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  #1  
Old 10-04-18, 06:09
John Winfield John Winfield is offline
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Thanks for posting all this. I have been looking for the chassis number on my recently acquired F15A and found it in this exact same location. And best of all, it matches the number on the title!

It's about 10,000 earlier than Vincent's truck.

It also has the two tags on the instrument panel, and no sign of any other plates anywhere.

The plates seem to match the truck. The deck appears to be from a welding truck, modified into a flat deck by cutting down the fenders (and removing the welder, of course). The brackets for the folding table are still there.

John Winfield
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File Type: jpg Built plate.jpg (146.9 KB, 5 views)
File Type: jpg Publications.jpg (118.4 KB, 2 views)
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  #2  
Old 10-04-18, 07:51
Vincent BLASSIC Vincent BLASSIC is offline
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Great !!

Ok for 2 data plates.
-publication
-manufacturer

Other plates on engine cover ???
Holes on mine but no plates...
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  #3  
Old 28-05-18, 19:55
Vincent BLASSIC Vincent BLASSIC is offline
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Hello Friends.

I'm still looking for missing parts in Europe with internet.

So,

I think I will paint all the truck with SCC2 color and camo pattern in SCC14 color, I will make it in 1944 Normandy campaign profil.


My question is :

what is engine color ??? SCC2 or Ford Grey (as for GPW Jeeps) ???

Last edited by Vincent BLASSIC; 28-05-18 at 20:02.
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  #4  
Old 29-05-18, 01:01
Jacques Reed Jacques Reed is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vincent BLASSIC View Post
Other plates on engine cover ???
Holes on mine but no plates...
Hello Vincent,

These are the data plates on the engine cover of my Australian assembled Ford F-15A.

Not sure if Canadian sourced vehicles used the same plates. Perhaps another person can confirm.

Cheers
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File Type: jpg IMG_0107.JPG (219.3 KB, 5 views)
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  #5  
Old 29-05-18, 01:33
Vincent BLASSIC Vincent BLASSIC is offline
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Great Jacques !!

🙌
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  #6  
Old 03-06-18, 04:26
Jacques Reed Jacques Reed is offline
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Default Ford CMP Cooling System Drain Notice plate graphics

Hi Vincent,

This may be of interest:
Weather has not been great for being outside so I thought I would revisit doing the graphics for the Cooling System Drain Notice plate located on the engine cover of my truck. I had started it a while back because that plate is the one in the worst condition. Posting the photo of it here reminded me of it.

Didn't take too long to do it. Couple hours here and there the last two days at the computer. Getting more familiar with Paint.net helped.

This is the first draft so after a bit of a double check and tidy up I will print and decal a piece of sheet steel the same size as the original and see what it looks like. Original plate scan on right.

Does anyone know how the original plates were printed? Offset, like paper printing? Screen printing? It is darn good ink or paint, whatever it is, to last as long as it has.

My apology for going a little bit off thread topic here.

Cheers,
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File Type: jpg Drain Radiator - paint net - Copy.jpg (71.8 KB, 4 views)
File Type: jpg Drain Radiator.jpg (119.2 KB, 3 views)
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  #7  
Old 03-06-18, 11:24
Keith Webb's Avatar
Keith Webb Keith Webb is offline
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Default Instruction plates

These are the same on all Ford CMPs

They were supplied with the kits ex-Canada.

The data plates we see on top of the dash (which I have NOS) are also of Canadian manufacture.

I don't know what the process is to make those black and silver plates, but I know there are people who can reproduce that process.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacques Reed View Post
Hello Vincent,

These are the data plates on the engine cover of my Australian assembled Ford F-15A.

Not sure if Canadian sourced vehicles used the same plates. Perhaps another person can confirm.

Cheers
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42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains
42 FGT No9 (Aust)
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Also Canadian Military Pattern Vehicles group on Facebook
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  #8  
Old 03-06-18, 14:10
Chris Suslowicz Chris Suslowicz is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Keith Webb View Post
I don't know what the process is to make those black and silver plates, but I know there are people who can reproduce that process.
Anodising, I think. The plate is coated with a protective layer (photoresist as used for making printed circuit boards for small runs, or printed with a waterproof coating for mass production) where it needs to remain silver, then put in a chemical bath with a dye and connected to the positive supply. The electrolytic action etches the surface of the plate where it's in contact with the solution, and the dye is absorbed by the layer of aluminium oxide the immediately forms.

Same process as used to produce coloured aluminium cookware, etc.





(More complex than I first thought: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anodizing .)

Chris
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  #9  
Old 04-06-18, 01:34
Jacques Reed Jacques Reed is offline
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Default anodized printing on tags

Hi Chris,

Thanks for that info and link. It sounds like that's similar to the process to make photo-etched parts as used in model making.

In any event the process is probably outside the expertise of the home handyman. Having said that, I remember a cousin back in the sixties who was an electronics geek who made his own PCB's at home so anything is possible with enough research- and chemicals!

Cheers,
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  #10  
Old 04-06-18, 02:58
Vincent BLASSIC Vincent BLASSIC is offline
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Thanks for infos !!


Do you know how to paint Engine ??? OD ?? Ford Grey ??
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