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Posted

Discovered in Thailand - Prachinburi province, where I now live (about 2 hours drive east of Bangkok). Now fitted with 6 cylinder Isuzu engine... but what is it? It´s had a lot of modification, as often happens here. The owner (a small garage) asked if I wanted to buy it, but bank account says no (just bought modern Ford Ranger)... but not original enough anyway.

 

Expect more posts like this with photos - will probably be American WW2 relics, many still working on farms for hauling around tonnes of vegetables etc...

 

 

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Posted

Welcome to the forum OldExplorer and thank you for an excellent first post. Looking forward to a few more 'photos of any other interesting military vehicles you may see in Thailand. I expect somebody will be along soon to tell us what make the.....erm........whatever it is that you've just posted a pix of. Cheers.

Posted

This APPEARS to be a POSTWAR variant of the Dodge weapons carrier.

I know they made them postwar with the different looking front end.

I may well be wrong but, I think that is what this is.

 

Mike

Posted

Toyota FQ-15, 1950´s Japanese copy of the Dodge M37. Try Google for some comparison pictures.

 

Rare truck, only a few have been preserved, others are being worked to death like the one shown in Thailand.

 

- Hanno

Posted
Toyota FQ-15, 1950´s Japanese copy of the Dodge M37. Try Google for some comparison pictures.

 

Rare truck, only a few have been preserved, others are being worked to death like the one shown in Thailand.

 

- Hanno

 

Probably the best thing to do with them.........:cool2:

 

Mike :rofl:

Posted

Don't you belive it!! The Isuzu lump is damm near bullet proof, I know because of the way mine is treated. :-D

Stupid question though: Do teh Japanese drive on the left? notice it's right hand drive.

Posted

Thats the coolest thing. I want it, with that engine it'll be a great daily driver too!

 

The battle scars add to it! :)

Posted
Don't you belive it!! The Isuzu lump is damm near bullet proof, I know because of the way mine is treated. :-D

Stupid question though: Do teh Japanese drive on the left? notice it's right hand drive.

 

Yes! (That is also why Japanese cars tend to have their fuel filler caps on the nearside, whereas European cars have them on the offside - even most supossedly British cars these days)

Posted

I have to agree with Mcspool that this is a Toyota 2FQ15L, which is somewhat similar to the Nissan 4W73. The book of Bart states that it's from the early 1960s and that it was sold to a lot of armies, which probably explains why it's in Thailand.

 

Marty

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