpm but it would do that going up a hill too.”

It’s got new mirrors, all new roof lights, new stacks, new bumper, new grille parts, the whole thing was made over, basically everything that needed to be replaced was, all bar the engine.

“It’s done 1.8million kays on the two engines, so we’ll either replace the engine or rebuild it. We haven’t done that yet because you can’t buy one right now. But if I can get a new one it will be done in March/april next year, if not then we’ll rebuild it here.”

Fleet Image in Hamilton were chosen to paint it, as “they are the best painters you can get,” says Redington.

“Dean (Big Gear), who runs the shop, has this eye for detail. He knows what we like and is super fussy. It was a big job, windows out and sanded back to bare metal, so there’s no original blue left on it at all.”

Redington explains how the choice of grey paintwork came about.

“I bought a K200 off a mate of mine in Aus for my 50th, and it came in Toyota grey. We decided to keep it that colour and paint our tanker business grey - it flowed on from there. We have our white and green for chill, yellow trucks for Foodstuffs and the grey is for tankers and concerts (Ontour Logistics division).”

He says that Cliff Mannington at Truck Signs in Tauranga did the detailing (including the ‘life’s too short to drive ugly trucks’ statement on the back of the cab) as they do all Northchill’s signwritin­g.

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 ?? ?? Above: The colour on the K104 is called Toyota grey and painted by Fleet Image while Cliff Mannington at Truck Signs in Tauranga did the detailing. Below Left: Michelle and Graham Redington with their “grey” trucks used for tanker work and their Ontour Logistics division.
Below Right: New stacks were part of an extensive restoratio­n.
Above: The colour on the K104 is called Toyota grey and painted by Fleet Image while Cliff Mannington at Truck Signs in Tauranga did the detailing. Below Left: Michelle and Graham Redington with their “grey” trucks used for tanker work and their Ontour Logistics division. Below Right: New stacks were part of an extensive restoratio­n.

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