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BlueBelle

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Posts posted by BlueBelle

  1. 31 minutes ago, 10FM68 said:

    It all sounds great fun, you are fortunate to have the perseverence.  I like studying things in depth, but usually get distracted after a while.  I was piecing together the narrative of your thread last night and got sidetracked onto the differences between the various marks of halftrack.  So, all morning I have been trying to sort that riddle out!  Later I shall return to M32 ARVs in British military service - I had forgotten, until I re-read your thread, that the British Army had any. 

    What are you going to do with all your photos when you have finished the book?  It does worry me that so much has been lost - there was that blinkin' online photo store (can't remember the name) which suddenly demanded large sums of money and then deleted all the photos of those who didn't pay - did so much damage to online study and the move from websites to FB was dreadful - recalling old posts from FB is impossible.  We have probably a max of 20-30 years left and then our collections will be gone - there is no guarantee that our next generation of relatives will be interested and they'll all get slung out as being of no interest - not least because the young today don't go in for hard copies of photos - if it isn't on their phone, it doesn't exist.  And I'm not that sure museums can be trusted either - look what happened to Beverley and even Bovington has a pretty hard nose when it comes to exhibits - they seem to have scrapped or sold off quite a lot over the years.  Enough, I'm rambling.

    If you are indeed rambling then its fine by me as yours are enjoyable, relevant and of value to our fields of interest . Don't stop, except to get a cup of tea. As for today's museums, archives, archivists and the ethos within....don't get me started... again. In the process of moving back to the UK from a colony, the topic of what to do eventually with the original photographic  collection presents questions and frustrations as I don't want them to be lost forever, nor do I want the electronic images wherever I put them to 'not be there' tomorrow for whatever reason. I need a permanent gallery perhaps.... but how? Oh well, I'll worry about it later!

    Yes, Halftracks and M32 ARVs...in Libya, fascinating topic. Keep on keeping on with them. Even the little Humber CT too, that I'd not thought 6RTR had in Libya has turned up in a colour slide but I can't make out the ERM.

  2. 4 hours ago, 10FM68 said:

    Well, good morning Lizzie, how very nice to hear from you and what a coincidence as, only last night I was trawling through your whole thread on Tripoli: I have it all on my computer (luckily I saved the photos before they disappeared as there are some fascinating shots and I return to them often).  There was little on there which I would argue with now - except I think that there were light khaki coveralls and that they weren't faded green as you suggest.  Which is a pretty small matter to disagree on, I suspect!  Oh, and I'd spell 'jerrican' with an 'i' rather than a 'y' as the Army did (maybe still does, but I duobt that they are as finickety about such detail these days when they can't even manage drill properly (I saw a photo recently of an RSM with one hand correctly supporting his pace stick under his arm and the other cocked up behind his back as if he were a GI - I was shocked!)

    As to this matter, thank you for your thoughts and the photo - yes, not brill, but it's all grist to the mill. I'm not really convinced by the Sabratha theory - that might be too subtle for its audience I think.  It might hold water better in a static exhibit of one of the regiment's tanks on an open day all bulled up, but not here, I think.  I would be surprised if the photo had been taken at the time of the livery change: it's in 'rag order' badly weathered and with a replacement (and yet to be painted?) front mudguard by the look of it.  Yes, it is a posed shot, but not one of which the regiment ought to have been too proud!  Certainly 3 RHA would have managed the photoshoot rather better, if their Scammell is anything to go by!  Best BD for the crew, in this case, is rather let down by the state of their chariot!

    So, in the absence of a more convincing reason, I will stick with the dyslexic  answer - the backwards 'z'!  But, we'll probably never know.

    How's the book going?  We're still waiting.  I had a wry smile about your comments about Pat Ware and his knowledge of Centurions, last night.  I have most of his books on 'Antars' 'Quarter Tons' 'Ferrets' and so on and have been pleased with them.  Just recently I bought 2 of the series of 4 bookzines by him for Kelsley Pubs on the subject of soft-skinned vehicles in British military use.  They're terrible!  Although most of the photos come from The Warehouse Collection, the captioning is dire and many are completely irrelevant or of preserved examples with all the problems of detail they bring.  As you and I, and most on this forum, probably, appreciate, there is so much to be gleaned from an original photo - buy why do those posing always stand in front of the markings!  The narrative is thin... I could go on, but, my goodness, not a series I'd have put my name to in his position.  But, I expect it helps pay the bills.  So... take your time and do a good job - but do make sure you have a good proof-reader who knows his stuff - that is where so many books fall down as the author is so immersed in the work they often can't see the wood for the trees by the end - it is the proof-reader's job to bring a critical eye from a new perspective.

