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R.E. plant Photos


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Next couple of batches come from BATUS Canada 1990. We were out there setting up things for the Exercise season that year

 

Batus Grader 1.jpg

Batus Grader 2.jpg

 

Aveling Barford Grader, reshaping a stretch of track

 

 

72-51 and Winget.jpg

 

Terex 72-51B and Winget 6 ton Roller going behind the Grader. The bloke who appears to be taking it all for a walk is actually controlling the throttle of the rollers vibrator engine

 

72-51 and Winget 2.jpg

 

Bored with walking he has hitched a ride, or maybe vibrations got too much. 'Elf an' Safety would go mad :D

 

Cat D6D 1.jpg

Cat D6D 2.jpg

Cat D6D 3.jpg

 

Caterpillar D6D Dozers. Nice landscape shot, gives you an idea of how big and flat the place is. I can't remember what the trench was for, but it went on for a good few miles

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This was being set up for a "Tin City" urban warfare type of thing. Volvo 4400 used to lift the tower up so it could be locked in place with an explosive release pin. Top tank was to be filled with water then at the appropriate time it would be set off to crash down on the unsuspecting ground troops. Wouldn't work as a straight tower, at first, so they had to weld the extra piece on the front

 

Water Tower 1.jpg

 

Water Tower 2.jpg

 

Water Tower 3.jpg

 

Water Tower 4.jpg

 

Self Recovery 1.jpg

 

Self Recovery 2.jpg

 

Self Recovery 3.jpg

 

Bit of self recovery going on here. Spot the deliberate mistake of the bucket getting in the way on picture 2

 

Batus Plant Park.jpg

 

BATUS Plant Yard, Residents include; Muirhill A5000 (with engine cover up). Fiat Allis with the forks. Terex 72-51B and Cat D6D

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Last Lot for now

 

Batus Wrecker.jpg

 

Somebodies Bedford being recovered by the BATUS REME Wrecker. I reckon the wrecker was a locally purchased job, don't remember seeing any like that in the UK

 

Canadian Transport.jpg

 

Any equipment movements on the training area are handled by the Canadians with these trucks. They are a bit lie the MOJO's were in Germany. No Speed Limits, No Tying Down, No Safety at all. If you saw one coming towards you, you just pulled over and got out of their way. Absolutely mental they were.

 

L'Rovers.jpg

 

The rest of the world travelled in bombed out Land Rovers. Wouldn't recommend anyone buying an ex BATUS Rover it would have had a right kicking. Seen here one Engineer Troop Commander and his Driver. Note the extra customising on their motor

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Last Lot for now

 

 

 

Somebodies Bedford being recovered by the BATUS REME Wrecker. I reckon the wrecker was a locally purchased job, don't remember seeing any like that in the UK

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hi Rob,

That REME wrecker, probably a Western Star as one of them ( I assume there was more than one) was brought over from BATUS to join the REME Museum's vehicle collection, probably at 12 years ago, it has recently been moved to the new REME Museum at Lyneham .....still in the red paint.

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  • 2 months later...

Some of them actually got to do some digging!

 

590 and Hauli.jpg

 

Hymac 590 loading Haulamatic

 

 

590 in Trouble.jpg

 

Not sure what went wrong here, or the young Sappers name (might be Merton), but was a nasty job getting that track back on

 

NCK 406 Volvo and Hauli.jpg

 

NCK 406 Excavating, Volvo 4400 loading Haulamatic, MPF spectating

 

Pair of Volvos.jpg

 

Pair of Volvo lining up to winch something, if I remember right it was a Cat D6D that had come off the bund sideways

 

Volvo4400 Getting Stuck in.jpg

 

Volvo 4400 up to its axles

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I found out one problem with the Volvo 4400 and that was when you got severely bogged ie. most of the tyre is buried then you loose all air in the system as the muck releases the air taps on the tanks between the wheels.

 

Did a tandem pull myself on a Volvo 6x6 dumper converted to a drain clearance machine at Leeming.

It got stuck buried up to the load bed. We had to pull from full length of the winch rope due to the boggy ground.

Another godsend was that a ripper had been fitted the day before to my Volvo with tines upside down as usual. Made it very easy to unbog yourself.

