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ajmac

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Posts posted by ajmac

  1. 20 hours ago, REME 245 said:

    If you were a professional outfit you would have used those throughout the Loyd throttle linkage system, however the Loyd being what it is they just bent the end of the rods a 90 deg and held them in place with a  washer and cotter pin!

    • Like 1
  2. Cromadex Northampton have SCC15 on file from a paint chip but it’s only available in two pack.  I have used a fast air dry from them called NATO Green which they have on file from a paint match they did for a customer at some time..  This isn’t official NATO green, just a match they did for someone who said they were t6ring to match NATO green, hence the name....it doesn’t match real NATO green but it does match SCC15!

    Post war SCC15 became BS298 OD But I am not convinced it’s that close to o the original SCC15 samples I have.

  3. I recently joined a French Facebook group called barn finds, there are the odd modern day find but the majority of the content is scanned in old photos from the 1980s and 90s.  The quantity and quality of wartime German vehicles or part there of found is incredible!  We all tend to forget that that was basically 30 years ago and today people can only dream of those kind of finds.  Very occasionally one may locate an original 'lost' vehicle but its very unlikely today.  At the very least you will not be finding one which was dragged off the battlefield by the farmer and it still stored in his barn.  Sadly its because the guys who did such hording have now passed away and the hoards already dispersed.

    Where hoards still exist, unless the owner has the ability to store vehicles correctly time has not been kind to the steel work.  I've seen Loyds which have been outside in yards for 40 years with 1/4" plate chassis which have completely disintegrated!

  4. All of the bearings are still manufactured today and the road wheels can be stripped of original rubber and new rubber wound on, vulcanised and machined to the correct profile.  They are NOT press on tyres.  The parts getting more difficult to find are the fork pivot seals, I had new ones waterjet cut; the asbestos cup linings riveted into the positions where the spring packs seat are also more difficult to find than they used to be.  I imported my asbestos cup linings from New Zealand, NOS.

    Road Wheels:

    There are a number of different types around, TL94 was the early war part number but later they changed the spokes a bit and the profile of the tyre, late ones have escallops in the rubber running all around the tyre where it is bonded to the rim.  You have:

    T16 disc wheels, T16 curved spoke wheels, Canadian wheels, Australian LP wheels, British cast wheels and British fabricated wheels (these have circular lightening holes and stand out a mile).

    Track return Rollers:

    Lots to choose from again:

    T16 solid metal, Canadian (lots of rubber), British early war with thin rubber and lightening holes, British later with thin rubber and no holes, late war with no rubber at all and  Australian.

     

    I'm sure to have missed some, its a mine field.

    Oh...Windsor Carriers have wheels which look similar to normal Universal Carrier items but they are wider as the spacing between the guide horns on the track was wider.

  5. Anything Ford Flathead V8 from 1938 through 1946 will be fine, the post war update which changed to the shorter bell housing is not correct but will fit with a period adaptor to an original gearbox, they continued on into the early 1950s and are probably more easily located.

  6. I've just acquired a Mortar trailer to tow behind the Loyd Carrier.  Its reasonably complete but has no cleats, I see mention of getting new ones cast, did that happen and are any still available?  I do have the correct hitch assembly but with the small eye, for the loyd I need the 2 13/16" ID 'large' eye, can anyone help out?  I am happy to swap it for the smaller one which would be more suited to jeeps.

    trailer.jpg

    • Like 1
  7. Glad that my drivers floor pressing tools came in useful again.

    Congrats on the rear hull plate track adjuster support relief pressings.  I will need to get mine done...but they are different because I have the fish plates too.

  8. 18 hours ago, Adrian Barrell said:

    True! Though on a similar note, I have recently been lucky to get the barrel record book for my 17 pdr. It fired it's first proof round on 23rd March 1945 and it's last round on 14th February 2011. That's 66 years in service! 

    It is for the barrel I have fitted, not the one that came with the carriage but impressive none the less.

     

    Who on earth was still in a position to need to fire 17Pdrs in 2011?

  9. I read that Donnington Park Race Track has either been sold outright or been leased out, thus the museum had to go as that was not required by the new owners / occupiers.  It would seem to have been a good move as Kevin and the team have been getting a lot of vehicles out to companies for restoration over the last year.

  10. I first saw these two in their position outside the museum back in 1994 on the 50th anniversary before I travelled over to Normandy.  Today a video popped up on YouTube of the two being lifted onto a transporter to be sent away for restoration.  I th8nk that was a couple of years ago.  Any news or photos of the current condition of the two.  I guess the Churchill is from Pounds and the Grizzly is one of Ian McGreggers Portuguese imports.

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