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#1
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Thanks for the info Mike. One photo below shows markings on the rear of a Mk1 C Squadron? Unit signs are too far gone to even guess at.
I will try to find Rover photos from either Northam or Moora camps using the State Library as a source. The other shows repairs to cracks in the hull, you mentioned in Military Profiles that several hulls were rejected because of cracks. Someone welded and patched this hull, not to subtle either. |
#2
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Yes, a C Squadron symbol of a circle.
2/11th Aust Armd Car Regt would be a pretty safe bet: located at Mingenew, WA from late December 1942. Consisted of HQ Sqn, and A, B and C Sqns. Good luck with the photo hunt. Mike |
#3
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Been going over the hull to fit new armour plate, have noticed that many of the original welds have let go.
Many of the boxes and internal fittings welded to the AAP have separated over the years. Anyone who has welded armour plate knows it requires prep work and knowledge of stress and tension. I am welding in 5, 8, and 9mm mild steel plate to fill the holes. 9mm AAP is no longer available. Will be using a MIG and pre heating to do the welds and grinding the welds flush. The Nickle weld will be reproduced by a stick welder later. |
#4
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Looks good! When you get closer to fabricating larger missing pieces, bear in mind the workshop conditions when these 40 hulls were manufactured. Was there a fully dedicated clean-sheet production line, or were these welded up on jigs on an open stretch of the factory floor? Were the workers the most highly skilled men in the entire factory, or were they the next shift available? Are there signs of careful, precise and repeatable measurements and precision controlled cutters, or more scribe a line and grind down to it?
I mention this degree of imprecision thinking about a story from when DEW Industries in Canada graciously restored a WW1 US light tank which ended its service life in the nascent Canadian Armoured Corps. Don Dingwall was at DEW and he had to laughingly explain to the modern shop workers just how primitive the shops were in 1918-19. Of course nothing would be square or perfect. The workmen were used to making locomotives, which only had a few truly standardized parts.
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Terry Warner - 74-????? M151A2 - 70-08876 M38A1 - 53-71233 M100CDN trailer Beware! The Green Disease walks among us! |
#5
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Finished the upper sections today. Looks much better but still the ugliest truck ever. I will tackle the hatches and fittings when time allows.
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#6
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Wayne, it looks to me like the Rover inspired Elon Musk in the design of Tesla's new Cybertruck.
![]() Brian
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1942 Willys MB Jeep 505 contract 1943 C8A HUP |
#7
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I would suggest Tesla’s Cybertruck is an insult to the Rover.
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1943 Willys MB Willys Trailer 1941 Fordson WOT 2H 1941 Fordson WOT 2H (Unrestored) 194? Fordson WOT 2D (Unrestored) 1939 Ford 1 ton utility (Undergoing restoration) 1940 Ford 1 ton utility (Unrestored) 1941 Ford 1 ton utility (Unrestored) BSA folding bicycle BSA folding bicycle 1941 Ford/Marmon Herrington 3A gun tractor 1941 Ford/Marmon Herrington 3 gun tractor (Unrestored) 1941 Diamond T 969 (Unrestored) Wiles Junior Cooker x 2 |
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