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While sitting here and reading through my Ford Gun Tractor parts book (Hey, Keefy, that's one thing that didn't leave Lithgow in the middle of the night!
![]() C11Q-4299 Thornton-Welles Automatic Locking Differential (Optional, when specified). Which vehicles specified these locking diffs? How many were put into service? Are there any diagrams or repair manuals for these? More importantly, what does "Optional" mean? Does this mean that a Field Battery purchasing Major could stroll into a Ford dealer and ask for an FGT with metallic paint, air con, 8 speaker stereo and a Thornton-Welles locking diff? |
#2
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Funny thing Tony, I have just done exactly what you did.
Then proceeded to Google and it directed me to this thread. Which appears to have no replies. Thought I'd dig it up again - hopefully for a response. Anyone know anything about the Locking Diff??
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Pax Vobiscum.......may you eat three meals a day & have regular bowel movements. |
#3
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Or any wartime designs of locking differentials, either Manual or Automatic?
I understand the Thornton locking differential was also used in the International Harvester M-5H-6 for the US Marines. |
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#5
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I am not sure where these 3 photos came from but these are photos of the Thornton-Welles conversion which converted 2 & 4 wheel drive trucks to 6X4 and 6X6 versions.
Hope this helps Just noticed the photos are labelled as Welles-Thornton not Thornton-Welles
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Cheers Cliff Hutchings aka MrRoo S.I.R. "and on the 8th day he made trucks so that man, made on the 7th day, had shelter when woman threw him out for the night" MrRoo says "TRUCKS ROOLE" ![]() |
#6
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Photos came from
http://www.warfare.altervista.org/Ma...truck_cdn.html where there are other photos and information as well ![]()
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Cheers Cliff Hutchings aka MrRoo S.I.R. "and on the 8th day he made trucks so that man, made on the 7th day, had shelter when woman threw him out for the night" MrRoo says "TRUCKS ROOLE" ![]() |
#7
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Some Ford tandem drives had "Thornton drive" Back ends in them. I'm guessing that's them. Now having looked:
In my book "Military vehicles produced by Ford Motor Company of Canada, Windsor, Ontario" there are listed Ford-Thornton refueling unit 6x4 and Ford -Thornton-Marmon Herrington Crash Tender 6x6 There is also a Ford- Warford Crash Tender 6x4. Is this any help?
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Bluebell Carrier Armoured O.P. No1 Mk3 W. T84991 Carrier Bren No2.Mk.I. NewZealand Railways. NZR.6. Dodge WC55. 37mm Gun Motor Carriage M6 Jeep Mb #135668 So many questions.... |
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Hello All,
A research challenge ![]() Part of the confusion may be from a common linking of a type of differential with the name of their accredited distributor. I located this link about an experimental vehicle based off a Ford chassis - Accessed August 4th 2016 from https://servicepub.wordpress.com/201...illery-tractor The link states that the differential parts were sourced from "The Canadian distributor for Thornton bogies, H.V. Welles of Windsor, Ontario, carried out the conversions". So they could be Thornton Bogies that were supplied and converted by H V Wells. This results in the Thornton-Welles reference. There is a thread about them here in Australia. Accessed August 4th 2016 from, http://www.hcvc.com.au/forum/OldTruc...thornton-names According to "Grandad - 23rd January 2013 "The Thornton Tandem Co. became the Detroit Automotive Products Corp" Accessed August 4th 2016 from, http://www.hcvc.com.au/forum/OldTruc...n-names#104467 My work here is done - teehee ![]() Kind Regards Lionel
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1940 Chevrolet MCP with Holden Built Cab (30 CWT). 1935 REO Speed Wagon. 1963 Series 2A Army Ambulance ARN 112-211 Series III ex-Military Land Rovers x 2 Last edited by Lionelgee; 04-08-16 at 10:48. |
#10
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Please go here to find the originals: http://www.mapleleafup.nl/marmonherr...truck_cdn.html Thanks, Hanno
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Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
#11
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Whoa, slow down a little. The thread seems to have shot off on a tangent here.
The FGT Parts book is not talking about a 6x6/Tandem drive to convert a vehicle by utilising a Welles-Thornton rear bogie. The book is discussing an optional locking differential centre to be used in a 4x4 FGT. Quote:
Curious the variations of Thornton-Welles and Welles-Thornton, which seem to relate to the US Supplier/Canadian Distributor relationship rather than any trade name or patent right (which seems to lie solely with Ray Thornton). (Funny how this thread has sat dormant for 12 years and suddenly springs to life again.) Last edited by Tony Smith; 04-08-16 at 14:51. |
#12
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My reading of the (optional when specified) was that the Thornton diffs could be supplied as an option if the buyer specifically asked for and was prepared to pay for them. So the option of the Thornton diffs like a factory fitted radio in a Holden Belmont was there if one wanted to pay for it. Otherwise Belmonts were the no frills base model and did not come with a radio as standard. The Premiers did though. My reading of the posting by "Grandad" in my last post suggests that the Thornton diffs are the self locking ones .... Grandad states that "Ray Thornton designed the two-speed transfer box with a self-locking diff in it that later came out in 1939 as the NoSpin, which became the Detroit Locker...." Accessed August 4th 2016 from, http://www.hcvc.com.au/forum/OldTruc...n-names#104467 Kind Regards Lionel
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1940 Chevrolet MCP with Holden Built Cab (30 CWT). 1935 REO Speed Wagon. 1963 Series 2A Army Ambulance ARN 112-211 Series III ex-Military Land Rovers x 2 Last edited by Lionelgee; 04-08-16 at 15:21. |
#13
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This page discusses the experimental conversion of F60H chassis with Thornton bogies and a single locking differential, but it ultimately appears to have been an experiment, and not a production vehicle.