     

    Oh and thank you for the ID of the Archer - what a spot!

    A pleasure, as usual, to read your comments 10FM68 and to receive your very welcome advice. Thank you.

    I have managed to spell jerrican both ways in my book draft! I will also need an editor who has more that just an 'idea' of what I've written about so that all materialises in a true, factually accurate and readable form..... I'd hate it if I were to be picked up or mocked for getting basics and facts wrong, even after using an editor!

    Nearly there with the 6RTR in Libya book but new stuff keeps coming in and I'm loathe to keep it and the photos out of the narrative. It's a longer than anticipated process but really enjoyable building the regiment's history, especially through original photographs and the intelligence they provide. Some original colour photos here last week of a DT on the Garian Pass loaded with the DAK Sexton (from Ice Cold in Alex) making its way to be used as a 6RTR range hard target and, it's being followed by one of the K2 (painted windscreen) ambulances from the film. Five new glorious colour slides arrived of Cambridge Load Carrier vehicles on trial with 6RTR.... bogged at Leptis Magna in the exact same spot where Centurions habitually got stuck. The slides also depict the recovery by an Explorer, using another Cambridge as a winching anchor. Enough wetting the appetites of the curious.... more work to be done. 😊

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  3. Possibly another; from a very small poor quality image in the June 1951 RDG journal.... 00SA23 or is it 00ZR23? Of the many photos I have of Cromwells, Comets and Centurions (other armoured and B vehicles too) in 4/7 RDG Libya markings/liveries, none show an SA ERM. It is not unreasonable to suggest the SA is for Sabratha and the staged photo taken in winter around the time the regiment's ERMs and livery changed to the new system/Lt Stone livery (from an olive drab-type livery).

    Forgot to add: The other vehicle creeping in view in your photo is the drivers end of one of the regiment's Archer SPGs.

    Cromwell 00SA23 or 00ZR23 4:7 RDG Sabratha -from Dec 1951 journal .pdf

    • Thanks 2
  4. 4 hours ago, john1950 said:

    Was Bluebell not looking for 431 pictures?

    She was! BlueBelle with three 'e's. Well remembered John 😊

    I saw the video above a good few years ago. Of passing interest only as it wasn't a Libya one as far as I knew then. I now know the ERMs of not one but THREE FV421s that were trialled in Libya with 6RTR and even better, I write to the drivers of two of them and now have a wonderful photographic collection of them there, including five glorious colour slides of them, two bogged down on the Leptis Magna Training Area by the beach and being recovered by an Explorer which was using the third FV421 as a winching anchor (is that the correct recovery terminology, I wonder?). One of the Load Carriers had ditched it's artificial load of Centurion track links joined up in a circle, to make the dragging out of the bog a little easier, so thought I. All will feature in a stand-alone chapter in the  history of 6RTR in Libya (WIP).

    Nice to look in here from time to time, especially when my sixth sense tells me to! 😊

    • Like 1
  5. The 44 on the RAC flash relates to the period the 13/18H were the RAC AC regiment for 11 Armd Bde (black bull, yellow background formation mark) from which the regiment departed and went into 1 BR Corps with a 131 flash number. Methinks.

  6. On 1/12/2023 at 4:05 PM, 10FM68 said:

    Ah!  Thank you for that.  That's exactly the sort of information I was after.  So, still serving with the regulars in the middle 50s!  Good that suits my ideas.  Sounds as though they were the 1(BR)Corps armoured car regiment - should have been a '2' on red/yellow on other mudguard then.

    No, seems it's not a '2'' but what looks like a unique '131' on the RAC flash. Images of vehicles of 13/18H in 1957 taken from lousy pdf reproductions of the 1956 and 57 regimental journals sent to me when researching AEC ACs in Libya in the late 1940s and 1950s. D. Taylor's Warpaint is lacking the AoS information, not for the first time either. Each sabre squadron of the regiment had a Heavy Troop consisting of two AEC ACs and one Dingo. So six AECs in all in the regiment and they spent most of their service in the care of the REME LAD.

