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30-cwt vs. 3-ton Difference
Can anyone her explain the difference between the 30wt and 3 ton trucks ??? I tried to do a search here with no luck and the few books I have seen do not really tell me what the difference is, They seem to be the same weight wise no ??
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Differences
30cwt came with 16 inch rims and to my understanding came with the 137(?) inch wheelbase. The same wheelbase with 20 inch tires would be a C60S.
I'm sure springs, maybe dimensions on the frame might have been different but the tires are the main difference. |
The 3 tons are 60 cwt so different weights. The 30 cwts had the smaller balls on the front rear end too.
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Dave,
I sorted out the difference for Chevs the other day, see http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/sh...184#post202184 HTH, Hanno |
20 hundredweight (cwt) is one ton.
30 cwt=1.5 ton.............................. 16 oz =1 pound (2.2 to the kilo) 112 pounds = 1 cwt. ( and so, 20 cwt to the ton) 1 ton= 2240 pounds. BTW. there are 63,360 inches in a mile and 240 pennies in the other kind of pound :devil: Need I go on................Old people know this stuff..............It clogs up their memory banks. 56 pounds in a bushell. 9 gallons of beer in a firkin....... :cheers: Alright alright!................ I know! :) :) :) :) |
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The long 158" wheelbase only came in C60L (60-cwt payload) form. See http://www.mapleleafup.net/vehicles/.../chevspec.html |
And of course, the same applied with F30, F60S and F60L Fords too.
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There is always a "but".
There were 158" trucks, Ambulance and some Canadian made Australian? contract vehicles, that had features of lighter trucks (small steering joints and 16" tires). I believe they were listed as 3 ton but a casual observer might think they were either 30 cwt or a mix of "incorrect" parts. |
drivelines
There were some ambulances that were 4x2 vehicles in longer wheelbases. I have a front axle ( Ford?) and it fits right into a standard CMP 13 cab chassis as it has a hollow tube with no gears and is not a drop type axle that many standard trucks of the era would use. The ends are not drive types but have kingpins, and one version (that is now found a new home) actualy had an extended kingpin with extra support underneath the axle to provide additional support. Going down the road such a vehicle would appear to be a 30 or 60cwt depending on wheel sizes used. It is an oddball!
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Ambulances
The Australian Ambulance was on the 134" chassis and the Ford version was listed on the data plate as F60S although it has 16" wheels and 4 7/8" steering ends (the aforementioned 'small balls').
And to further cloud the waters the gun tractors were classed as a 3-ton chassis although they were on the 101" planform. Earlier ones (until 1942) had the 'small balls' because the larger 6" steering ends were not introduced until 1944. Quote:
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See the thread Late 1945 Ford F60L with 16" wheels. |
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Attachment 79160 Attachment 79161 |
This has been very interesting and very confusing as well :wacko:
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4x2 ambulance
A very interesting set of pictures Hanno! If you look at the close up photo of the axle you will see the additional lower support arm of which I wrote. The axle that I still have does not have that additional support arm and it seems probale that in rough service it would not last very long.
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In the absence of any literature defining British WO load rating specs we're left to infer them from known vehicle types. In relation to CMP types they appear to be as follows:
Truck/Lorry (carried load): 8 cwt: SWB; 13" wheels 15 cwt: SWB; 16" wheels 30 cwt: SWB; 20" wheels; 2-spd transfer case (variants include Truck, 30 cwt, 4x4, AT Gun Portee; Lorry, 30 cwt, 4x4, Water) and: MWB; 16" wheels; 10.50 tyres; 2-spd transfer case (F30/C30 variants) 3-ton: LWB; 20" wheels; 2-spd transfer case Tractor (towed load): 3-ton: 10.50 tyres; 2-spd transfer case (FAT, LAAT, F60T) Note that for Tractors the wheelbase and wheel size are not stipulated, because they don't affect traction (towing capacity). A further spec applies to Artillery Tractors, namely winch. As far as I'm aware the above specs hold true for all CMP variants except: F60S Bofors (Lorry, 3-ton, 40mm, Self-Propelled) which runs 16" wheels. An apparent anomaly is the C8AX (NZ variant fitted with 16" wheels, making nominal load rating 15 cwt, and built on C15441 chassis) for which the expected designation would be C15AX. I'm inclined to suspect C8AX designation may be local misunderstanding, just like F60S designation seen on Australian F30 Ambulance. On the question of LWB with 16" wheels, eg. F602L pictured above, I suspect these are rated for on-road use only, just like MCP vehicles. As such it would equate with the Dodge T110L5 (160" wheelbase, 16" wheels, 2-spd diff) which is rated 3-ton. It's worth noting that design factors such as auxiliary springs, diff ratios, steering boxes, big balls v. small balls etc. do not define load rating - they simply reflect the way a particular manufacturer designs their range of 8, 15, 30, or 60 cwt. vehicles, as defined above. Which means the whole question of load rating is far simpler than it appears - once you figure out the rules! |
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30cwt vs 3 ton difference
Check out my truck site that was done on 10 03 11 CMP c60l comes home .There is a bit of information about the front axel that is interesting
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Grant, evidently there's another factor at work in C8A/F8A load ratings which differentiates them from C15A/F15A. Something to do with the car type rear chassis perhaps...? I really don't know enough about them to speculate.
Attachment 79226 Attachment 79227 |
George, I'm familiar with the C60L radar trucks but I didn't bother mentioning them. Some were fitted with 16" wheels and others like yours were fitted with 20" road tyres. Either way it supports my contention that these vehicles were load rated for on-road use only.
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One of my Ford CMP has Cheve axels under it .The army had to do with what they had to work with ??
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I'm afraid this is not entirely correct. The British War Office classification was a load classification, regardless of the technical configuration of the vehicles supplied by manufacturers. Load carrier trucks have a load rating, tractors do not - see the thread Is the FAT a 60cwt or 15cwt truck?. To be able to carry the load and move it at convoy speed across country, manufacturers configured their trucks from existing components. As stated above, I sorted out the difference for Chevs recently, see Chev CMP chassis views. One can see clearly that the heavier the load rating, the heavier the truck's components are - so "design factors such as auxiliary springs, diff ratios, steering boxes, big balls v. small balls etc." in fact do define load rating! Quote:
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As per Vanderveen: "Truck, 3-ton, 4x2, GS (Ford F602L) V-8-cyl., 95 bhp, 4F1R, wb 158-1/4 in, 243x90x118(78) in., 7280 lb. Latest type, using many components of F60L. Tubular front axle, two-speed rear axle. Also with four-stretcher ambulance body and 134-1/4 in. wb GS with open cab." HTH, Hanno |
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Read Wheels & Tracks magazine issue 1 and 2, and there is little left to speculate. |
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PS: your thread CMP C60L comes home can be found here |
30-CWT vs 3 ton
I was told that they were shipping the trucks to the UK without axels as there was a shortage of the Ford axels , so they used Cheve axels and put them under the trucks in England .Partly cause by the supply boats that were bringing axels got sunk by U boats, Have you heard this?
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No, it was an early production supply problem. They are neatly listed in the parts list, so it could not have been a mix-up during shipping and/or (re-)assembly overseas.
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Hanno, Tractors do indeed have a load rating, despite not being load carriers. I conclude therefore it refers to towed load, not carried load (as mentioned in my post above). Pretty obvious when you think about it but we overlooked it in the thread you mention. Attachment 79431 Attachment 79432 Attachment 79433 |
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I suspect we're getting into semantics here Hanno! To put it another way - Load Rating determines components, not the other way around. Hence F60L with small balls is still F60L. |
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