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Regarding the thread on the Chev sedan in Libya, please go to the following site for an exhaustive analysis of the whole subject.
http://brianlucas.ca/roadside/#historical The only surprises I found in current practices were the following. Cyprus Fiji Macau Somalia Thailand Which currently drive on the left and have not been under British control for many decades, if ever. I enjoy homework. Bill
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Dog Robber Sends |
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Don't forget Japan drives on the left and I am sure that it was not due to us Brits influencing them. Richard |
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When I was in Burma in the 1970s most of the vehicles were still right-hand drive despite a change to driving on the right about a decade earlier. It was the cause of many fatalities and accidents.
At least we still drive on the correct side of the road in our CMPs - what could be more important sign we're right than that? ![]()
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Film maker 42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains 42 FGT No9 (Aust) 42 F15 Keith Webb Macleod, Victoria Australia Also Canadian Military Pattern Vehicles group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianmilitarypattern |
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Just don't let it happen again. [/stern talking-to]
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SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
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I have a feeling the little bit of Ireland in the north-east corner will have to be returned sooner or later though but what might happen to that British north portal of the Med is anybodies guess. So what's left, Diego Garcia and the British Indian Ocean Territory of 60 sq.km populated with 1500 UK/US service personnel and 2000 contractors, The British Virgin Islands where the USD is official currency ![]() Some of these are quite pleasant places, some are not, but collectively and with respect to their populations, where applicable, hardly an empire. The "Jewel in the Crown" was given back ages ago by Mountbatten; a suitable job since it would be difficult to make a FU of giving a sub-continent away and kept him well away from these shores and Canada especially. R. |
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"Cyprus became of great strategic importance after the opening of the Suez canal in 1869. At the Congress of Berlin in 1878, the Great Powers endorsed an agreement between UK and the Sultan of Turkey upon which the island became under British control while remaining legally part of the Ottoman Empire. In 1914, when Turkey joined the Central Powers in World War I, the UK annexed Cyprus. Both Turkey and Greece recognised British sovereignty over Cyprus under the terms of the Treaty of Lausanne, signed in 1923." (source) And thanks to the (continuing) military presence of the British during the early 70s, a little Dutch boy was fascinated by the military vehicles (Landies, Stollies) partrolling the streets, laying the base for a life-long interest. H. |
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R. |
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H. |
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British Antarctic Territory, Gibraltar of course, plus Alderney, Sark, Herm, Brechou, Little Jethou, The Minquiers and Rockall PLUS the Cypriot Sovereign Bases. But there's rockall else! Sealand the old WW2 fort in the North Sea we seem to have given up.
Last edited by David_Hayward (RIP); 25-08-04 at 09:19. |
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Hanno:
I concede on the issue of Britain's sovereignty over Cyprus during many years. Perhaps give me the benefit of the doubt in my saying that Turkey and Greece have been in nominal control of the island for "several decades" which could support my thesis that they would have converted from driving on the left to driving on the right. Richard F: I guess I hava always considered Japan as a very feudal and very isolated country and sort of assumed they adhered to a much older rule of the "right of way". ![]() Bill
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Dog Robber Sends |
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I wintered in Athens that year, during some of the Cyprus troubles. It was interesting to see Greek soldiers on the streets dressed in U.S. fatigues and carrying M-1 Garands and BARs... both of which I'd owned and shot previously on my own. I daresay I knew the Garand better than 99.5% of Greek conscripts at the time...
