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Gordon_M

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Posts posted by Gordon_M

  1. It's a profile thing, that percentage that people go on about when talking about tyres.

     

    Older tyres are normally 100% profile basically the cross section of the tyre is the same height as it is wide. Modern radial tyres tend to be lower profile, from 100% right down to about 50% profile.

     

    Your problem is that instead of being 10.50 100 20 ( with the 100 being the profile ) you have bought 10.50 (x) 20 with the (x) being something less than 100.

     

    They should fit, and work, but of course the two implications are that the truck will sit lower, and the speedo calibration will be wrong because the lower profile will have a smaller rolling radius anyway. There are tyre charts online that will tell you the difference in rolling radius between 10.50 100 20 and whatever you bought.

     

    Fit them as a set, with tubes, but don't be tempted to inflate them beyond the maximum pressure stated on the sidewall, and don't mix old and new tyres as it is illegal to have (old ) crossply on the rear of a vehicle and new (radial ) on the front - stuff like that.

     

    If you haven't fitted them, have a word with your tyre supplier and see if they can supply the same tyre in a higher profile for a restock / reorder charge maybe?

  2. Worth throwing in here, for those considering purchase decisions, that although half ton WC Dodges are a little lighter and narrower than the 3/4 ton, the fixed bodies like half ton Carryalls are actually slightly higher than the 3/4 ton WCs.

     

    Virtually all parts of these machines can be manhandled by one person ( ask me how I know .... ) with only engine blocks and axle assemblies being too heavy to lift or roll easily - the front axles are particularly difficult to handle on your own.

     

    Best Dodge type is the early VC half ton ( I would say that - wouldn't I ? ), which was lighter all round, but chassis and axles are not as durable as the later ones, plus spares are more difficult to get.

     

     

    485.jpg

  3. AS long as it rolls... I think with one 13" wheel it would be forever turning left or right.

     

    Well done for taking that on. Although not as old as many vehicles on here I know that 50's and 60's vehicles were used a lot over salted roads and few survived.

     

    I can't remember the last time I saw one of those in the flesh, regardless of how common they once were.

     

    Gordon

  4. He's wasted doing them boring ordinary cars and trucks, I reckon everyone on here could keep him employed ...:cool2:

     

    If you are only short two 16" rims, put the two you have on the back and give it that trendy forward rake till you find the other two.

     

    Gordon

  5. Well you're in the wrong place then ....:-D

     

    If you look for Weirs Pumps, Cathcart, Glasgow there should be more info that you could possibly need. I'm sure they'll have a historical records section somewhere.

     

    Their basic production was pumps at the Cathcart plant - for example all the pumps on the RAF refuellers like the Thompson Brothers and Bedford refuellers with the Zwicky booms, but they also did huge amounts of other equipment and would have been full time on military production throughout the war. Lots of production for naval ships and so on too, given the proximity to Clydebank.

     

    If you wanted a centrifugal or reciprocating pump, you went to Weirs, while dog-bone compressor pumps all came from Mirrlees and fans from Howdens - all within walking distance of each other if you could put up with the Glasgow rain.

     

    I wouldn't have expected them to be tooled-up for gun barrels, but receiver frames, carriages, platforms, etc would be well within their machine shop capacity.

  6. I'm sure I found a Matador locally which was in very good order, and when I enquired about it the man-that-knows said it was one of a batch made for the RAF in the 1950's ( well post-war, basically )

     

    Anyone know anything about that batch?

  7. My favourite starting procedure is to strap the tank to the front of a concrete mixer after putting in the bits from one or more toughened glass windows.

     

    Half an hour of churning with glass fragments inside really cleans out all the junk, and you can wash and re-use them. Don't have any broken toughened glass ? Your local scrapyard would be delighted if you took some away....

     

    I did coat the inside of the tank when cleaned but don't really remember the product name - something like RUSTBUSTER I'm sure.

  8. AVIATION IN PARLIAMENT AUGUST 12 1920

     

    Houton Station, Orkney

     

    MR. WASON on July 29 asked the Secretary of State for Air if he is aware

    of the extravagance carried on at Houton, Orkney, in running the Air Force ;

    that the lorry and tender are doing no real work and are practically only

    used for running into Kirkwall and back for amusement, and that all the

    stores and rations could easily be carried by a small cart; and whether,

    under all the circumstances, he can see his way to abandon the station ?

     

    Mr. Churchill: I cannot accept the suggestion that there is any extravagance

    at Houton Station. Enquiries have been made, and the Air Officer

    Commanding reports that mechanical transport is only used for Service

    purposes. It would not be economical to provide horse transport specially

    for light loads. The question whether this station can be dispensed with is

    now under consideration.

     

    :shocked:

     

    That strikes a chord since I've actually been there. Houton is on the 'mainland' of Orkney, looking south east over Scapa Flow, with Flotta dead ahead ( south east ) and Hoy off to the right ( south west ). I believe it achieved some importance as a seaplane base but don't know exactly what time period. The seaplane ramps / hardstandings still exist near the current ferry terminal.

  9. There is one great benefit here - basically it isn't scrapped and is stored for the future, whatever happens.

     

    When I was a lad I passed by a whole pile of stuff that I knew I couldn't restore or would never get round to, and now it has all been melted down I'm sure.

     

    Last ten years or so if I run across anything unique that really should NOT be melted, regardless of condition, I've managed to find time and money to grab it and get it under cover, or pass it on to someone who could - at a last resort via fora like this one.

     

     

    There would have been a really good case for buying this, cleaning and conserving it, and just keeping it stored somewhere even if it is another hundred years before someone can get it all back together - well done.

     

    Gordon

  10. I've done that myself and it's no big deal for DUKW wheels, slightly heavier is you have 12 ply tyres though. Remember that DUKW linings are the ones that are less absorbant to water than GMC ordinary linings and I found little rust when I stripped mine.

     

    Pulling it out cautiously to see which wheels turn would help.

  11. Rocking it should work, but ...

     

    Ideally you would have driven it in nose first, so you could pull it out by the pintle hook. There really isn't a good way to hook onto the front of it if the towing points are rusty or broken.

     

    DUKWs have demountable drums, so you could pull each wheel and then each drum without pulling drive shafts and wheel bearings.

     

    Gordon

  12. It's a double-lap flare, basically exactly the same as a brake pipe end. Although not common you do get exactly the same flaring tool type as for brake pipes. There's a cheap hand-held Sealey version that does up to 1/2" at least.

     

    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/AK5063-SEALEY-VEHICLE-BRAKE-PIPE-FLARING-TOOL-KIT-/250888964116?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_3&hash=item3a6a25c814

     

    Not high pressure, of course.

     

    Gordon

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