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Gordon_M

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Posts posted by Gordon_M

  1. Welcome. The Scottish section of the MVT may be of help to you too, depending on which bit of Scotland you are in, of course.

     

    I'd suggest something small to start, and crucially as complete as possible. :-\

  2. Thanks Howard, I'll ease back a bit then. :blush:

     

    I understand the logic of a hole somewhere there, and you wouldn't want to weaken the structure, but does seem a little strange, and two holes as well, where one would have done ( one each side of driveshaft I suppose )

  3. .... and the real world one.

     

    In the real world nobody is going to complain if you are carrying spare wheel(s) jack, petrol, oil, and water - including jerrycans, stuff like that.

     

    You'd have a pretty defensible case if you were carrying a 'load' that was mocked up strictly for show and did not constitute a real load for the vehicle - for example if your GMC was full of empty wooden crates, or maybe that 'jeep-in-a-crate' box that the 514th were craning into and out of the GMC and Chev at the recent do using that nice big Brockway Crane.

     

    I'd have to point out the huge grey areas though - suppose you put your jeep in the back of your GMC to take it to a show ? Perfectly reasonable thing to do, well within the limitations of the vehicle, but definite grey area. You could argue that in that case the 'load' itself was a historic vehicle so it shouldn't be a problem.

     

    Actual commercial use of a WW2 vehicle, needing full compliance, taxes, insurances, licenses, and the like, must be a nightmare. I can only think of tour DUKWs and goodness knows how much paper they need to operate.

  4. Yes, there are some happy owners somewhere :-| and that shiny paint is a little too shiny, but I suppose leaving it out in the baking sun for a year isn't an option to dull it down a bit?

     

    As regards the gun mount. Have a look round on here to find the excellent thread on the Dodge Light Repair truck and its' clone. The owner has posted some great shots of the contemporary spotlight mount and cowl reinforcing on that thread which could give you a load of reference info.

     

    http://hmvf.co.uk/forumvb/showthread.php?38135-1918-Dodge-Light-Repair-Truck-and-clone/page5&highlight=dodge+light+repair

     

    Gordon

  5. It's terrible when these things are over done.

     

    Next time you walk past 3/4 ton Command Car, have a look at the side of it.

     

    The door edge cutouts have wire turned edges, with the distinctive knurl.

    The joint where the side panel meets the floor panel shows as a distinct line of spot welds.

    ... etc

     

    None of this was ever fixed or smoothed over on the production line, so why should it be massaged away during a 'restoration' I'd far rather see a Dodge, jeep, or GMC with a coat of mud on it - have you noticed the owners of muddy trucks always look happier?

  6. Just a basic M37 with a different bed. I'm sure you have already worked out that all the red metal is just to allow the winch cable to be run over the roof to the back of the truck.

     

    I don't recognise the body at all, but I don't think that is significant. There was a very limited run of M37s with a dump body - it might even be one of them

  7. 4100c7ab-f724-45e0-ae41-9fce.jpg

     

    Bill Murray needs to know what this one is ... any ideas ?

     

    --------------------------

     

    The vehicle pictured here (and sorry for the quality, but wartime photos from Russia in the 1941-1943 time period tended to be a little scratchy) is either a 1500-A or 2000-A Mannschaftswagen (Crew or Troop Transport)

     

    Several prototypes were made by Auto-Union but the production versions were done by Steyr,Phänomen, Auto-Union using the licensed Steyr design and Mercedes for the most part in the 1942-1944 time period.

     

    This particular vehicle is totally different from any version I have ever seen and after over 5 hours of research I am no further than the first 5 minutes. It resembles the 3 photos I have of the Auto-Union prototypes, two different ones, but it has an entirely different motor hood.

     

    I have a sinking feeling that the answer is obvious and I am just missing a brain cell or two as to what make it is but I just cannot retrieve it.

     

    Perhaps one of our WWII buffs or one of our European members has a clue.

     

    Thanks for any assistance.

     

    Bill Murray

  8. Tried it - I was useless with it, but it does look like the sort of stuff you would need to practice and practice some more.

     

    I was trying to use it on sheet metal and got nowhere. It may be fine for castings and solid lump repair. Have a look the the You tube videos though

  9. Worth knowing. I always thought the curved boom was later but now I know.

     

    Seems to be the one truck type that didn't get the draughty open cab too. I know with that wrecker setup it wouldn't have lowered the height,but then they went open cab on other trucks with fixed body heights

  10. I'd just like to reinforce the point that you do need to prove ownership of the vehicle, with a copy of either;

     

    Bill of Sale in your name

    Title document.

     

    ... or the like. I think I used the UK C&E 386 document, showing chassis number and import duty paid, on one truck that I didn't actually have a receipt for.

     

    Gordon

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