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Rangie

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Everything posted by Rangie

  1. Old Topic I know, but if anyone happens to have saved copies of the docs mentioned here, I'd be most appreciative of a copy myself: FV987957 iss 05.pdf FV987957FI iss 01.pdf FV987958 iss 05.pdf FV987958FI iss 01.pdf Hakenkupplung NATO hitch.pdf Cheers, Alec.
  2. That's an excellent example! Like the note for when its used with the No.3 Cooker. The "Trade Pack" No. 4 of 240 did make me chuckle, the Military didn't do their orders by half eh!? Alec.
  3. Hi Folks, Looking for a couple of the Remote Stands for cooking over the spare H-Burners from a No.4 Sankey Kitchen. Supplied to go in the vehicle rather than included in the trailer so they often go astray. Please PM if you have ones to spare, thanks. Alec.
  4. Oh they most certainly have been! The one from your Ipad anyway. Coincidentally I replied earlier. Alec.
  5. Still looking if anyone has any in the back of their storage sheds/bottom of their scrap piles! Cheers, Alec.
  6. I have spent many hours perusing the site. The search terminology can be a nightmare but if you persevere its amazing what turns up! Alec.
  7. Due to the proximity of the exhaust manifold/front pipe to the "Dash", it may or may not serve as a fire-wall Superb job as always, nicely thought out and always good to see things being bolted on. Alec.
  8. This site is a continuous source of surprise and information! A Nuffield Jeep, a bob-tailed lightweight Jeep, never heard of one before! Will be interesting to follow this refurb. Were they mass produced, or a limited-numbers type thing? Alec.
  9. Patents are a fickle reference source i'm afraid. Something that was on the 10th variant may reference the initial patent, just to cover themselves so to speak. It is a good starting point though and generally shows what they were thinking and where they were going 👍 Alec.
  10. Mine looks to have the same source, I cleaned it up many years ago bu the same page tear is there. Easy to work out the missing wording though. Clive, the front page I have on the '62 document has been defaced, probably to remove the "Restricted" markings and the WO reference. At the bottom of the page is quoted 1962 and J2-JB 10912. The VAOS I have with the equipment list is Section J2 57/Vocabulary/382 dated June '39, this is the earliest version I have found in my research on the Hydra. It also lists items that were quite rapidly phased out so its a bit of a red-herring in terms of what was subsequently used in practice but its useful for the early stuff. The '45 57/General(A)/4196 is also a really useful one made by the DCS as it shows the later improvements and what was in-use at the end of the war. A number of these were improved again and the '62 document is really representative of what was in-use until they were phased out in the 80s. Alec.
  11. Its War Office Publication J2-JB 10912 (1962) 👍 Alec.
  12. They were collapsible solid-fuelled stoves, the largest component part designed to be carried comfortably by two persons. Alec.
  13. The 2 and 3s were made by a couple of different manufacturers to the same basic spec. The 4 Mk1 Portables were sometimes known as Triplex (one of the suppliers, or the one that submitted the first basic design). The 4 Mk2 would have been an assemblage of components. One company to make the trailer (Arrow, Sankey, possibly Brockhouse, GKN, Universal Engineering, etc etc), one to supply the burners/petrol equipment/Latterly the LPG Equipment. The CES will help to identify what was what, and then further dissect via suppliers list/NSN number as far as you can go. But they would have been supplied by a manufacturer/supplier under a specific contract code (The trailers were their own B Vehicle). Alec
  14. It wasn't un-noticed... I thoroughly enjoy your insight, hindsight and input in general! Alec.
  15. No.7 is a hybrid. From memory an Optimus 80 with a 123R burner but I cant quite recall. There are a few topics on it and lots of examples in the galleries over on CCS Forum Theres no makers names on my No.6s, I believe they were a fairly small batch produced for evaluation purposes, but look at the supplier's lists for NSN 7910-99-138-3660, to see if that produces any more info. One of my containers is stamped J&F P /I\ 85, that rings a bell as something like Jones & Fellowes who produced all kinds of deep-drawn steel and aluminium items/cookwear. Again a few topics were posted on CCS, including a post about one chap who had them with him on an expedition on trial. Alec.
  16. No its not, that has a kind of Prentiss-Wabers/American look about it but I'm not sure what make/model it is. Alec.
  17. Oh yes absolutely. That is the burner unit used in the No.4 Mk2 LPG version, still used in the last versions of the Sanky Trailer Field Kitchens, colloquially known as an H-Burner for obvious reasons, ha ha. Originally the same H-Shaped burner and vapouriser assembly was petrol-fuelled and had its own little petrol-fuelled preheating burner. The petrol units were later converted to LPG when the switch was made, they can be identified by a blanking plug where the preheater burner was, along with a bracket for the burner. Later ones as per your photo were LPG designed/had a specific manifold from the outset. The petrol fuelled version utilised a 2-Gallon pressurised tank which was essentially a No.1 Hydra Burner without its burner but fitted with a 4-valve distribution manifold for the 4 feed-hoses to the H-Burner units. Those H-Burners can also be used independently as you see in the photos, just fed from a 1-Bar regulator/hose for quick boiling/feeding duties. There is also an angle-iron frame thats supplied when they are used individually for supporting large pots (to save them bouncing around on the burner themselves!), I have a support frame myself and use it with a burner when i'm doing pickling or boiling duties amongst other things in the shed, very handy! I'll try to find photos but I'm bunged up with a hellish head cold and struggling just now.. Alec.
  18. 4 Mk1 was a solid fuel range, collapsible so that it was portable. 4 Mk2 was trailer mounted, initially petrol powered but modified to LPG powered. No2. Mk1 was as per Crossland Ltd/Villiers Mar-Vil style/British Safety Stoves Mk1 with a detatchable tank/vapouriser and a cast iron burner. No.2 Mk2 had a roarer burner and front flame control No.2 Mk2 Modified had a silent burner and side flame control No.2 Mk2 up-issued had the original Mk2 retrofitted with a silent burner but had the original control spindle blanked off and the cutout can still be seen on the front panel.
  19. Have a look over on the Classic Camp Stoves forum, there's lots of photos of various examples, including the less common nowadays Hurlocks, Towson & Coxsons and other ones. For some the Nomenclature has changed, ie the No.4 was a solid fuel type, but the No.4 Mk2 was the trailer mounted type. They in turn went from being petrol fuelled to being LPG fuelled so there were lots of subtle tweaks over the years. The No.2 for another example went through 4 variants in two Mk's for added confusion Alec.
  20. Link responds that the Online survey not available i'm afraid? Alec.
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