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SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
#13
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You Kips missed a few countries.. You are probably in the minority... Here's the list of right hand drive countries.. Countries Which Drive on the Right-Hand Side The following is a list of countries of the World whose people drive on the right-hand side of the road. Most of the automotive drivers of these countries utilize left-hand drive vehicles. Drive Side Country R Afghanistan R Albania R Algeria R American Samoa R Andorra R Angola R Argentina R Armenia R Aruba R Austria R Azerbaijan R Bahrain R Belarus R Belgium R Belize R Benin R Bolivia R Bosnia and Herzegovina R Brazil R British Indian Ocean Territory (Diego Garcia) R Bulgaria R Burkina Faso R Burundi R Cambodia R Cameroon R Canada R Cape Verde R Central African Republic R Chad R Chile R China, People's Republic of (Mainland China) R Colombia R Comoros R Congo R Costa Rica R Croatia R Cuba R Czech Republic R Denmark R Djibouti R Dominican Republic R Ecuador R Egypt R El Salvador R Equatorial Guinea R Eritrea R Estonia R Ethiopia R Faroe Islands (Denmark) R Finland R France R French Guiana R French Polynesia R Gabon R Gambia, The R Gaza Strip R Georgia R Germany R Ghana R Gibraltar R Greece R Greenland R Guadeloupe (French West Indies) R Guam R Guatemala R Guinea R Guinea-Bissau R Haiti R Honduras R Hungary R Iceland R Iran R Iraq R Israel R Italy R Ivory Coast R Jordan R Kazakhstan R Korea, Democratic People's Republic of (North Korea) R Korea, Republic of (South Korea) R Kuwait R Kyrgyzstan R Laos R Latvia R Lebanon R Liberia R Libya R Liechtenstein R Lithuania R Luxembourg R Macedonia R Madagascar R Mali R Marshall Islands R Martinique (French West Indies) R Mauritania R Mayotte (France) R Mexico R Micronesia, Federated States of R Midway Islands (USA) R Moldova R Monaco R Mongolia R Morocco R Myanmar (Burma) R Netherlands R Netherlands Antilles (Curacao, St. Maarten, St. Eustatius, Saba) R New Caledonia R Nicaragua R Niger R Nigeria R Northern Mariana Islands (Saipan) R Norway R Oman R Palau R Panama R Paraguay R Peru R Philippines R Poland R Portugal R Puerto Rico R Qatar R Reunion R Romania R Russia R Rwanda R Saint Barthélemy (French West Indies) R Saint Martin (French West Indies) R Saint Pierre and Miquelon (France) R Samoa R San Marino R Sao Tome e Principe R Saudi Arabia R Senegal R Sierra Leone R Slovakia R Slovenia R Somalia (a parts of Somalia, Somaliland, drives on the left) R Spain R Sudan R Svalbard (Norway) R Sweden R Switzerland R Syria R Taiwan R Tajikistan R Togo R Tunisia R Turkey R Turkmenistan R Ukraine R United Arab Emirates R United States R Uruguay R Uzbekistan R Vanuatu R Venezuela R Vietnam R Wake Island (USA) R Wallis and Futuna Islands [Fr.] R West Bank R Western Sahara (ex Spanish Sahara) R Yemen R Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) R Zaire Now get on the proper side of the damned road before you get run over...
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Alex Blair :remember :support :drunk: |
#14
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The argument for us CMP fans is similar to the "If God had wanted us to fly he'd have given us wings" If Canada had made CMPs left hand drive we'd all be driving on the right... So it's up to you guys, either drive on the left where you should be or move somewhere that does. ![]()
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Film maker 42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains 42 FGT No9 (Aust) 42 F15 Keith Webb Macleod, Victoria Australia Also Canadian Military Pattern Vehicles group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianmilitarypattern |
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As a further bonus we can import the interesting Holden Monaro CV8 ![]() ![]() ![]() R. |
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Source At about 20K GBP it's a steal. I wonder whether they make 'em in khaki? Also, it comes from the same factory which built this speedy number: ![]()
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Film maker 42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains 42 FGT No9 (Aust) 42 F15 Keith Webb Macleod, Victoria Australia Also Canadian Military Pattern Vehicles group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianmilitarypattern |
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I had some very nice Aussies come to "Overlord" to camp only, in several emails to arrange, I suggested they bring me a CV8 as an "appeasement", here it is below. Quote:
R. |
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![]() This is the model with traction control permanently off... and with 95 sturdy horses driving those melodious spur gears...
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Film maker 42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains 42 FGT No9 (Aust) 42 F15 Keith Webb Macleod, Victoria Australia Also Canadian Military Pattern Vehicles group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianmilitarypattern |
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Nice Ford, Keith, also large.
