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Guest Message by DevFuse
 

The golden age of tut tutsor was it tututs?


87 replies to this topic

Poll: What did you call them? (81 member(s) have cast votes)

What did you call them?

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#1 ONLINE   Alan

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Posted 05 November 2004 - 03:07 PM

The golden age of tut tuts came when they started to tarmac over the cobbles. Oh the joy that could be had from a set of old pram wheels, some wood and a length of rope.


#2 OFFLINE   Dane

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Posted 05 November 2004 - 05:26 PM

Going like the clappers down Smithy Brew with a gang of your mates hanging on the best way they could.

#3 OFFLINE   Dion

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Posted 05 November 2004 - 10:36 PM

I had a tut-tut in the sixties but I remember my mates dad making him one that was shown on Blue Peter.It had two long pieces on wood formed in a vee and it looked great,does anybody remember this from Blue Peter or is my memory playing tricks again?

Edited by Dion, 06 November 2004 - 02:19 PM.


#4 OFFLINE   Dane

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Posted 13 November 2004 - 03:00 PM

Alan, It would seem that not many kids have had the unforgetable pleasure of owning their own tut tuts/trollies.

#5 OFFLINE   Dave

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Posted 13 November 2004 - 03:04 PM

I had a good one that my dad made for me. I used to fly down Woodlands Road on it

#6 OFFLINE   daveshome

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Posted 13 November 2004 - 10:25 PM

I had always wanted a Tut Tut but has a kid never got one, so I grew up with a space in my life, one day I was driving past the Oxfam shop in Bridge St Newton and sew the most wonderful pram for sale.
I jumped out of my car and snapped it up at a reasonable price of £5, took it home and helped my kids make a Tut Tut, that was in about 94 and here is the results of out labour of love....?

Daveshome. :D

[attachment=1419:attachment]

#7 OFFLINE   Dane

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 09:42 AM

Nice one daveshome. I see you were posh eh, super low profiles and lowered suspension. :D

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 11:11 AM

Daveshome Great trolley

Fingerposters , at least us poor lot called them trolleys Dave not tut tuts

I thought you got tut tutted when you had been naughty?

Dion

As children we were not allowed to watch Blue shows

On a more serious note you are correct. It WAS on Blue Peter.

Dane

I often wondered as a boy where you got the clap

So it was Smithy Brew?

Dane also mentions that they were trollies too

Only the posh ones called them tut tuts

#9 OFFLINE   daveshome

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 04:14 PM

Thanx Dane,

Glad you noticed all the modification.... :P ...but then I had a long time to perfect my Design....but I must point out that my sons made it, the child in the photo is my youngest son and this was during the construction.
I will dig one out of the finished Vehicle....? :)

Thanx Hooligan,

And yes you are right they were Trolleys, but the thread is on Tut Tuts and I have found that Tut Tut is a universal name, Tut Tuts and naughty, all I remember was that I was that naughty my Mam sounded like Skippy at times...? :o

I have heard of Blue Peter but I was not allowed to stay up late to watch it. <_<

It didn't matter if you got the Clap! Cloughton St was just up the road.....! I dont know where it is but that's what I heard....honest......what!!!!!!

#10 OFFLINE   Dave

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 04:43 PM

Quote


Could you steer that one Dave? The wheels on mine were a bit smaller, but the front axis (whatever it's called) could pivot, thus being able to steer it with feet or a rope. My mum told me they were called 'tut tuts' (it's a Denton's Green thing) but my mates educated me that they were called 'Trollies'.

#11 OFFLINE   Alan

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 05:00 PM

Tut tut was the generic protestant term whose boundaries far exceeded Dentons Green. We knew about trollies but our priest told us the word was a manifestation of popery and to shun it

#12 ONLINE   Dave

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 05:04 PM

You might be right. I've just remembered that my mates went to St Peter & St Pauls.

#13 OFFLINE   Voll

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 05:30 PM

Alan, I thought you went to Cowley not West Park!
No one in Nutgrove would have called them tut tuts. I suppose you ate sweeties as well, did you. Trollie drivers to man, we were.

Edited by Voll, 14 November 2004 - 05:32 PM.


#14 OFFLINE   Alan

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 06:18 PM

You're getting confused Voll, you've been in the Alberta permafrost too long. Tut tuts were the steerable ones, trollies had two fixed axles

#15 ONLINE   Dane

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Posted 14 November 2004 - 06:31 PM

You are wrong mate. Trollies were steerable as well.





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