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Ashcollection

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Posts posted by Ashcollection

  1. Dear Nick and others,

     

    I am in touch with the Southern Ontario owner of the round the Isle of Wight modified machine, his asking price is outside what in reality it will fetch. The perceived and actual once again separated by a large margin.

     

    I saw some emails about the museum issue and did reply.

     

    Robin

    Hi You Salamander people might like to know these two are still about,the yellow one with me and the red one up north with its engine out.red one.jpg neither are currently for sale

    yelow.jpg

  2. I can just here my old mechanical teacher at Farm college saying "never start anything unless you are sat in the operators seat" as I read your exploits of the self directed crane going across the yard, very funny, at least now!

     

    I guess when you consider that there are no stabiliser legs and it relies on its own mass as counterbalance 10 tons lift is pretty good.

     

    I like the fact you have a Muir Hill, next you will tell us you have an Eager Beaver as well

     

    Love the look of the beast

     

    Robin

    Haha yes I know that saying as well! As the previous couple of times we had started it it had taken at least two hours, flat batteries and far too much time priming fuel to be fun anymore, it was very unexpected! it fired up far better than anything else I own. the prop shafts are off for the time being until I get a copy of a manual and can figure out what all the unmarked leavers do. Also yes I'm afraid to say we like our plant here, I do have an Eager Beaver as well, along with An Aveling Barford dump truck, Thornycroft Trencher, CET, Mk 1 Millitant with a Jones KL66, and a Mk 1 Millitant with a Blaw Knox excavator on the back. The Militants are scrap yard rescues, but they are under cover and in one rusty piece at lease, rather than being scrapped, exported and made into cheap washing machines.

  3. Robin they were only built for the military in the first place.

    Thanks everyone for the comments all very helpful. We started her up last weekend and moved it round the yard, its a big lump to push round two 90 deg corners that are only 60ft apart, didn't dare driver her yet as on starting she took off across the yard with no one in it! something must have moved in transit as it wasn't in drive last time we started it, anyway after the heart rate had stabilized and the laughter had stopped, it rolled nicely pushed by my Muir Hill, the engine was running only to get steering.IMG-20141220-00509.jpg

    IMG-20141220-00506.jpg

  4. Hi fatboy, just found your thread today and I've been trying to message you I'm the guilty party that bought the Humber, I feel guilty now! but in my defence it is rustier than it looks, the roof has nearly separated around the gutter due to someone's past body filler repair, the driver side step has fallen off due to the sill being non existent, it has a landrover tail gate, a dodgy repair to the cargo floor, its rusted through along the cargo body on top of the bins and someone has tried to bodge the wiring, ( I'm trying to justify it by saying I've saved you)!but its better than the cargo version I was going to restore, ok that explains it better!

    Keep looking you will find one, always buy the one with the best body you can the mechanicals and electrics are easy. The Pig is easier to restore but the soft skin is more drivable more stylish and way cooler! ( that will start a debate) haha .

  5. the poor old girl that was by the long gone hungry horse at Necton on the A47 is long gone, we had her for spares several years back

     

    we also have the remains of the Casgrove one, it came to us after loosing its recovery gear but fitted with a handy perkins v8 another one we broke up was the cut down artillery tractor that used to belong to Norfolk recovery in Norwich.

  6. These next three were at Joe Hunts yard, mid to late nineties.

    [ATTACH]15915[/ATTACH]

     

    [ATTACH]15916[/ATTACH]

     

    [ATTACH]15917[/ATTACH]

     

    The last two at Necton, on the A47 between Kings Lynn and Norwich.

    [ATTACH]15918[/ATTACH]

     

    [ATTACH]15919[/ATTACH]

     

    Of course I did bag a few bits off of them, some will come in handy for using on mine.

    the poor old girl that was by the long gone hungry horse at Necton on the A47 is long gone, we had her for spares several years back

  7. Hello, that got you going, Ian's in the know as he took the picture, its, 50EK64 that Alan Buckingham restored, one of the Rush Green pair, I was prompted to join after seeing it's "sister" if you like that I also owned, also Ex Alan (12DM85) at Leconfield they have done a very good cosmetic restoration, the poor thing was in a bad state. There is a you tube clip of Crouch's dropping it off. We had fun loading it here! Ian may remember our yard, we managed to demolish the corner of a workshop at the bottom of a slope on a very tight corner. God knows where this link people have mentioned came from, not I! Crouch's Antar that i've seen mentioned should have good Axles as he had a pair from me as well that I was going to use on 12DM85. I will add some nice shiny pictures in due course when we get the old girl out in the yard.

    Thanks Ian,

    Nice picture of this mark 3 on Antar Gallery thread 5. Perhaps you can enlarge on the situation. Do you know which one this is, as it appears to have no markings on it, in either photograph? Is this the end product of the Rush Green pair?

    Alternatively, if "theashcollection" could return with some information on it, it would be most appreciated as the Ebay book advert attached to the Antar link is decidely uninteresting. Visual post or pm fine. Thanks.

    Bw,Mike.

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