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  #1  
Old 22-10-18, 15:31
tankbarrell tankbarrell is offline
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The white circle on the British one is not added on, it is just paint like the Canadian one. The bolt is for fixing the lamp itself.
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  #2  
Old 22-10-18, 17:04
rob love rob love is offline
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Ah, yes, I see that now. They even dimpled the metal for the bolt.
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  #3  
Old 23-10-18, 11:32
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Ron Pier Ron Pier is offline
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I thought I might as well take a reference photograph of the back of my Brit lamp with armoured cable. Ron
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  #4  
Old 01-12-18, 11:03
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Tony Smith Tony Smith is offline
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Q: Electrically, where did these connect to on the vehicle? Was there a socket at the rear of the Gun Tractor body, or did they remove a taillight lens and fit it in place of the lamp? The socket used has no weather cap (unless you stick a cork in it!). Are these the same plugs that are used on the body wiring harness that plug into the back of the 11/12 Cab rubber taillights, and therefore with a modicum of weatherproofness?

If there is not a socket at the rear of the body, would it explain the presence of the power sockets fitted in the dash panels of the Cab 12 Chevs in THIS THREAD on dash layouts. I note that the dash pictured by Dick Wheat and those by myself in that thread are all of CGT/Portee vehicles. Connecting a trailer (artillery piece) wiring harness to the dash of the towing vehicle would be a major embuggerance. Perhaps an "Extension lead" was used to run from the dash to the rear of the vehicle, where the Gun lead connected? This would keep the exposed socket well within the vehicle to keep it out of the weather.
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Old 01-12-18, 17:52
Owen Evans Owen Evans is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tony Smith View Post
Q: Electrically, where did these connect to on the vehicle?
Most (if not all) british WW2 vehicles had a 2-pin socket, usually located at the rear of the vehicle. Maybe the Canadians had something similar?

The first two photos are two different types of socket I've encountered, the third photo is the corresponding plug (which as you correctly guessed, also fits the 11/12 cab rubber tail lights). The last two photos are the sad remains of a 2-pin socket that was fitted to my C15; bolted to the rearmost crossmember, and oriented upwards (so located between the chassis and rear body).

Owen.
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  #6  
Old 01-12-18, 21:02
Lynn Eades Lynn Eades is offline
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Owen, just for clarity:
There are "pins" and there are "contacts"
SBC identifies a bulb / plug with two contacts.
SCC means the bulb or plug has one central contact.
These items have two parallel pins which means the bulb or plug can be fitted two different ways.
Im not sure about this but I believe SCC stands for single center contact. This makes sense. (to me)
However along with that goes SBC or single base contact(s)??????.. which doesn't make sense. The only conclusion I can think of is that it differentiates from a double base bulb like a festoon bulb? Anyone clarify?

Anyhow a gun tail light assy would use double contact plugs and sockets to allow for a feed and an earth return.

Then, just to stop it all being too easy "they" made (single filament) bulbs, plugs and sockets with offset pins
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Last edited by Lynn Eades; 01-12-18 at 21:03. Reason: improve spelling
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  #7  
Old 01-12-18, 21:23
tankbarrell tankbarrell is offline
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I think SBC stands for small bayonet cap.
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