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  #1  
Old 24-02-19, 17:25
Niels V's Avatar
Niels V Niels V is offline
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Mine is 21cm in diameter
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  #2  
Old 24-02-19, 17:45
Alex van de Wetering Alex van de Wetering is offline
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Quote:
Mine is 21cm in diameter


I see a lot of small diameter flat plates on early Monkey face CMP's, but also on C15TA's here in Holland in 1945.....larger flat ones on Cab 13's, but also some with the fancy plate with ridge. Canadian Jeeps often show a large diameter plate with ridge from what I have seen......and the occasional jeep with a very large custom mate plate for red cross marking on an ambulance jeep.
I have no idea if there is difference between British or Canadian vehicles....or if it's more a matter of different suppliers(?)

Niels, thanks for posting those pictures and measurement; interesting to see an original plate!

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Old 24-02-19, 17:58
Owen Evans Owen Evans is offline
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Default Small plate

The attached is what I meant. If you compare the bridging plate diameter to the diameter of the headlamp lens (7 inch). As Alex says, often seen on the earlier (11/12 cab) CMP trucks.

Owen.
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Old 24-02-19, 20:10
Harry Moon Harry Moon is offline
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Default flat vs edged

I have examples of both and I would hazard that the edged ones were common on the headlight socket and the flat ones when it was attached seperatly from the headlight blank..
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Old 24-02-19, 20:22
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Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is offline
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The ridged plates are British, the flat plates are Canadian.

They doubled up as blanking off plates for the headlight buckets. They had holes to fit them in the headlight buckets and holes to fit them elsewhere when a second headlight was required. Compare with Niels’ example.

Of course when war progressed things got mixed up and troops used whatever was available from stores.

H.
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