That Holden Monaro is sold in the US as the Pontiac GTO. Don't know what motor it has in Oz but here it has the Corvette V8. Retail price is $31,795 which is a bit much and the car is missing it's sales target by a pretty wide margin. I assume it is sold in Canada as well. To the left/right thing, I did not do any more searching beyond what I posted yesterday but I remember a lot of cars in Argentina being right hand drive in the thirties and later imported to the US. Anyone know if at that time they drove to the left? As well, I seem to remember some movies with a Chinese theme pre WWII and I could swear they were driving on the left as well. I will ask my father, he served there for 3 years 1937-1940. Cheers Bill
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Dog Robber Sends |
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Argentina and Uruguay drove on the left until ... post-war?
The Holden Monaro is sold as the Vauxhall Monaro in the UK. |
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Thanks, David:
I know there was a very large British influence in both Argentina and Uruguay in the 1800's/1900's due to the trade in beef and maybe wheat. Seems to have lasted quite a while. The Vauxhall Monaros in the UK, are they V8s as well? I don't know what engines are offered in Oz, but maybe smaller ones as well. As a side note, Pat and I visited Belize for a day on a HobbyTown sponsored Carib Cruise in March and I was totally amazed to not only discover that they drive on the right but that all of the earlier British cars were nowhere to be seen. Probably 70% American minivans and trucks and 30% Japanese sedans and light trucks. Our guide, who was driving a Plymouth Voyager purchased in Texas, said all the old British stuff was sold off as scrap to Mexico when the NAFTA agreement came into effect and Mexico built up it's assembly operations. I asked our guide to give me a tour of the auto scrap yards as a sort of side tour and we did not find one single British vehicle left out of perhaps 6-8 yards. Little current history for you David. Bill
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Dog Robber Sends |
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Surely it would be a 1300cc with twin carbies and a chrome rocker cover.
They'd also delete the aircon, heater and the radio would be an optional extra. Perhaps rebadged as a Monaro Viva ![]()
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Film maker 42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains 42 FGT No9 (Aust) 42 F15 Keith Webb Macleod, Victoria Australia Also Canadian Military Pattern Vehicles group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianmilitarypattern |
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Thankfully just rebadged as Vauxhall, being the UK tradename for GM, and called the Monaro 5.7i; indeed there is even an official tweaked version called the VXR with a useful heap of extra ponies, that is if the 329 of the normal version is inadequate. What I don't know is if the speech announcement warning system has been changed on the UK "production" versions; early trade/media Holden demonstrators had the traction control "ON" setting to announce: "You bloody pommie woose." In fact at the full list of just over 28K pounds, this is about a third of the price for any super-car here, plus the advantage of a major, national "maker" with its extensive garage network. R. |
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As for the melodious and unforgiving spur gears, probably better termed cogs here; we are pleased to report less protestation from the Ballard cog-box. In a bit of non-original, but you'd be hard pressed to see it modification, we have spent a day turning a 4" billet of steel into largely pre-tempered, dark blue, instant watch-spring swarf and fabricated a dynamo nose-piece adaptor to carry a LR 110 viscous fan unit. Gone is the apparent fan roaring which sounds like the engine being thrashed within an inch of its life even at a fast idle, now there is unmasked audible feedback of what the engine is actually doing, the real practicallity of conversation in the cab and the hithertofore unheard and quite prominent purring of ST24s on tarmac. Whilst in there, with the rad out, the infamous "Detach-O-Matic™" single dynamo stud has been replaced with an item fabricated from a 12.8 grade allen bolt, the new stud is roll pinned through the manifold casting and this pin cannot come out as it almost hits the dynamo casing; plus the associated nut is castellated and pinned with an R clip for belt adjustment convenience. Lets see the bugger try and fall off now. . . . . . . . . . . . Not only is the gearbox breathing a sigh of relief, but we expect Ballard to be substantially quicker to shows and the like now that 50mph actually sounds like revving the engine rather than 32mph, perhaps he'll actually keep up with Rory's PU. . . . . . . R. |
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