    Daimler 131 RAC 13-18H 1957.jpg

    13-18H AEC AC B sqn.jpg

    1 BR Corps-131 on RAC flash 1957.jpg

    131 RAC 1BR Corps Dingo 1957.jpg

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  7. There never was a 26 Armoured Engineer Regiment. There was however, at Corunna barracks, 26 Engineeer Regiment which with 5, 25 & HQ squadrons when augmented by 2 Field Support Squadron, became 3 Armoured Division Engineer Regiment. The history is on the web and, in 1980, my brother joined the REME workshop attached to the regiment and....  I was in the district and knew my stuff. It was not the first time I or my brother were associated with the barracks for in 1955 it was named as Epsom Barracks and we were babies there as my father was the ASM REME of the LAD attached to 3KOH. The barber who cut my brother's hair 1980-84 was the very same one that had given him his first haircut in 1957 and remembered him for the trouble he gave and fight he gave our father in holding him still for hair chopping! Link:https://www.baor-locations.org/corunnabks.aspx.html

  8. 2 hours ago, sturgis said:

    10th Amd. Div White scout car in background ? Tripoli 1956..

    No, not a WSC.  I know the owner and of his father-in-law who took that photo at 5 Medium Wksp REME, Gurgi Barracks, Tripoli, 1956. Richard? The vehicle in question, 37YT42 is an M5 halftrack of J Battery, 3RHA Homs barracks. Yes. 10 Armd Division. I have other photos of the same Halftrack but regretably won't show them anywhere but in the appropriate book-in-the-making.😊

     

  9. Plain matt green with or without splodges of black or even shiny DBG is not a 'nice' livery for any vehicle when compared to Lt. Stone or even Lt. Stone and black/green splodges. A couple of Aden-based REME Halftracks in desert livery featured in Starfire's post a while ago, scroll through the link below. There are also plain Lt. Stone liveried REME Halftrack images elsewhere on the web. I have an unusual one too, an M5A1 with both a front jib and a 'never ever seen before' rear jib, albeit a smaller one!

     

  10. Me too. I sent a message to Admin to inform them and to request reinstatement of my previous to the 19th, status. 'They' had also awarded me some badges....so said the new 'never been seen before' type of notifications. Weird or what?

  11. On 6/19/2021 at 11:27 AM, gordonb said:

    Does anyone have any photos of 06BB50 please? I understand 2RTR were also in Libya, was it there perhaps?

     

    Gordon

    You understand correctly Gordon though I'm afraid your Saladin did not serve with 2RTR in Libya. All of their Saladins, 36x brand new, were in the main ERMd 07BB** with a few in the 00CC** range. In service some were BLRd or worse, replacements issued were still in the ERM category I've mentioned. I have what I believe to be the complete list of ERMs for 2RTR. Their Saladins were subsequently handed over to 14/20KH, then to 5RIDG. Cold trail thereafter though I have photos of some of them with the 3Carbs at the very end of the British prescence in Libya, El Adem 1969/70. 😊

  12. 1 hour ago, Caddy said:

    P.S. love the ‘Mr’ BTW, makes me feel important

    You are important. Your address is as per regulations, 2nd Lieutenants are 'Mr' (not quite 'real' officers yet) and in the field are taken under the wings of experienced other ranks to learn the basics of being an officer.....of course they are not entrusted with being in command of anything, least of all in the making a brew or cooking anything in a BV or other stove for those nominally under their command. They 'watch and learn' , they do as they are told but do get to scrub the cooking vessels and soldiers plates. Should they moan about their lowly and seemingly demeaning tasks, they don't get fed. Learning is rapid. They inevitable grow into being super 'proper' officers. I need to incorporate this into my Libya tread and the woes of the subaltern in the desert. 😊

    PS. Grilled bangers are best but like fried ones are impossible to do in an armoured vehicle. You must wait until you stop for long enough to get out the even more 'dangerous' petrol or camping gaz stove! Hence the 'banger on the go' is done in a full-temperatured BV..... if you have one.

