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mtskull

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Posts posted by mtskull

  1. On 4/5/2021 at 7:01 PM, johann morris said:

    Thanks BRDM and thanks again for the earlier assistance.

    If it ever gets finished, I have promised the Yorkshire war time experience it's first appearance. 

    jon

    I have never been to that event but I will make sure I go if your Panzer is in attendance.

    To echo what has been said many times before,  most people would have been satisfied with a vehicle that runs, drives and fairly closely resembles a Panzer. 
    You, on the other hand, have painstakingly researched and created a stunningly accurate replica. 
     
    I salute you, Field Marshal Morris.

    • Like 1
  2. Beats me why they bother writing all of this waffle, e.g. “the navy chaps would soon have seen to that”, “we imagine it was known as that big slow handy katy” etc.  Surely anybody who is seriously interested in a vehicle like this is more interested in its military history, its originality, authenticity and condition than in some homely back story detailing its cosy life as a farm truck?

  3. On 3/6/2021 at 5:03 PM, Le Prof said:

     

    Hi All,

    Excellent, thanks to all for your help.

    So the photo was taken about here on the junction of Church Road and Cheltenham Road, with The King's Head pub on the right:

    https://www.google.com/maps/@51.9476099,-2.0623714,3a,32.8y,177.99h,90.23t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sPwnqHioH4DsRWKnHqrXSOg!2e0!7i13312!8i6656

    image.thumb.png.a6f40a0e1dc77a185331d334ad7b50fa.png

    I am sure you are correct about the location but, it can’t be the King’s Head in the original photo; if it was then the signpost would have been pointing down a road that didn’t exist in 1944.

    I think the photo was taken from outside the pub, looking away from it to the North with Church road on the right. If you look at the signpost, the visible part of the first letter is a vertical element, which cannot possibly be part of a “C” for Cheltenham, the next town in a Southerly direction. More likely, it is an “E” for Evesham, the next significant place heading North.

    Sadly, the scene has changed beyond all recognition...

     

    107A2D2E-4308-46B3-90B0-0AE03B6718BE.png

    500B4CA8-2E7D-481C-9A75-EF5BF885A884.jpeg

  4. According to Wikipedia, the second prototype was used for an attempt on the world altitude record (which did not end well).

    It would seem likely, then, that the photo shows a cylinder being filled with liquid oxygen. There is something which may be an oxygen mask on the ground near the scale.

  5. Thank you for all the replies. 
    I will try to obtain a better picture but to me it seems certain that the two men are pouring something from a wicker-enclosed vessel, via a funnel, into a container which sits on a weighing scale. As to what and why, further research is required....

    Meanwhile, I have identified the aircraft as a B.A.T. Basilisk, one of only three prototypes built. This positively dates the photo to 1918 or 1919, as the first prototype was completed in 1918 and work on the type ceased in 1919.

    E73E4723-AF50-430E-92CD-A5AE7D65FF80.jpeg

  6. Apologies for the poor quality pic; it’s a photo of a photo hanging in my local pub. Can anybody shed any light on matters such as aircraft type, date, place and what is going on?

    At first I thought that the large letters “BA” and the smaller stencilled letters were part of the RAF serial number but further research shows that all the serials in the BA series were Bristol Blenheims.

    Upon closer inspection of the stencilled letters, it appears more as if they are the beginning of a word, e.g. “Base”, “Basil” or something longer.

    Any thoughts?

    571CE169-A292-4831-B829-FA5CC9A580A4.jpeg

    6AF4AC40-29C0-4037-B18D-C959743B6D8D.jpeg

  7. 9 hours ago, B series said:

    Good try, but not the Vietnam war which was fought around 80 degrees W, but same era and more around 100 degrees E. 

    Some mistake, surely? Vietnam is around 100 degrees E.

    So working on the basis that the object was deployed around 80 degrees W,  at a guess was it deployed by the USA in Cuba?

  8. Look closely at the photo.

    There are several details which lead me to believe that this vehicle dates from rather later than 1915, in particular the wheels & tyres, not to mention the telescopic front shock absorbers....

    I’m no expert but I would suggest that this is a modern attempt to create an approximate representation of a civil war era Armstrong-Whitworth FIAT, as pictured.

    AAD839D7-F6E9-496A-AC3F-A97356AF8788.jpeg

    • Like 2
  9. I’m disposing of 5 Defender steel wheels with Michelin 7.50 x 16 tyres as pictured.

    2 of the tyres are almost new, one is about 30% worn, one 50% worn and one is just legal. There is also a sixth tyre of a different size which you can have for nothing. Rims are scruffy but sound.

    Buyer to collect from Burley-in-Wharfedale, West Yorkshire.

    Sensible offers by pm  please.

     

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  10. 1 hour ago, rewdco said:

    In the Australian video (https://streamable.com/4z655h) I noticed something that has been on my mind for a very long time... It looks as if there are lots and lots of weld beads on the armor of this tank. I have seen similar weld bead areas on other tanks as well. Can anybody explain me the function of these beads please...? 🤔

    Cheers,

    Jan

    Those are not weld beads, what you can see is a coating called “Zimmerit”, intended to stop magnetic charges sticking to the armour.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zimmerit

     

  11. 2 hours ago, jeepfinger said:

    Hey Mtskull,

    I guess that you are talking about the Brickworks in Bingley? Yeh they had allsorts of stuff there in the 80's. I'm not sure, but I think the Militant is the only MV left.

    Dave

    Dave, you are correct. When I first went there in search of Karrier Bantam spares in about 1980 I was gobsmacked by the variety of types and ages of vehicles in there. Boats and aircraft, too. All cleared very quickly in the late 80’s, sadly.

  12. Spotted what looks like a Militant to me the other day, at a location that was once a scrapyard full of all sorts of military vehicles but was almost entirely cleared some years ago. 
    I was too busy to stop and take a photo but here is an image from Google Street View.
    No idea as to condition or whether it is for sale but if anybody wants to save it please PM me for the location.

     

    B8D5E2D9-D315-4ED0-ADD7-BC222CD7B55D.jpeg

    • Like 1
  13. OK, got my anorak on now...

    The Morris Minor in the photo has the larger rear windscreen, which definitely dates the photo to 1956 or later. Also, although it is difficult to be 100% certain, IMHO the car under the cover is probably a Farina-bodied Austin Cambridge or Morris Oxford, which would date the photo to 1959 or later.

  14. OK, let me throw this into the mix, shoot me down if you will:

    The “skis” that the “goat” appears to be standing on, with closer inspection, look more like this Bedford badge. 
    I am sure somebody will put me right but that doesn’t look like a Bedford lorry to me, so maybe it is there for another reason?  Bedfordshire & Hertfordshire Regiment, maybe? Consider also the “goat”. Perhaps not a goat, but instead a crudely executed version of the animal from the B&H cap badge?

     

    C146F50E-F26E-4E5A-B7EE-EC004C9D514F.jpeg

    61E3B741-55C1-4DCE-89C4-2544E5866803.jpeg

    • Like 1
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