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#1
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The windscreen demister/defroster is a standard German item and can be regularly seen. It is little more than a glazed frame with a number of fine resistance (eureka or nichrome) wires strung across it between spring steel fingers that act as the contact feed points. It is simply plugged in to the standard Wehrmacht dash socket. I had the opportunity to rebuild one of these for Paul Hocking's Stoewer; we only had one original wire but from its length. resistance and gauge, some replacement was found to restore the device to working order. While we're on CS8 trucks, that young Rory Ballard has just bought this. . . . . . . . . R. |
#2
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Best to scan as an uncompressed TIF file, then resave/resize as a JPG with moderate compression for posting on the internet. Keefy's right - you can't go back.
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SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
#3
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The parameters for posting pics here are 600 pixels wide and no larger than 100 Kb... which means if you have a pic which fits the pixel width, you only have to save with greater compression. Whatever software you're using should have this option.
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SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
#4
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eBay item 6158528600 eBay item 6156328280 Your turn again! H. |
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From a lot of some 50 phots recently auctioned on eBay (Item number: 6155913897)
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#7
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Are you going to build one of these? H. |
#8
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See http://beute.narod.ru/ for lots of pictures of captured Allied equipment. The page on COE GMC's contained a surprise:
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#10
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Quote:
H. |
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Hi Rolf
Unfortunately there isn't a really effective way to increase resolution - the problem is there isn't enough information in a small image to make it large and clear. You can try enlarging something in Photoshop, but all you're really doing is making bigger patterns of the same pixels. Going from large to small works - it just doesn't work the other way around. Here's your second image enlarged in Photoshop from 229 pixels to 500 pixels wide. I have also done an auto colour and contrast balance on it. You can see it is now a lot fuzzier than the original. The solution is of course to re-scan at higher resolution if you can.
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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 |
#12
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Hi Rolf
Please feel free to email them to me - I'll host them on my site - that way they can be much larger and won't put a strain on MLU resources. Keith
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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 |
#13
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The top one looked to my untrained eyes like a gantry ..Dodge WK-60?
Second I suspect is an ex-French order GMC AFWX-354. The third I think is a 1940 Model Chevrolet WE, 131 inch wheelbase some of which were diverted to the UK and sold off onto the civilian market, so I assume that they were diverted from Antwerp...the featured truck may have been a sequestred Begian or Dutch truck although it could just possibly have been ex-Gennevilliers [GM France]. The fourth includes three? GMC AFWX-354 ex-French order trucks, with that crew-cab again. Likewise next one. Wermacht [Heer] truck WL 314297 looks to me as though it is a 1939 Chevrolet COE, perhaps VE? The trailer arrangement is typical of those produced in the Low Countries, and I wondered if Hanno thought it was a sequestred Dutch civilian outfit? These are amazing photos and proves to me that some of the French orders for Chevrolet and GMC military trucks did land on the Continent and were a nice present for the German forces...perhaps used on the Russian front? Having said that I would love to see a German Chevrolet Houlder-Thornton YR 6 x 4 as these were supposedly shipped after the Armistice. Bart stated that a consignment of GM trucks was offloaded at La Rochelle, intended for the French forces but the Germans found them and had them asembled for their own use. Given known timing of the order placement in New York in 1939 and when the diverted crates landed in the UK, I wondered whether any of the AFWX trucks were included in the La Rochelle batch? Last edited by David_Hayward (RIP); 29-03-05 at 23:10. |
#14
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Hanno, is the truck not rhd? Close scrutiny of my screen suggests under correction that it is. I agree, I discount ex-French on reflection. I suggest a captured Gantry truck to S/M 2023 ...were they used in North Africa?
L 4552457 to 4553198 [unless there were any Mid-East theatre Census Numbers in addition] 1940-41 Canadian Dodge Model DCM-4? [equivalent of the US WK-60] with Welles-Thornton rear bogie, Serials # 8,300,001 – 8,300,742? I say DCM-4, although it would appear that they were WK-60 chassis railed across from the Dodge truck plant in Detroit to Windsor and then 'assembled' to British specs. after addition of the Thornton bogie supplied by Thornton's Canadian agents. Last edited by David_Hayward (RIP); 29-03-05 at 23:14. |
#15
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There are lots of interesting Beute pics on the Axis History forum.
Here's a nice example of a CGT, marked as a Ford (their IDs are sometimes wonky such as Ford Cab 11 CMPs marked as Morris C8). I notice some of us have already posted in there too.
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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 |
#16
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some more photos from my collection, i cant read the german on the back of the first photo. any one help?
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Keith |
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Kieth, your first pic is a Chev 15 cwt but the box is unique. It's a lot like the 2A1 but it has square wheel well openings. The only pix I've seen of British made boxes use 3 1/2" boards for the sides and this one uses 5 1/2" by the look of it. It doesn't have fold down sides and the POW can holders are mounted on their side instead of laying flat. The top of the endgate is flat too.
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1940 Cab 11 C8 Wireless with 1A2 box & 11 set 1940 Cab 11 C8 cab and chassis 1940 Cab 11 C15 with 2A1 & Motley mount & Lewis gun 1940 Cab 11 F15A w/ Chev rear ends 1941 Cab 12 F15A 1942-44 Cab 13 F15A x 5 1942 cab 13 F15A with 2B1 box 1943 cab 13 F15A with 2H1 box 1943 Cab 13 C8A HUP 1944 Cab 13 C15A with 2C1 box 1943 Cletrac M2 High Speed Tractor MkII Bren gun carrier chassis x 2 |
#18
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The scribbling on the back is hard to read, all I could make out is Egypt and 1942. HTH, Hanno
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Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
#19
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Thanks for the info on the photo David and the german on the back Hanno
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Keith |
#20
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Second line: "In Aegypten - in Egypt" Fourth line: "Sommer 42 - Summer '42" |
#21
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Some more original photos of Austins from my book.
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Keith |
#22
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IIRC, the unpassable region south of El Alamein preventing Rommel to bypass the British positions. |
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Very good.
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Richard, thanks mate! I agree that it is unlikely that there were any Mid-East Census Numbers applied.
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#25
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Richard |
#26
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The WK-60 Breakdown Gantry was definitely used in North Africa. A photo in Brian Baxter's book, "Breakdown", shows one and the census number looks to be L 4552570. Bodies were British built, so hence it is not a Middle East census number, they would have been shipped to UK first. Richard |
#27
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as Hanno stated in a post.....
Why not show us your pictures of vehicles used by the enemy?? Either Commonwhealt used by the axis or the other way round?? OK you might be allowed one US vehicle too.... And someone please tell me how to make the photos bigger with out redusing the resolution too much... Rolf |
#28
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British bedfords 4.jpg British Trucks 8.jpg British truck.jpg
Some of the photos i have in my collection of British trucks in German use. I have about 250 Original photos of of British trucks / cars that we left for the Germans to use. I am looking for some photos of 1944 Morris C8 GS 4x4 as i can not find any during the war and just a few post war. My Morris did not come out of the Army untill 1957 so there must be some out there. 1944Morris C8 GS 1938 Humber used as a Staff car in WW2
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Keith Last edited by Keith Brooker; 24-03-08 at 00:38. Reason: Add more info |
#29
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It's time to revive this excellent thread with pictures of what I believe is an Opel Blitz obviously driven by U.S. troops who want to make sure they don't experience any friendly fire incidents
CHIMO! Derek
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Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? |
#30
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When you can not afford a real MV this is what you end up with.
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