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Sean N

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Posts posted by Sean N

  1. I think that is an old advert off a search engine as the business contacted me with these photos over a year ago I think. Seem to recollect it is in Sussex. Might still be there, worth chasing.

     

    I thought that; it comes up on Google, but not on Milweb's listings. I think Milweb are sometimes not too good at deleting expired ads. If you look at Milweb's classified ad listings now, there don't seem to be any Commer cab Fords. However, I wanted to confirm that was the one Hoseman was referring to, and there doesn't seem any harm Louisa calling about it; worst case, she's in no worse position than now.

  2. We have been told that our vehicle was supplied during the war to Rutland Council, Great Britain for use as a snow plow on the lend lease scheme.

     

    This may be two stories confused. Is it more likely that it was supplied under lend-lease, but converted as a snowplough post war when disposed of by the WD? There was a firm calling themselves Mack Trucks who did a lot of snowplough and other conversions of surplus Macks, and I believe a number were also bought direct by local authorities - there were some such survivors in Scotland.

  3. You could speak to 'Austin' on this forum, if it's the Commer cab Ford. He recently bought two or three of them. If he's making one out of two, he may have some parts left spare (though note I don't speak for him and I don't know his situation)

     

    If you want a new shift lever gaiter I have several!

  4. Neil, having come across similar applications in industry, I'd agree with Iain - it's likely that MDF will not put up with vibration and jolting even if the damp doesn't get it - I think the fixings are likely to tear out. If you are going to use wood, ply would be a much better bet; or you could consider a fabricated steel mount.

  5. I was in a restaurant Saturday evening that had a number of old photos around - said to be connected with the owner's family.

     

    One, a WW2 truck, carried a number on the front offside just below the windscreen, but rather than a conventional census number it was a broad arrow followed by 275698, the 27 being painted a smaller size than the other characters.

     

    This probably should ring a bell with me but doesn't. Anyone shed any light?

  6. Not only Jeeps....

     

    I think it's a real problem. For those who have vehicles, particularly the sought after ones, elevated prices can give you a cosy feeling in the wallet; but they're a barrier to entry for those new to the hobby, particularly the young.

     

    BUT ... as someone who was looking at a couple of your old posts earlier and thinking you're not around as much, welcome back (ish)

  7. Pete, there's another site which is very useful: https://www.measuringworth.com/ukcompare/

     

    It allows you to compare past and present prices in a number of different ways; inflation, purchasing power, wage comparison and so on, and gives some idea of the best measure to use.

     

    For example, I have a Ruddington catalogue from around 1952, which shows Bedford O types selling at, I think, £25 each. I found it interesting that in wage terms, that was almost exactly what I used to see Bedford TKs sell for at Aston Down in the '90s.

     

    As an example, the Fodens that I've commented on in the past come out around £35,000 in RPI terms, but £92,000 in terms of the proportion of an average weekly wage it would take to buy them (probably the most meaningful), and a frightening £135,000 in terms of GDP per capita income!

  8. Rick, have emailed. Best bet might be to talk to geophysics people or archaeologists. Several options including GPR, magnetometers, electrical resistance, EM conductivity, even metal detectors perhaps.

     

    University Earth Science or Archeology departments might be able to help, or at least offer advice and contacts - see if you can get to talk to someone at UofM or the Metropolitan uni.

  9. If I'm honest, I think the comparison with Wheels & Tracks is a red herring - it's looking at it from a partial viewpoint, and as John says, things have moved on. CMV's problem might be that it's not W&T in the eyes of many enthusiasts, but that doesn't mean that CMV should (or could) aim to be a replacement for W&T or that it's even aimed at the same niche.

     

    As Clive has said above, there's a tension between catering for the highly knowledgable enthusiast market and for the mass, casual interest market. An authoritative in-depth article that satisfies the first may turn off the second; for every person who's hooked by an obscure discovery or authoritative history of Subsidy Talbots, there's another who's only interested in Series 3 Land Rovers. It's a difficult balancing act to pull off well, but it has to be pulled off for the magazine to be successful.

     

    Modern print production techniques have made publishing relatively niche magazines practical in the last 15 years or so, but it'd be a mistake to think there are huge piles of cash to be earned at the drop of a hat and the magazine has to make money - or no magazine. That means it has to appeal to a wide range of people. It also means advertising is likely to be necessary, however much it may be disliked; I can't think of a current mass market magazine that doesn't have extensive advertising.

     

    Having said that, some of the issues commented here are inexcusable; simple proofreading or technical errors, repeated typos, unreadable copy (design should aid readability, not hamper it). Unfortunately many of these issues might point not just to carelessness but also more fundamental structural problems in Kelsey Publishing, in which case John's got his hands full!

  10. This may sound stupid but if they uncovered 2, why not recover both and use the second for parts or a template? Sod's law dictates that you fill in the hole burying the second tank and then 12 months down the line you realise something on your recovered tank is missing or broken and you wish you'd kept that other one!

     

    Chris, knowing Rick I suspect if it works out he won't stop at one - he'll be bringing up anything vaguely tank-like that's down there.

  11. Richard, thanks, that's interesting. Having had next to nothing to do with them I hadn't realised QL® had such a control box for the engine dynamo, so that's where my confusion arose.

     

    Having the auxiliary control board inside the body on the front bulkhead is consistent with practice in other vehicles so sounds probable.

     

    That confirms Guy's comments and that I have a QLR auxiliary charging set up. Thanks.

     

    Guy, thanks again for your input on this.

  12. Need to double-check what I have here just to be sure.

     

    Guy said in this thread:

     

    The auxiliary generator on a Bedford QLR is DW7X8X ... they use the same 141 regulator.

     

     

    However in another thread, someone asked about this control box on a QLR that Peter Hommes had for sale:

     

    attachment.php?attachmentid=116892&d=1467818953&thumb=1

     

     

    ... It's clearly a 141, and given the discussion here I said it was the control box for the [DW7X8X] auxiliary generator. Guy replied:

     

    Sorry, but the big box on the rear of the cabin is the vehicle dynamo regulator box for a wireless equipped QL. The chassis and the remaining bits are from a QLR , so on the chassis normally you had a radio box unit.

     

    ...which I took to be stating it was the regulator for the vehicle (i.e. engine mounted) dynamo NOT the auxiliary (chassis mounted DW7X8X) dynamo. This appears to contradict what was said in this topic, so I'm now confused.

     

    Though I know nothing about QLR auxiliary charging, all the FFW / FFR vehicles I've come across with auxiliary dynamos have a conventional control box for the vehicle dynamo and a large auxiliary control box either in the cab or in the radio body. The box in Peter's photo is clearly a 141 and so wouldn't appear to be the control box for the vehicle dynamo.

     

    I'd like to clarify so I know definitively what I have - is it definite that the 141 is the control box for the DW7X8X and that the pair formed the auxiliary charging set on QL®?

     

    Thanks.

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