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Lauren Child

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Posts posted by Lauren Child

  1. Weasel's were all fitted with 12v equipment from the factory so 6v does not apply. The only book you need is a copy of the original manual TM9-772 available from Portrayal Press New Jersey but be quick , they are closing down.

     

    Nice one - 12V makes it easier :)

  2. Ok okkkk :red:

    what do you think about 82nd division? :)

    Why there are two stars version: complete circle and cutted circle? Witch difference?

     

    I think the circle just makes it more visible for aircraft that are further away.

     

    EDIT: Sorry I completely mis-read the post there - as Hanno has said down below, not much difference between them :) The dashes are just where the stencil was held.

  3. The invasion star that is visible from the air has a ring around it (bonnet or roof).

     

    All other stars should be normal, though if it's a Canadian vehicle it gets put on skewed with single point to the side instead of upwards.

     

    There are exceptions of course :)

     

    There are quite a of 101st Airborne marked vehicles out there with the success of the television programmes. If you want to stand out from the crowd you might want to look at some of the other units.

  4. right now my main concern is making it safer. (It was several potential fire hazards.) I can't explain in detail since I'm still learning mechanics...

     

    Glad to hear you say that - safety first at all times as these can be dangerous machines to work on (especially when you go up to the big stuff).

     

    If you are concerned about fire then I'm guessing there are fuel issues. Remember that petrol (gasoline) vapour sinks downwards as it's heavier than air. In an amphibious vehicle or tank hull it can fill up - make sure you have plenty of ventillation and the right sort of fire extinguisher on hand just in case (water and petrol is a bad mix in a fire, so get one that works on burning fuel). Fuel vapour can also be very poisonous if you breath it in climbing down into a sealed hull.

     

    If it's electrical issues that are of concern for fire, then keep in mind that if you are on old style 6 volt electrics you need the cable to be about twice as thick as the normal ones used on 12 volt cars to do the same thing (and that's before you take into account that it's a bigger and beefier beastie than your everyday car). Welder cable works well for the battery/starter connections, but look at the amp ratings and ask for help if you're not sure.

     

    If you are looking at learning mechanics then it can be worth picking up wartime books on it. They were written for people who'd never had experience of anything mechanical and had been drafted, and some of the terminology can be different for the military. I picked up a modern book when I was learning, but it had a lot to do with modern cars that just didn't really apply.

     

    I picked up the "Manual of Driving and Maintenance for Mechanical Vehicles (Wheeled) 1937" and the "Manual of Driving and Maintenance for Mechanical Vehicles (Tracked) 1939".

     

    They're both British ones. Some of the terms will be different again :banghead: and they're a bit of a dry read :noyay: , but they do cover a lot. The Tracked one assumes you've read the Wheeled one already.... I've not come across many mechanical books that cover the tracked vehicles.

     

    There's a later version as well but I can't remember what it was called (remember a lot changed during the war so these are a bit of a snapshot, but it's a good start)

  5. Rubber tracks would probably make for a better ride on-road, and less likely to tear up the grass lawn if that's where you're driving around.

     

    I read somewhere about the friction from the rubber tracks impacting on the speed though, so it may be worth doing some research. I'd have a natter with some other Weasel owners before spending the pennies either way.

  6. I was just thinking how far the heath and safety stuff has got involved these days.

     

    That's not necessarily a bad thing, but remembering having a go on those you can see the pylon in the background that we did a circuit around before heading back, and the wooden crate under the barrell of the Abbott which your team mates sat on while you bumped and bounded around the field.

     

    Not sure you'd get away with that these days, but it made for some interesting times.

  7. Ah OK - I've not seen that before - thanks for the heads up! I'll look for that in the future :) That makes sense with the NBC stuff.

     

    Is the glacis hole thing a good way of differentiating T54 from T55? I'm wondering if I was seeing things on the video (possibly a bit of muck) or if it's a misunderstanding and it's present on some versions of both.

     

    Looking at the shadow I thought was a hole with fresh eyes it could be a bit of muck and it's a bit far up.