Perhaps this trial led to the approval of the Thornton locking differential to the 4x4 FGT? |
#14
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![]() Quote:
Yes that post is the one that I posted up a couple of hours ago. Accessed August 4th 2016 from https://servicepub.wordpress.com/201...illery-tractor Kind Regards Lionel
__________________
1940 Chevrolet MCP with Holden Built Cab (30 CWT). 1935 REO Speed Wagon. 1963 Series 2A Army Ambulance ARN 112-211 Series III ex-Military Land Rovers x 2 |
#15
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This page details the intricacies of the Thornton tandem axle conversion (which apparently sold well into the 50's). From this description, it appears the Thornton locker was actually used between the drive to the middle and rear differentials, and not within an axle differential between left and right axle shafts. However, the depiction of the locker is precisely the same as modern day units sold as "Detroit NoSpin" lockers, which install within the differential and replace the pinion or spider gears. It is not technically impossible that this centre was fitted within the rear differential in the 4x4 FGT.
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#17
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Tony, The No spin Diff is just that. It is the carrier with spider and side gears with a spring between the side gears and teeth (dogs) on the inside of the carrier housing and on the outside of the side gears. They lock under load and click when half shaft speeds were un equal. We had one for a Wagner log stacker made by Allied sevices in Oregon, which I built into a diff about 20 years ago.
Also, the famous Detroit locker was (I believe) designed and built for the 1 1/2 ton 6x6 Dodge, for the mud in Europe. The building with the plans (patents?) was burned down. I can't remember where this came from, other than in Dodge stuff.
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Bluebell Carrier Armoured O.P. No1 Mk3 W. T84991 Carrier Bren No2.Mk.I. NewZealand Railways. NZR.6. Dodge WC55. 37mm Gun Motor Carriage M6 Jeep Mb #135668 So many questions.... |
#18
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Hello All,
As previously stated in my earlier email where I cited "Grandad". Thornton made the "Nospin" diff. Later Thornton were brought out by the Detroit Locker people. Accessed August 4th 2016 from, http://www.hcvc.com.au/forum/OldTruc...n-names#104467 This has been verified by another author who states that ... Detroit Locker After being used as a compensator between the two axles of the Thornton Tandem Drive (a dual rear axle conversion for single-axle trucks), it appeared as the Thornton NoSpin differential in 1939, and was eventually used in a large number of WWII military trucks. At points in the 1950s and 1960s, it was an OE option in OE light trucks. It began hitting the light truck aftermarket in 1969 as the Detroit Locker. Major improvements came in 1994 with the incorporation of a dampening device that civilized the Detroit without changing its basic operation. Accessed August 5th from, http://www.offroadadventures.com/articles/view/id/432 Here is the link to a third source that provides the History of the Detroit Locker. Accessed August 5th from, http://www.onallcylinders.com/2013/1...ferential-town It states that... "The Detroit Locker was initially called a “Thornton NoSPIN Differential.” Ray Thornton patented it in 1941 as device for use in six wheel (tandem drive) truck applications. The NoSPIN was manufactured by the Detroit Automotive Product Corporation and was used on American military vehicles during World War II." Kind Regards Lionel
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1940 Chevrolet MCP with Holden Built Cab (30 CWT). 1935 REO Speed Wagon. 1963 Series 2A Army Ambulance ARN 112-211 Series III ex-Military Land Rovers x 2 Last edited by Lionelgee; 05-08-16 at 03:09. |
#19
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A Detroit locking diff, and very useful it was. I know you are talking Fords here, but don't forget all the Dodge WK60 had Welles-Thornton back bogies too.
I suspect they hoped ( in vain ) that using locking diffs on both the back axles would make up for the lack of drive to the front axle - fat chance ![]()
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Gordon, in Scotland |
#20
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Here is a wartime version of the Thornton No Spin for Ford Cars. I see that it also involves replacing the axles, while the modern version uses the original axles (or uprated aftermarket replacements made to the original form). That may be a peculiarity of fitting it to a Ford Banjo diff, or it could be the original design used for the No-Spin.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/NOS-Vintage-...dYoSmI&vxp=mtr But I'm still (13 years later ![]() |
#21
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A bloke in our MV club had a Marmon Herrington locking diff fitted in his MH Gun Tractor for a while. He took it out and replaced it with a standard diff, as the lockers can "click out" leaving you with no drive at all. He told me that sometimes you'd have to get out of the truck and give it a push and you'd hear it click back in and off you'd go. In his opinion, they'd be more suited to something running in 4x4 all the time.
Another bloke in our club has a Ford GTB which he converted a Detroit Locker out of a tractor to fit in the rear diff. Works a charm I'm told ![]()
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1967 Land Rover Plant Repair Vehicle 1941 Matchless G3L 194? Wiles Junior Trailer 1941 Morris Commercial CS8 |
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