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War Department Numbers
I was checking my period pix and decided to make a list of the CZ prefix War Dept numbers. These are the ones with the photo notation at the end. Next I got the numbers off the Canadian Register site and added them. Some of the Canadian Registry entries seem out of sync but they could be numbers somebody invented for their restoration.
If anyone has any C numbers to add from period pix I'll put them in the list. I deleted all of the Canadian Register because they were so out of sync. |
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Here's a page from Canada's Fighting Vehicles with info about the Canadian overseas War Dept numbers. The CZ numbers are for the 8 cwt and 15 cwt vehicles. The 30 cwt and 60 cwt got the CL prefix. I made this list to see what numbers would be appropriate for the different cab styles. The CZ series seems to start with 4200000 and go to around 4300000. I'm sure that Canadian Register 5791190 is bogus as well as a few others. Perhaps we can post wartime pix with the visible numbers and avoid this kind of confusion.
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Cz4205649
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I've posted this one before but not sure where.
Attachment 66231 http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...C5109W4749.jpg Please ignore the caption. He's not a messenger but RCMP Rich |
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It would be best to relay on period pictures and documents, or only restored trucks with a documented provenance. Here are some census numbers from the thread Wartime pictures wanted: CMP F15A, all F15AŽs with Cab 13:
- Hanno |
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W.D. number CZ4206605
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Period document, a road accident report, listing 1st Cdn Army Ford 15cwt truck with vehicle W.D. number CZ4206605 (read more on my web page).
Attachment 26679 |
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Here's five from Canada's Fighting Vehicles. I was kind of surprised that the White fit the category.
Note the two penthouses on the HUP. Attachment 26681 Attachment 26682 Attachment 26683 Attachment 26684 Attachment 26685 |
Previous Collections of WD numbers
Over the years there have been two attempts to collect WD numbers from CMPs both John Merchant and Peter Ford tried to collect this information from CMP owners. In corresponding with both of them one of the issues was the originality of the numbers reported.
When I first restored my HUP I put it in the markings of a Canadian Unit at the close of the war. The WD number on the door was totally bogus taken form the vehicles serial number, yes now I know that there is no correlation but then I didn't. After having learned the true history of my HUP and found proof my marking problems were solved. Thus I think you have probably hit on the best route to a list of WD numbers and matching vehicles. Gleaning through the photo archives that were not readily accessible before the web. Cheers Phil |
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Here's some more. I've edited my original post to link the pix to the CZ numbers.
You can't see the hood on this water truck but then all water bodies were on Cab 12s, weren't they? Attachment 26719 Attachment 26720 Attachment 26722 Attachment 26723 Attachment 26737 |
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I dug up a few more. It's quite surprising how far out the numbers on a lot of the restored vehicles really are. Maybe this thread will help solve that problem. I'm going to delete all the references with no pix for that reason.
The CZ numbers seem to go from about 4204000 to 4290000. That's about ninety thousand 8 cwt and 15 cwt vehicles in Canadian service overseas. According to Canada's Fighting Vehicles there were 133442 vehicles of the types I've found produced. When you take into account the ones that stayed home and the ones that went to other countries that makes me think there must have been large gaps in the numbering system or more types included. Attachment 26738 Attachment 26739 Attachment 26744 |
I have a number of documents at home, issued at intervals, that list the blocks of WD numbers allocated to the Canadian Army Overseas (CAO). The numbers were not allocated as 420,000 to 450,000 for Jeeps (as an example) but could be 420,000 to 421,500 then 443,700 to 444,600, etc....
In addition to the large blocks in the 4xx,xxx range, the early days of the war saw a numbering system in the 117,000 range (from memory so don't hold me to this). These different systems were based on the vehicle being under the control of either the Service Corps or of the Master General of the Ordnance (MGO). By 1941 these distinctions disppeared and all vehicles in the early block were re-numbered with numbers from the later block. This will explain why lorries made in 1940 could have a WD number that follows a lorry made in 1941. Still with WD numbers - at the beginning of the war the CAO rented vehicles from the War Office. As these were not the property of the CAO the WD numbers were those applied by the British - not even the "c" prefix was permitted. I have some of these lists as well. Unfortunately, all of these documents are at home - and I am not. I will try to remember to update this in November when I am back in God's country. |
Here is a Pattern 12 in British Columbia during the war
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Here is one picture from a batch I bought on E-bay a few years ago all of the pictures are posted on http://www.canadianmilitarypattern.c...20Columbia.htm . The picture below is the only one where the number is readable. Z57-092
Just added blow-up of door number Cheers Phil Attachment 26747 Attachment 26748 |
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Excellent work!