     

  13. Clearly Mr Caddy you nothing of what goes on in a tank turret or what has gone into BVs for the last 70 years or so. 😉 I have eggs-cell-ent sauces that inform me.....you'd be suprised at what has been thrown into BVs and then down the gullets of appreciative hungry tankmen on the move. The sausage, German variety, was a favoured delicacy and still is apparently as despite the few bits of armour remaining and being based in the UK, so too are the German sausages and special sauces (look up the source of the curry wurst sausage dish sauce...very interesting).😅

  14. The most important aspect is as reported here, the BV. To make a proper brew one requires boiling water and indeed to boil sausages known as 'bratties' one requires boiling water again. I am told if you left most of the water out you could cook other foodstuffs in it too....would that be range stew? But an RHQ RTR approved forum reports that the latest BVs and the ones going into C3s do not boil! The Elf n Safety zealots seem to have struck and deemed boiling water a hazard to our brave, tough troops who are so 'deserving-of-the-best equipment and essentials'. An adjustment has been performed in manufacturing to prevent the water reaching boiling temperature. If REME still have the ECE or Control Equipment Technician trades, perhaps they'll override the thermostat or whatever mechanism that must be 'fixed' to enable a perfect brew and/or sausage to be delivered, fit for purpose.

  15. On 5/11/2021 at 3:12 PM, bootsandsocks said:

    Does anyone remember the long swan cyclops did across the desert in libya, with us was a boffin from fvrde in chertsey. I broke down half way down there and was stuck there for at least seven days with a hydraulic leak, we were finaly recovered and towed home. I forgot to say that I was driving a Saladin at that time. Those were the days.   

    Hello Bootandsocks....Suprise Suprise! I know you from another forum world! Good to see you on here and in the best forum thread ever! Yes, your long swan was Ex Crescent Moon to the Toummo water hole in the Tibesti Mountains. My father was on the exercise too, the ASM REME sharing the spares RL binner driving with the TQMS Tosh Hamm. Mr Bunce was the accompanying boffin. Let's play a game..... you were in either 4 or 5 Troop, your commander was either 2Lt. Scrutton 4 Tp or Lt. Pugh 5Tp.  You want more? Ok, your Saladin was named either CHINDWIN or CHAMPION. Both vehicles spent a long time adrift with mechanical poorliness but I really think it was CHINDWIN 07BB68 that was yours as I know it was at Uig El Chebir VOD (Vehicle off Desert...a term I've just invented for VOR as there were no roads beyond Sebha) from 28th Apr until 8th May 1960. More? No, you tell us more please. I have the full report of Crescent Moon. Oh, I was there too, not at Toummo obviously but there playing in the sand, sea and Roman ruins of Homs and Leptis Magna. Other grown ups who were there too correspond and many have sent their photo collections of 2RTR in Libya to me.  Feel free to do the same and if you like, to p.m me...... 😊

    • Like 1
  16. Oh. I feel compelled to do a little Saladin Bridge Plate thing here. Last four photos are of 2RTR, 14/20 and 3rd Carbs in the deserts of..... yes, Libya. All four Saladins shown were first issued to 2RTR in Aug 1959 and all had yellow bridge plates painted on the right hand wing with the same Romanesque number 11. All had the RTR cap badge on the other wing. No RAC AoS flash, no Formation flash (Trip Dist Dhow). Within weeks, the bridge plates had been painted out, never to be seen again whilst the Saladins, all 36 of them, remained in 2RTR's hands. The RAC cap badge was repositioned on the LH side of the mantlet and bright new RAC AoS flashes (with white headers and black stencilling 2 R TKS) and Trip Dist Dhow Formation flashes (shield-shaped but later became a mix of shield and rectangle shapes) were applied. When the Saladins were handed over to succesive regiments (14/20H, 5RIDG, poss 17/21L and finaly 3Carbs) each painted the bridge plate on again! Good job we're just 'doing' bridge plates as I could go on and on about Libya Formation flashes and 2RTR Saladin (and other vehicle types) names. Top three photos are on the web, bottom three are mine.583667571_6-saladin36copy.jpg.ca4b94d43689ab26b31f7ae3b9fe9c59.jpg959407033_5-saladin21copy.jpg.ae47f3705741455847eb1f2ab0683c82.jpg889289189_4-Ex-2RTRSaladinLeylandwreckerrectangulardhowflash14-20HLibya62-64copy.jpg.6fb626e178fc9d8b672932604a70b9c1.jpg9610516_3-SaladinbrandnewBridgeplate-LizzieTaylor.thumb.jpg.d6c2df7e79bdf01a90a97a99c35e4b4c.jpg1953824040_2-SaladinBridgeplateblank-3rdCarbsElAdem1969-ex2RTR.jpg.68d869a4c9da47762006d06c04c60c88.jpg552479219_1-SaladinBridgeplate14-20Hex2RTR.jpg.81b739fc0a0d46d18edd26f6a2cda6c3.jpg

