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  #1  
Old 20-05-11, 03:07
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Quote:
Originally Posted by warren brown View Post
Or was that tray-back 'original' to that truck? Not factory, but made for some specific military role - any ideas?
looks like an all steel original rear body. Probably had drop sides and the photo shows them off.
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Old 20-05-11, 03:19
warren brown warren brown is offline
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Thanks Cliff - I'm still learning...
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  #3  
Old 20-05-11, 20:50
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Richard Farrant Richard Farrant is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cliff View Post
looks like an all steel original rear body. Probably had drop sides and the photo shows them off.
Warren and Cliff,

I was staying with Warwick at that time so had a good look around it and I distinctly recollect him telling me it had wooden sides, which had obviously deteriorated and that all the metal work from the sides was laying on the body. The photo is not as sharp in colour as it could be, think that was 1997, so not far off when you said 15 years ago, Warren.
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  #4  
Old 20-05-11, 23:01
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Farrant View Post
Warren and Cliff,
I distinctly recollect him telling me it had wooden sides, which had obviously deteriorated and that all the metal work from the sides was laying on the body.
Thanks for that Richard. I never thought of it having wooden sides but I knew the bed and wheel wells were original.
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Cliff Hutchings
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"and on the 8th day he made trucks so that man, made on the 7th day, had shelter when woman threw him out for the night"
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  #5  
Old 21-05-11, 01:47
Dianaa Dianaa is offline
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Thanks mates!

Will pass the message back (although I don't know if they'll be interested in the wooden dropsides!)

Diana
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  #6  
Old 21-05-11, 09:23
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Keith Webb Keith Webb is offline
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Default Wooden dropside

Here's an ex RAAF wooden dropside GS body.



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  #7  
Old 23-05-11, 09:29
Dianaa Dianaa is offline
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The above dropside trayback appears to have been service green over-painted blue. In the original AuLRO post the author suggested the vehicle in question had never been painted service green.

If the vehicle in question went through a post-war re-build would they have stripped the paint back to bare metal/wood before painting blue?

I know that after the war my uncle bought up CKD kits to use for his general carrier business (my father actually got a 15a off his cousin for his building company). Would these have been pre-painted service green or just finished in primer? And if so did the RAAF build war surplus trucks into fleet colours before entering service?
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  #8  
Old 23-05-11, 09:57
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Keith Webb Keith Webb is offline
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Default Original AuLRO post?

So Alan has posted my pics elsewhere? Fair enough - it's his vehicle.

He was saying it appears never to have been painted khaki which is interesting - certainly the blue was applied over a red primer on the body so you may be correct in saying it has had a post-war rebuild, but I've never known one where the paint was stripped on a CMP.

I think Alan will find the cab was originally khaki when he pulls it apart.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Dianaa View Post
The above dropside trayback appears to have been service green over-painted blue. In the original AuLRO post the author suggested the vehicle in question had never been painted service green.

If the vehicle in question went through a post-war re-build would they have stripped the paint back to bare metal/wood before painting blue?

I know that after the war my uncle bought up CKD kits to use for his general carrier business (my father actually got a 15a off his cousin for his building company). Would these have been pre-painted service green or just finished in primer? And if so did the RAAF build war surplus trucks into fleet colours before entering service?
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https://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianmilitarypattern
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