Chuck Timbrook’s new memorial addition to the Black Out veterans-support rig

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Updated Jun 1, 2018

Blackout | 2017 Promo Video

When Chuck Timbrook reached out to me and asked if I would make a video for his truck Blackout I didn't hesitate. This truck is so much more than a cool ride, it's a memorial to the men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice. Chuck Timbrook Black Out

Posted by One Room Media on Saturday, April 22, 2017

The last several months have been eventful for Chuck Timbrook. Since my last update with Timbrook, during which we discussed his heart surgery and a series of holiday parades where his Black Out 1999 Freightliner Classic was set to appear late last year, he’s found out from his doctor that “my commercial driving days are done,” he says, with his heart operating at around 40 percent of optimal capacity. “I might have to go back next year to put stints in.”

While his financial picture has dimmed a bit, his passion for the veterans-support and -recognition work he’s been doing with Black Out is as bright as ever. “Once I get up in the morning, I can not lay back down,” he says. On tough days, “I’ll do something on the computer – on my good days, I’m up there messing with my truck.”

This week, he’s prepping to take it to a nearby high school’s veterans car show.

He’s gotten a lot done since we last spoke — take a look at the rear memorial box and added flags in the video above, and these pictures from events over the weekend and a photo shoot with a local photographer:

Unveiled this past Saturday at an event preceding a ride for a fallen friend in Tony Tannuty, Timbrook notes, the passenger side of the new memorial is shown above. The box was fabricated by Hopewell Sheet Metal in Hagerstown, Md, with whom Timbrook’s worked on Black Out in the past.Unveiled this past Saturday at an event preceding a ride for a fallen friend in Tony Tannuty, Timbrook notes, the passenger side of the new memorial is shown above. The box was fabricated by Hopewell Sheet Metal in Hagerstown, Md, with whom Timbrook’s worked on Black Out in the past. It was then painted by Bubba Didit Paint in a marbled black that “turned out like a sheet of glass,” Timbrook says.It was then painted by Bubba Didit Paint in a marbled black that “turned out like a sheet of glass,” Timbrook says. On the other side, lettering, finished by the Tim Freker Signs shop, delivers the message Timbrook hopes all onlookers take away from the truck, one of thanks to “our brothers and sisters who’ve never come home,” Timbrook says.On the other side, lettering, finished by the Tim Freker Signs shop, delivers the message Timbrook hopes all onlookers take away from the truck, one of thanks to “our brothers and sisters who’ve never come home,” Timbrook says. On the front of the box, too, he adds, it’s a memorial for our fallen police and firemen, with apair of hands with a folded American flag in it.”On the front of the box, too, he adds, it’s a memorial for our fallen police and firemen, with apair of hands with a folded American flag in it.”

The rig now carries 12 flags, likewise a sound system newly donated by Wicked Sounds of Hagerstown, Md. “They put speakers in my [memorial] box,” Timbrook says, and “10 speakers on the outside of the truck” for a key feature of every event Timbrook participates in — playing the national anthem from Black Out’s stereo for the crowd. “Inside, two giant amps run everything – with 2,000 watts of power. … When I played the national anthem Saturday, it was just crystal clear and beautiful.”

If you participate in the big Rolling Thunder rally in D.C. the day before Memorial Day, look out for Timbrook and Black Out there. And you might find a smaller 1/32 scale model of Black Out available in the near future from California-based New-Ray Toys, he adds.

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“I built one and sent them a model,” Timbrook says, referencing a prototype he auctioned off this weekend for near $300, adding to the $3,000 he otherwise raised for veterans in events over the weekend.

And stay tuned on the interior, which Timbrook has also begun to customize. The Twisted Shifters company “out west sent me POW MIA cue balls” for both gear and brake knobs “as a donation to the truck,” he adds, clear evidence of a growing reach for the unit. “There’s events coming up all over with American Legions and the veterans’ motorcycle clubs. My wife said, ‘Well, you can’t work, but at least your schedule is full.’ If I’m going to die, I’m going to go doing something respectful. If I can’t drive truck anymore commercially, I’m not giving up this veterans support thing that I’m doing.”

Stay tuned for more.

Chuck Timbrook Black Out 1999 Freightliner 2017 04 25 08 14

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