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Thanks for your good words Jordan .
David D. you are right. I was serving 6000 KM from home and forgot about the round brushguards that go in the front of the box on both sides of the chimneys.I will be working on that thanks. But my problem is worse . I found the holes for some kind of bolt to hold down the guardrails and brushguards but have no clue what fits in there . I have included a picture. Q. What kinda bolt goes in there ? I have tried stove bolts and wood screws in 1/4, 3/8 and 5/8 and no joy.
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44 GPW / 44 C-15-A Cab 13 Wireless 5 with 2K1 box X 2 / 44 U.C. No-2 MKII* / 10 Cwt Cdn Brantford Coach & Body trailer / 94 LSVW / 84 Iltis Last edited by Robert Bergeron; 08-07-17 at 23:41. |
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Bob,
Have been following this thread since day one. A Tip O' the Hat to what you and the MLU gang have achieved. Visited Oshawa last summer…and saw this..It seems to very similar to yours. Can you tell me just how close it is production wise. The dash plates show C-15A June 19-44 Cab 13 Chassis serial 48444 00001 CDLV 2571 on the smaller metal tag is stamped C-60L-03 MB-02 C-60-1481 Can you tell me what all those numbers mean..? |
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Dennis, are you the Dennis Cardy that lived in Ontario in the mid 1970's and attended the first military vehicle show in Ontario at Paisley?
If so, you had a C15A wireless truck that I bought from you (or some other Dennis Cardy) around about 1976 for $1500...I think I still have the receipt. That C15A wireless truck was serial number 484440001. I sold it to the Oshawa group in about 1986. If you are one and the same Dennis Cardy then the truck you were looking at in Oshawa was the one you owned 40 years ago. Attached is a pic of it getting a brake job shortly after I got it along with my first ever MV, CDLV505 MB serial 155792. I wonder if it too is still driving about somewhere. Quote:
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Guilty as charged your honour…LOL..
Nice to know it found a good home at Oshawa. Their radio installation may not be as advanced as Bob's …but it's sure a good start…. Have some "as-found" shots of it somewhere..Think I paid $250 for it. Had been parked after the engine had died…Did a compression test…pulled the head and after a valve job ..and a new fuel pump soon got things going. From a Gear-Head point of view.. prefer the Ford flathead..But hard to beat the simplicity of that Chevy 6. Just like Bob's…the radio box was missing..But a search of local wrecking yards soon turned up the correct one..Fifty bucks for that.. Aah…the good old days.. Dennis. |
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Robert.
Short hex head lag bolts are used to anchor all the roof safety rails and brush guards. Can either be flanged, or plain, used with a flat washer. They will need good, solid 1/4-inch plywood directly underneath the outer aluminum sheet metal roof skin to work at all. Once water gets into that upper layer of roof plywood and the rot process starts, nothing you bolt or screw down up there will stay in place very long. The box simply flexes too much when the vehicle is on the road. If you cannot get any hardware to grab when trying to mount those fittings, you have a problem. David |
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Robert..
A Plus 1 on what David has said about mounting the various roof ladders. Good advice for sure. He is absolutely correct..if water leaks in past the mounting bolts..the wooden structure underneath can and will disintegrate in a matter of months.. Not joking when I say if you have a friend who is into boats…he will immediately recognize what you are facing and recommend the ladder mounting flanges be properly "bedded" in a flexible caulking compound.. Thus preventing any water getting in. Dennis. |
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Bruce Parker,
Thanks for that colour photo of the Wireless Van…and that update. Always wondered where it ended up… Here it is at the Bruce County farmhouse shortly before it was passed on to you. May I ask a few questions…?? You talked about doing a brake job.. How were the front brakes when you got it.? Probably toast by that time..Was it a total brake rebuild…? To be honest..cough…cough….when you are running on original Run Flat tires that are flat..you don't really need a lot of help from the brakes to slow you down…cough cough. Dennis. |
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Thanks Dennis.
Small world, i spent the last year in BC , Comox and Esquimalt. If you look at my post of 10-19-16 on page 9 of this tread you will see pictures of the production original furnished by Rob L.
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44 GPW / 44 C-15-A Cab 13 Wireless 5 with 2K1 box X 2 / 44 U.C. No-2 MKII* / 10 Cwt Cdn Brantford Coach & Body trailer / 94 LSVW / 84 Iltis Last edited by Robert Bergeron; 09-07-17 at 03:35. |
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