    • Like 2
  17. 10 hours ago, Edward William Jones said:

    Was this near Ttimimi? Between Derna and Tobruk?

    No, not really.

    Camp Chatham, 20 miles west of the Knightsbridge cross tracks.

    Troops would often leaguer at a twin rock feature known as 'Pindar's Tits' near Wadi El Mra.

    The two 'hillocks' to be seen from afar were so named long before the big-boobed model, Lucy Pinder of allegedly Page 3 fame was born. Some well-read wag in a WW2 or soon thereafter Cyrenaica HQ saw the likeness of the breast-like mounds to lines orated by the Greek poet Pindar when he claimed that Cyrene was to be built upon the chalk-white breasts of Libya. If you also look at a map of Libya, the 'lump' on which Cyrene and surrounds protrudes into the sea is also breast shaped. Hence, Pindar's Tits and certainly not Lucy Pinder's Tits or with an 'e'. History is a mystery, even when written down ..... somewhere!   ☺️

     

  18. 10 hours ago, Morris C8 said:

    Photos came in the post of Libya 1969.

    Keith

    Libya 1969. kb.jpg

    Libya on the range kb.jpg

    Libya 1969 back of photos.jpg

    Yep, I bought some too! Most of the batches on offer are not up to much and the photos are in the main, not of 2RTR but are of 3RGJ ....taken by a 3RGJ person I suspect who was an officer trying to impress his CO.... I didn't buy the COs photos! The Capt. with the CO in two of those photos lives. The occasion of the exercise was for 2RTR's Battlegroup to practice their warfare skills, unfettered by BAOR/UK constraints as that's where they were ordinarily based. The vehicles you see are not 2RTR ones but are those of the exercise stockpile at 10 Ord Depot El Adem..... Camp Alpha or sometimes known as St Barbara's Camp..... she being the RAOC patron saint. The APCs, Ferrets and Wombats (yes, Wombats, not Mobats or anything else) were not 3RGJs either, just more stockpile stuff. Everything picked up from the stockpile and returned, even more worn out, at End Ex. Anyway....this was not Tripolitania 😂

    • Like 1
  19. 12 Ridgebacks and Mastiffs re-engineered (take a look at hugely improved ground clearance) for UCR in Mali. I thought it was news... the website says contract was awarded last May. https://npaerospace.com/ridgback-and-mastiff-upgrade-for-mali-operation/

    So maybe not all the 'armoured' trucks and Warriors will be sold off/cut up?

    Ajax doesn't have the same capability as Warrior in that it can't carry a full infantry section....if I've read correctly. Boxer? Don't know. Everything is under-armed and a muddle of wheeled and tracked. No capability to fire a missile from under armour. No long range/smart heavy artillery to count of (AS90 is a relic, the few left in service) , no long range thermobaric missile systems, no anti-aircraft/missile protection, no armoured divisions, no armoured brigades, no agreement for 20 years on strategy, formations etc. We'll be safe though, we have laptops and the 'invulnerable' interweb. Apologies, it's not Libya-sand-coloured stuff.

  20. Dear Ploughman, if you want to wade through nearly 800 pages of The Desert Railway, try this https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/The-Desert-Railway.pdf

    Stuff in there too, on Staniers.....steam puffers which may pop corks for some!

    The website has been a great source of British Royal Engineers reference material for my RE research in Libya since I embarked upon my 'crazy' project...... have a good look around it.

    https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/introduction/heritage-material/

    This is the best place for anyone to start on anything Royal Engineers.....journals with much high-brow stuff and so on but unfortunately there are  no 'Sapper' magazines which are really really full of more useful useable information. Again I suggest, turn to the RE Museum.

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