  8. ooh, looks good but we have already said we will attend the Pensthorpe one which is on the same weekend! here's the link.... http://www.pensthorpe.com/events/2012/7/pensthorpes-1st-vintage-rally/

     

    its only the first one so we want to go and support and encourage it in the hope it will get bigger and bigger each year :)

     

    I will let the others know about the Peterborough one though as we might be able to do one of the days for one and one for the other... fun! Thanks so much for letting us know! xxx:kiss:

     

    I suspect I'll be at the Peterborough one with Dolly (the F22), but at the moment *every* time I plan on an event something happens...

     

    :banghead:

     

    Sheringham's not that far away though - I'm sure I'll get over that way at some stage. I may have to get a pair of those dungarees now ;)

  9. Wow - that looks like the place where I got my first taste of military vehicles! They did corporate driving days. I've no idea where it was as we were all bussed there from Ipswich.

     

    I absolutely fell for the Abbott gun carrier - vivid memories of hurtling off at some rate of knots while the chap yelled "yeeeehah this girl can drive a tank" having been very (and vocally) frustrated about a bunch of my colleagues going too slowly and then having trouble steering with not enough power applied.

     

    It was the first vehicle I'd ever really driven, and was way before I got car driving lessons. Start as you mean to go on, I've always said ;)

  10. Looking at the photo it's obvious why the access is poor - someone's left a mechanic in there...

     

     

    ah yes - that'll be it.

     

    This would really worry me. I can't understand why,

     

    I've come across my fair share of batty reasoning, but in this case it might be for a few reasons. It's a hell of a lump to move in and out and you run the risk of damaging things when you do so (after several years spent on the vehicle, that's a bit of a worry). Similarly, especially when there are 5 or 6 restorations going on at once with 20-30 part time volunteers at any one time, things can easily get mixed up and misplaced. The kit is generally safer when it stays in/on the vehicle. It takes a *lot* of sorting out if somebody picks something up and mistakes what vehicle it was from.

     

    There's also a common sense element of don't play with something bleedin heavy unless you absolutely have to. Most of us spend a lot of time working on vehicles with tight access, and while it's not ideal it is often the best way of doing it safely for both the individual and the piece of kit.

     

    If you'd absolutely had to take it out again, I'm sure they'd have let you.

  11. Hi Lauren!

     

    Thats a big YES from me :) Boy do I WISH I had one, ANY of them! Speaking for myself Claire "Shorts" Hack I have a passion for all things with engines as long as the are old and/or big. I've also flown helicopters a couple of times and overtaken a Wherry on the norfolk broads with the local Mississippi Steamer... which is apparently not the done thing ;) I've been lucky enough to go and help out in the steam railway sheds as their wrench monkey too for the engines [mainly because I'm short so they can send me into where they used to send the 14year old boys when they where first invented] and for me 30th this year [eek] me and the girls are heading to go and drive the trains! I LOVE anything that drives,floats or flys :) Im sure the other girls feel the same, we're trying to decide wether to club together and get something...we quite liked this one.... it was pink and green too, apparently to blend in with the particular type of pinky rock over the landscape it would have been stationed in....? What do you have?

     

     

     

    Wow, Helicopters and steam! Now I'm jealous :) I have to admit it was probably my brother's love of steam trains that got me interested in engineering - while he was running around the trains themselves I headed back into the sheds to see how they worked and got put together.

     

    My babies are a Ford FGT F22 ( http://www.geocities.ws/cmpvehicles/f22.html ) which is from the same family as your pink and green favourite there, and a Fordson WOT2H ( P1020309 ), but I also volunteer in the MV wing at Duxford playing on the big stuff when I get the chance.

  12. Hey, the keen photographer in our group lynne [the brunette with the head scarf] has just added some more of her pics

     

    Wow it looks like you had a great day there! So can we tempt any of you to start getting into vehicles? Once you pick up that spanner or climb on something big and tracked it becomes addictive!

     

    Just look at Tank Girl -http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank_Girl_(film)

     

    We definitely need more girls into the hobby.

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