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  #1  
Old 06-04-19, 17:46
Paul Edwards Paul Edwards is offline
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Default Chevrolet c15a New Project

Gentlemen, after many years of sitting on the MLU side lines I've decided to come over to the dark side.

Having been in the hobby for many years and centered around American kit I've gone and bought this little buet of a Chevrolet c15a no. 12 cab home with a view to restore.

I'd much appreciate any advice on colour schemes, I fancy the micky mouse scheme but not sure whether these trucks served in the ETO.

Cheers,

Paul
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1942 Harley WLA
1943 Willys MB
1940 BSA M20
1940 Morris Commercial CDSW Light Recovery
1942 CMP Chevrolet no. 12 cab
1944 Bedford MWD
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  #2  
Old 06-04-19, 18:27
David Dunlop David Dunlop is offline
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Nice little truck, Paul, and welcome to the forum.

David
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  #3  
Old 07-04-19, 02:28
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Tony Smith Tony Smith is offline
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Very nice. Looks to be in very good condition to start from.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul Edwards View Post
I fancy the micky mouse scheme but not sure whether these trucks served in the ETO.

Cheers,

Paul
There is a thread on this very topic: http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/sh...ad.php?t=10148
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  #4  
Old 08-04-19, 10:16
Paul Edwards Paul Edwards is offline
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Thanks guys.

From your expert eye would this bumper be correct, it does'nt have the holes on each end or the cranking handle support bracket?

Also did these trucks have rear metal mud guards? Which engine do I have? is it the orginal 216?

And finially the fuel tanks have a short filler tube, what does this suggest?

Any advice would be welcome, thank you in anticipation.

Cheers,

Paul
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1942 Ford GPW
1942 Harley WLA
1943 Willys MB
1940 BSA M20
1940 Morris Commercial CDSW Light Recovery
1942 CMP Chevrolet no. 12 cab
1944 Bedford MWD
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  #5  
Old 08-04-19, 14:05
Owen Evans Owen Evans is offline
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Default Bumper, etc.

Paul,

The bumper looks to be a pressed channel (round edges?). They were normally a square edge. That said, I've seen quite a few with the round edge; anybody know if this is correct, or 'home made'? I'm thinking the latter, but others will be able to confirm.

Short filler neck on the fuel tanks would be correct for the year. There should also be a large brass or white metal plate on top of the tank, which houses the gauge sender and changeover switch for each tank.

From the year of production, your truck could have had either rubber or canvas mudguards. Canvas ones are available from http://www.canvasco.com/ in the UK. Some generic mudflap info here: http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/sh...hlight=mudflap

Can't say if your engine is original. The engine number is located of the flat area just behind where the distributor bolts to the block. Refer attached picture.

Good luck!

Owen.
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  #6  
Old 08-04-19, 15:40
Grant Bowker Grant Bowker is online now
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The parts lists describe two bumper profiles - with straight and tapered inner faces. The earlier (to some time in 1940) is described as straight profile and the later as tapered (standard rolled steel channel). I believe the constant thickness, as on Paul's truck is reasonable for the age of the truck.
The engine has features that are consistent with a 216 but are also believable for the "splash oiled" 235 used in some US Army Chevrolets of the period. There are many discussions about engine identification on www.stovebolt.com
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  #7  
Old 08-04-19, 15:41
Bruce Parker (RIP) Bruce Parker (RIP) is offline
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Rounded bumpers are correct, I have one I took off a Chev in my shed. On this one however I'd check to see of there are holes for the crank guide.

As for colours, in 1941 (which yours would be) they left the factory in either khaki or 'desert' light stone. There could be a number of camouflage schemes and colours applied and micky mouse is certainly one of them. If these trucks survived and needed a coat of paint it would have been according to the colour at the time, being brown in 1943 and olive drab in 1944/45. Olive drab trucks rarely had any camouflage applied.
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  #8  
Old 08-04-19, 16:00
Paul Edwards Paul Edwards is offline
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Thanks guys I'm learning fast.

Here's a close up picture of the bumper (I have to say to doesn't look like a babba addition)

And the fuel tank showing the short neck.

I'll check the engine number next time I visit the yard.

Cheers,

Paul
Attached Thumbnails
Right Front Under.jpg   DSCN5594.jpg  
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1942 Ford GPW
1942 Harley WLA
1943 Willys MB
1940 BSA M20
1940 Morris Commercial CDSW Light Recovery
1942 CMP Chevrolet no. 12 cab
1944 Bedford MWD
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  #9  
Old 08-04-19, 17:21
Owen Evans Owen Evans is offline
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Fuel tanks are correct!

Owen.
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1940 11 Cab C15
1939 DKW KS200
1951 Willys M38
1936 Opel Olympia
MVPA # 39159
MVT # 19406
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  #10  
Old 08-04-19, 17:42
rob love rob love is offline
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Agree on the fuel tanks, they are proper. Once a tool box is in place, they are difficult to fill. You really need the flexible spout and the funnel to get to them...a regular jerry can with normal flex spout won't do.
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  #11  
Old 16-04-19, 15:32
Paul Edwards Paul Edwards is offline
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Guys, I'm in need of a front brake drum but in my hunt I'm being asked which type do I have?

I understand some of the early models were different, but how exactly do these two types differ? I had previously posted a picture showing the hub, can anyone tell me what I have?

Cheers,

Paul
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1942 Harley WLA
1943 Willys MB
1940 BSA M20
1940 Morris Commercial CDSW Light Recovery
1942 CMP Chevrolet no. 12 cab
1944 Bedford MWD
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