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  • 3 years later...
17 hours ago, robin craig said:

Militant Nick you are so bad showing things I am not allowed to buy . ..

Ploughman and two five zero did the Volvo 4400 have a 4 in 1 style bucket? Kind of looks like it.

 

 

Yes and very good it was too.

I think it might even have been better than the Allis Chalmers that was in use in the 70's - 80's and streets ahead of the Allis's replacement in the Terex 72-51

We certainly tested them to extremes on the Airfields.

Any other job and it would have been classed as abuse.

Edited by ploughman
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The owner has another in yellow so I could make enquires about this one 🧐 😁

He also had an ex mod Jcb 410 fitted with loading shovel but I’ve not seen that for a while.

this link may already be on hmvf somewhere but here it is anyway;

http://www.classicmachinery.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=12095&sid=6520c633976cab767f6f213259150af6

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  • 2 weeks later...

That looks like an I.Harvester 65c (Hough) Later Dresser. Also licence built by Komatsu as Wa90. I did not like driving with the cab on the front section of the pivot. Thay had a prefabricated boom early ones were prone to cracking.

Edited by john1950
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Brings back a few memories seing a photo of one. I remember the demonstrator driver saying you could drive it on full throttle as it had a soft shift shuttle control transmission. So my younger brother jumped on and off he went on a load and carry operation, when he came back the demo man said "I dont know how you kept your foot on the throttle It did not drop any revs when you were digging or changing direction" As he wandered of to get back on his TS14 he said over his shoulder "its got a hand throttle" I have also seen that loaded with all 4 wheels off the ground bounding down the haul road.

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You operated in a different world, We just went in for a 7am start If driving a Cat 944 or Hough 65c had about 1100 tons to load onto varying sizes of vehicles by last load 16.15, Later if on nights on a Cat 966D 12 hour nights would be 4500 to 5000 tonnes a shift. With no one shooting at us or trying to set us on fire. I could not imagine swaping places.

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John - 1950/Richard,

In my 32 years service with earthmoving plant with the Royal Engineers the Allis Chalmers was a cracking bit of kit with very little modification off the commercial production line, which guaranteed its success..  For the N Ireland (once the armoured cab had been fitted) they came into their own and were invaluable support to the infantry role during rioting.  With the armoured cab and wee visor all round visibility was very difficult and hand telephones were installed at the rear on the battery boxes with a speaker over your head in the cab which the infantry support could communicate with the operator.  It didn't work that well..!!  A fire blanket was always close to hand as rioters would often lob half a dozen bottles of petrol at the cab and then a "Molotov Cocktail" to warm up the proceedings.  Known affectionately as "The Scoobie" the Armoured Allis Chalmers going full belt in a riot situation put the fear of Christ into those in its way.

John, although the military plant operator role is a little different to the civilian counterpart we all share the love of operating/repairing earthmoving plant.  The Allis Chalmers wasn't always used in the heat of Londonderry and Belfast as we did a lot of normal quarrying and earthmoving in places like Clogher, Dungannon, Florence Court and the Moy.

Although the Allis Chalmers work in places like Belfast had it's worrying moments the most worrying moment for myself was having to clamber up our remote controlled Tower Crane that was sited at Crossmaghlen in S Armagh with my arse going "sixpence half a crown!"  happy days.

Mick

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I have no personal experience of Allis Chalmers, but two used to work not far away and they seemed hardy working with very little maintainance and never greased, judging by the squeaks when they were working. Working on plant and driving could be classed as a clinical ailment, but there are no pills or cure.  

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Nice pics of the Armoured Allis at work.  As an ex RE POM, been there, done that.  Have to say sitting inside that armoured cab with the door shut it gets a bit claustrophobic, lonely and downright scary at times.

I remember one night going from the camp at Castledillon out Enniskillen way to shift road blocks during some demonstration there.  Peering through the little letterbox windscreen trying to shovel up cars and other rubbish while an unknown voice shouts directions through a pye pocket radio I am trying to hold in my other hand wasn't exactly a happy time. I was well glad to get back to camp and could have done with a few more than the 2 beers we were rationed to at the bar.

They did do an armoured cab for the Muir Hill A5000, but they weren't very popular.  All that extra weight on one side made them quite unstable.  I have got some pictures somewhere, I'll try and find them.

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