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  #1  
Old 14-01-10, 12:46
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David_Hayward (RIP) David_Hayward (RIP) is offline
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Default Valentine diesels

I am trying to find out which GMC diesels were used in Valentine tanks..one source suggested it was a model 6004...was it a twin 6-71 Detroit-Diesel pair or a Cleveland Diesel unit please?
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Old 14-01-10, 13:26
cantankrs cantankrs is offline
Alex McDougall
 
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Default 6-71

Quote:
Originally Posted by David_Hayward View Post
I am trying to find out which GMC diesels were used in Valentine tanks..one source suggested it was a model 6004...was it a twin 6-71 Detroit-Diesel pair or a Cleveland Diesel unit please?
David,

I own an AEC Valentine so not super familiar with the GM version. Definitely a single 6-71 inline two-stroke diesel (no room for two ). I'll have to check my manual to see if it mentions anything more specific. The only motors in Vals that I know of were the AEC Petrol 6 cyl, the AEC A190 diesel 6 cyl and then the GM6-71 (inline) 6 cylinder diesel (but the old style 6-71 which might be known as 6004). Some Lees and Grants and possibly Shermans had the 6046 twin 6-71 GM diesel powerpack.

http://www.mapleleafup.org/vehicles/cac/valentine.html says 6004

wwiiequipment mentions 6004 but I think the 'S Stroke' is meant to read 2 Stroke.

Regards

Alex
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Old 14-01-10, 13:36
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I beleive that these are the Valentine diesels used in the Canadian built tanks.
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File Type: jpg Valentine12.jpg (80.3 KB, 109 views)
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Old 14-01-10, 14:08
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I have a copy of the original Data Book covering the Valentine and other 'tank-type vehicles of Canadian Manufacture'. It lists the Valentine engine as being a single 'General Motors Two Cycle Diesel 6004 Special 6-71 Series Engine modified for tank use'. It doesn't say where they were manufactured, but David ought to be able to sort that out from his detailed research.

The twin 6-71 diesel powerpack was used in the M4A2 Sherman family but is not mentioned in this book because the tanks were of US manufacture, so I don't know its numeric designation.
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Old 14-01-10, 14:23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Geoff Winnington-Ball View Post
It lists the Valentine engine as being a single 'General Motors Two Cycle Diesel 6004 Special 6-71 Series Engine modified for tank use'. It doesn't say where they were manufactured
These engines were manufactured by General Motors' Detroit Detroit Diesel Engine Divisionin Detroit, Mich., USA. Designed in the late 1930s, the GM Detroit Diesel 71 series was built in one, two, three, four, and six cylinder inline models. The 6-71 obviously was the six cylinder version.

I suspect "6004 Special" refers to a the configuration needed for it to fit in the Valentine, e.g. different oil pan, exhaust manifolds, engine mountings etc.

Hanno
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Old 14-01-10, 14:58
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hanno Spoelstra View Post
I suspect "6004 Special" refers to a the configuration needed for it to fit in the Valentine, e.g. different oil pan, exhaust manifolds, engine mountings etc.
Like the "6046 Twin Diesel" was the configuration as fitted in M3 and M4 series Medium Tanks: two 6-71 engines combined in a single power pack (also see Sherman M4A2 diesel engine designation).

H.
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File Type: jpg gm6046.jpg (74.0 KB, 53 views)
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  #7  
Old 14-01-10, 15:02
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Thanks! You guys might like to know this snippet of info about the connection between GM Limited in Southampton and GM:

Quote:
... An Admiralty file of 1940 relates to the testing of GM two-stroke diesel engines by the Admiralty that GM Limited were proposing. Limited submitted a marine version of the three-cylinder Detroit-Diesel 3-71 design to the Admiralty for type tests. However the success of the trials came to the attention of the War Office post-Dunkirk as there was concern by July 1940 to ensure an uninterrupted supply of power units for the Vickers ‘Valentine’ Infantry Tank Mk. IIIA, orders for which had been placed in Canada. The Valentine was a 1938 design that initially used AEC petrol or diesel engines. The W.O. became interested in the Detroit-Diesel design in its six-cylinder form as an alternative power unit and so Limited worked with the Detroit Technical Staff in procuring a 6-71 engine which was then redesigned for the tank and to be interchangeable with British power units. Field tests carried on by the W.O. and presumably Ministry of Supply in collaboration with GM Overseas Operations and Limited resulted in the first application of GM Diesel engines to tank usage, as the Model 6-71S. This was later superseded by the more powerful 6-71A. The alterations and design called for the changing of the fuel, water and exhaust connections, mounting brackets and clutch and gear controls. The MofS forwarded complete drawings of the modifications to GM Overseas Operations in New York in order to determine whether GM would supply the 6-71 in quantity. Negotiations then took place over five months between GMOO, the Detroit-Diesel Division, Canadian Pacific Railroad who had been commissioned to build the Canadian Valentines, and British officials. This culminated in an initial order from the British Purchasing Commission on 27th September 1940 for 250 engines. The GMC 6004 diesels were used it seems in production Mks IV, V, VII-XI.

It seems that twin 6-71s were fitted in the M3A3 (Lee IV/Lee V) as well but none would have come here.
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