But a few minor corrections: Quote:
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Keep up the good work, IŽll post any other numbers I find here to add them to the list. Cheers, Hanno |
Hanno, I made the corrections. I called the one an ATT by mistake. I had a similar picture of one pulling a 6 pounder instead of the trailer.
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Phil, the number that you posted is for a vehicle that never went overseas and as such is a different numbering system. I'm going to expand this to include all of the softskins so I'll post these.
Attachment 26869 Attachment 26872 Attachment 26873 Attachment 26870 Attachment 26871 |
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I'm scanning the C series pix from Canada's Fighting Vehicles. Here's the first five.
Attachment 26874 Attachment 26875 Attachment 26877 Attachment 26876 Attachment 26878 |
F8 Serial No. 1G-6461 F*
Can somebody tell me when my F8, serial no. 1G-6461 F*, was manufactured and what the appropriate War Department CZ number I could add to it would be?
Thanks! Jim |
Jim, it would have been manufactured in 1940 and the only F8 number I have is CZ4204797. That one would be 1940 too so pick a number within a few hundred and you'll be OK. This is the very reason why I started this thread. If you're going to use one of these numbers it should be about right. It's surprising how far out of range a lot of the restored vehicles are.
Click on the blue number in the top post and you'll have the picture showing the number's placement. |
Ford
Jim, I might have the monthly Windsor Plant engine production numbers still, which wil tell me when Ford of Canada built your truck.
OTT that photo of the '40 Chevrolet has finally struck me after all these years as being a very rare shot. This is because it was either assembled at Aldershot (unlikely, as I thought that they were all Ford sedans or Wagons) or Southampton.There were several Chevy sedans destroyed in the bombing of the CMD in Southampton on November 30/ December 1 1940 and clearly this one escaped. It must have been delivered before the blitzing and thus with good timing. I believe that the Chevies were only shipped at the earliest in June 1940, and possibly a while later. Without checking I thinki the papers that I have ex-DND show that they may not have been ordered from GM until June. The location is not Southampton and I wonder if it is in the Bordon, Hampshire, RCASC Depot? I have seen that photo hundreds of times and it never struck me before. :bang: |
David P,
Thanks for the info and the suggestion on the numbers to use. By the way, I believe that the CZ stencils are 2 1/2". I checked with Rick Larsen's site and he has 2" and 3". Where do I find the correct size ones? Regards, Jim |
David H,
Will appreciate anything you can find on that production date! Regards, Jim |
Jim, look at the image in my second post. It says the numbers are to be 3 1/2 inches tall. From the pictures it looks like by 1944 or so they went to smaller letters.
On your truck I'd go with a number just under 4205000 since the F15 on the list is an earlier version with no cowl vents. |
David,
Oops! Didn't read your post like I should have! Will probably go with 3" letters/numbers. Do you know where the F8 with the number 4204797 was used during the war, Canada or Great Britain or somewhere else? Regards, Jim |
F8
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I am willing to be shot down in flames on this one. But I have picked up from various books and pics over the years that: apart from service in Canada itself and the U.K., many C8 and F8's ended up in the Nth Africa/Middle East theatre - where they were definately used by British, New Zealand and Australian units and probably other nations ..even the opposing enemy ! I wonder if some of the 8 cwts were shipped directly from Canada to Nth Africa. From memory, this was the case with the light stone finished Dodge D8A's, so maybe the same thing occured with C8 and F8. Mike |
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Jim,
F8 CZ4204797 was most likely pictured in the UK. As noted earlier: Quote:
As Mike says, they were used in action in the North African and Middle East theatres of operation. Attached goes a picture of an F8 captured by the German Afrika Korps and put to good use. Attachment 26926 |
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Here's five more.
Attachment 26986 Attachment 26987 Attachment 26988 Attachment 26989 Attachment 26990 |
Update links
Note: I fixed the links in the first posting above, so this message is no longer valid:
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