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G506

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Posts posted by G506

  1. Yesterday I was watching a repeat of Scrapheap Challenge set in Beaulieu Estate near Southampton, the challenge was to build a bomb recovery vehicle. 'Dick's Diamonds' mutilated an early Fifties ex British Army Morris MRA 1 tonner for their attempt, does anyone know what happened to the poor old girl after filming? I'm guessing she got scrapped, another rare truck gone forever.......

     

    :cry:

  2. Hi Nick

     

    I was not aware of a Amazon in the Milestones Museum, the only one I know in England is the one at Yorkshire air museum and a lot on Malta.

    Cheers

     

     

    Hi Niels,

    a friend has an Amazon sat in a yard near Southampton, awaiting restoration. There used to be one in Poole in Dorset (15 years ago?), which I think disappeared, and another in West Sussex, not sure if its still there or not.

     

    Nick,

    welcome, good to have you here!

  3. Hello Robert,

    no, but close. I think there were two bikes built for the film, one beefed up for the actual barbed wire fence jump, and one for still photo shots. Subtle differences between the two, but as far as I know both where 1960 Triumph T110's

  4. Hi Robin,

    Triumph TRW 500cc, I can't tell from this angle if it's a Mk 1, 2 or 3. Built between 1948 and 1965. Used mainly by the RAF and British army, but also Pakistan, Canada (as this one is), and apparently the Paris Police.

    And I want one!

  5. Mark,

    no luck I'm afraid, the book I thought it would be in has no pictures, but I am fairly confident they were Series 2A's, probably left hookers, and possibly SWB. Unsure if they were civvy or military spec.

    Sorry I couldnt be more help

  6. This is the towing arrangement for a 1/2 ton trailer, made in similar numbers by both Sankey and Brockhouse, and as far as I know only for the UK armed forces. As Richard quite correctly mentions, the idea is it can swivel around 180 degrees, allowing towing by either larger or smaller vehicles. It has twin brake actuator arms, one each side of the draw bar, which (assuming the trailer hasnt been messed around with) makes it a Mark 2, and probably dating from around 1955ish to 1960ish. If it only had one actuator arm, which went through a slot in the middle of the drawbar, it would be a Mark 1, from around 1952 to 1955.

    It probably also has narrow dish split wheel rims, as fitted to 88'' MOD Land Rover Series 2As of the time.

    Has it still got its ID plate, with its MOD reg no?

    Hope this helps.

  7. Good call Daz,

    I forgot to mention I have a Weber fitted, I find Solex and Zenith carbs make excellent doorstops

     

    Awaiting the barrage from Zenith and Solex fans............[/quote

    The weber suffers from icing and doesnt give enouch power .Having said that I,ve got one on my series 2.I,ve tried putting a zenith on and most of them seem to have warping problems.I,ve got a solex in bits and cant get the parts to fit.I,ve even tried an SU on an adapter that was a failure too.I,ve had both diesel and petrol 2 1/4s .The petrol I find much better I sprayed the electrics with battery terminal protector which more or less waterproof never let me down.The diesel was so underpowered I had an overdrive fitted which I used as 1/2 a gear to keep momentum going.

     

    Hi John,

    to be honest Ive never suffered a lack of power with the Weber, quite the opposite, but I reckon you're right to protect the electrics from damp/water

    Cheers

    G506

  8. Hi Hanno,

    for me, the 2 1/4 litre series 3 engine takes some beating. The five bearing crank makes it run that bit smoother, and the fact that basically the petrol engine uses a diesel block makes it quiet (walk past a well maintained 2 1/4 petrol and you will barely hear it running). Coupled up to a series 2a semi-crash gearbox (nearly indestructable), and a good Fairey over drive, you'll be onto a winner.

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