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Posts posted by ajmac
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What font is that Steve?
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....and relax......But the other WW1 threads are good too Andy, I shouldn't take away from those.
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I check your thread everyday, its the only thing I open HMVF for nowadays, sadly you are nearing completion which unless you guys have another project in the wings will be the end of an era :-(
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Great as always. I am impressed by the brass spinning on the Myford.
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I'll have a look tonight, I guess I could also grind a HSS tool with the radius and try that.
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Has anyone got a source for an old Imperial ball joint (photo below), it is only the bottom of the Loyd remote gear lever so not under any high loads. The thread is 3/8" BSF and the ball is 5/8" diameter. I could make most of it on the lathe but as I don't have a sphere making attachment I wouldn't be able to do the whole job. In the 1930s / 40s I presume it would have been a common off the shelf item. Sadly the parts book has the gear lever as a whole item and doesn't break it down to the lever and end, thus I don't have an original period part number.
Thanks,
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5 hours ago, super6 said:
Good to see you found your other one.
Nut is described in parts book as Part No. 33969-S 1/2"-20 slotted thin nut. Being listed as a standard part, I presume it will be UNF
Out of interest does it run in a bush and/or is there a lubricator/grease nipple for it?
I sorted the nuts too, they are indeed 1/2” UNF. This is a Loyd....thus there is neither! You can understand why they were all struck off as soon as the war finished.
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Spoke to them this morning and sadly they couldn't help.
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I’ll try them when they open tomorrow, thanks for the direction.
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Can anyone ID this standard Ford part from the 30s / 40s. I need a spare for the Loyd. I believe it was part of the handbrake assembly on 7Vs and from that I presume WOTs that came about later. If anyone has a spare and a couple of the castellated nuts that go with them that would be great.
On the Loyd it is used for the steering Tillers.
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I am searching for an Avon to section for a training course i am hosting next year. Condition isn't too important, so long as it hasn't had a compressor blade failure. Ideally it would be an Industrial 1533, 1534 or a 1535, but an Aero would also serve as a stand in.
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I should take this opertunity to thank Peter for all his valuable time spent helping the Loyd project along. Family and work schedule means I have made little progress this last twelve months. The original target was to have it running on its tracks by new year, but the revised target is to have the brakes and drive sprockets all done by the new year. Bogies by middle of of 2018.
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Norway is a great source of rear British vehicles and spares!
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Andrew,
Make sure you leave your boots at the door, slippers only while you are inside now, you wouldn't want to dirty the interior as it looks spot on.
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Looks like its not too far off now Andrew; tremendous job all around.
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The American Air Museum at Duxford it amazing, its just a beautiful use of concrete, with the sweeping observation ramps.
Its like saying that you don't care what your car looks like on the outside because you are always in it when you are driving. I remember discussing with an American colleague in Boston about the shoddy feel of the switchgear in a chevy hire car we had and he just didn't get it, its just a switch he said, who cares if it feels and sounds luxurious when you rock it. Detail is important, its about micro and macro. Tell me that the National History Museum isn't complemented by its building. Its all important, not just one aspect or another.
Lets be honest, the TM was a shoddy set of drafty buildings with Gauntlet restaurant when I first visited in the early 1990s, when I went back in 2011 it was so much better. It actually felt like someone cared about the exhibits and most importantly cared about the people who were visiting and paying for it all.
I could park up a Sherman V in a hanger with a small card information sheet propped up in front of it - Tank Displayed.
Alternately that same tank could be in a warm modern building which is pleasing to they eye with a movie of it in use playing, an engine sectioned next to it, veterans combat accounts, examples of ammunition etc...
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I saw in one of the mags that the 109 black six that used to fly in the 90s has been relocated to cosford along with a number of other important aircraft. Cosford is a great day out by the way, much better than it used to be!
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If I want to know about Land Rovers I have at least two Land Rover magazines to cover my interest thus I don't see why they should make up a large part of CMV who have the land rover magazines in their stable. As someone said previously, the most informative well researched wartime vehicle articles are in the MV modeling publications.
During the 90's I subscribed to 'Aeroplane Monthly', the best pages were always the first ones which covered, restoration projects, Russian discoveries, changes of ownership of notable warbirds etc....that was interesting.
I understand that the magazine needs to cover the hobby in general, but in the end being too inclusive ends up leaving no one happy and the readership collapses.
The other thing to remember is the internet, how can a magazine ever be looked forward to when all the 'news' is old news which those with an interest already know, again that leaves you feeling disappointed. Facebook & forums have killed 'news' for hard print.
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I thought they had an A30 Challenger for restoration - whatever happened to that?
They do have an A30 Challenger. It was loaned to IOW along with a Churchill MkIV; the Churchill was returned to the TM when the IOW museum closed a couple of years ago, one would presume that the A30 came back along with the Churchill MkIV although I have not seen any photos of it back at Bovington.
Fuel Tap Parts
in British Vehicles
Posted
All,
Does anyone know what goes in the back of the old 1940s Enots fuel tap? I think is needs a spring, nut and lock tab along with something to act as a rotation stop using the internal pin as a stop.