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#1
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looks like a head on,offset, collision more to do that much damage
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#2
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Before seat belts that MG driver must gave been shook up.
But can you imagine the driver or crew of the Dingo bouncing around the interior like ping pong balls......OUCH !!!!! Bob C
__________________
Bob Carriere....B.T.B C15a Cab 11 Hammond, Ontario Canada |
#3
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I would say its in Malaya or similar.
Chris |
#4
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The poor person in the car probably wound up in a cemetary. The people in the Dingo probably felt it too. I remember a friend in a Sunbeam Tiger who hit the back of a telephone truck in Pennsylvania and smashed his car pretty good.The truck stopped about a 1/4 mile down the road as they saw him in their mirror. All they felt in the truck was a little bump ,as if they went over a pothole
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#5
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Looks like Malaya to me, too, judging from the roadside veg.
Ghurka Regiment markings on the Dingo. When did they serve in Malaya? Might provide a clue as to the date range for the image. Mike C |
#6
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Hi guys
It is virtually certain the pic was indeed taken in Malaya. The Dingo has a common local modification to fit a turret on the top - due to bandits (sorry CTs) in high fire positions firing down into open topped Dingos. The crossed kukris sign on the Dingo indicates a Gurkha FORMATION, probably brigade, but the Royal Armoured Corps patch on the other side indicates an armoured unit which the Gurkhas didn't have. There were Gurkha formations in Malaya virtually non-stop from the end of the war until British withdrawal, so it would be difficult to work out a time line from that. The C15TA behind the MG indicates a fairly early date, but the Scammell Explorer in the back ground shows it was not that early. Someone may be able to work out a date from those two! Chris Last edited by chrisgrove; 05-02-13 at 21:59. Reason: spelling! |
#7
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Chris,
"The crossed kukris sign on the Dingo indicates a Gurkha FORMATION, probably brigade, but the Royal Armoured Corps patch on the other side indicates an armoured unit which the Gurkhas didn't have". Yes, Formation sign: mea maxima culpa. However, this isn't the first time I've seen that Formation Sign on an AFV: one of the British Mk.5/1 Centurions imported to Australia from Hong Kong in 1971 (and not used subsequently by the RAAC) had that same Formation Sign, yet the Gurkhas had no armoured units. Perhaps the higher Formation had an armoured unit attached, hence the adoption of the Form sign along with the RAC Unit colour background (red/yellow diagonal) and Armoured Regiment sign (41)? That in itself may indicate a date-range if the OOB is known for the Malayan Emergency. Mike C |
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