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Javier de Luelmo - Diesel 01-09-04 14:24

Ford/Marmon-Herrington Umbau-Wagen
 
1 Attachment(s)
Hello all. I found last night this pic I downloaded time ago from the Time website. It was taken, if i remember well, in 1940 at the Belgium-France border, and the text said something about a column of Belgian Army fleeing from capture into french territory. I'm sure I haver read somewhere about a batch of Antwerp hurriedly semi-assembled Fords (look at the wooden seats!) that escaped to France in the last days of the invasion and which would be completed later. And sure anybody here knows more about that...

Hanno Spoelstra 22-09-04 15:30

3 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally posted by Javier de Luelmo - Diesel
I'm sure I haver read somewhere about a batch of Antwerp hurriedly semi-assembled Fords (look at the wooden seats!) that escaped to France in the last days of the invasion and which would be completed later.
Interesting pic, thanks!
Looks like 1-ton Ford/Marmon-Herrington chassis/cowls which were converted into staff cars, radio trucks and armoured anti-tank gun tractors.

1) Staff car

2) Side view of a staff car

3) Front view of a radio truck

Source: Belgian Ford/Marmon-Herrington Staff Cars

Bill Murray 23-09-04 00:03

You have to love the reinforced chicken crate drivers seats.
When I was stationed in Peru with Volvo Trucks, I would on occasion get to drive bare truck and bus chassis to the various bodyworks factories and it was just like that. Sit on a box that was not very well secured and fight the Peruvian traffic which was pure chaos. The bus chassis were even more fun as there was no windscreen.
Cheers
Bill
PS: Nice pics all of you.

Hanno Spoelstra 10-12-04 22:56

Ford/Marmon-Herrington Umbau-Wagen
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally posted by Hanno Spoelstra in CMP Umbau-Wagen
W&T 31, p.2: The Wehrmacht's Umbauwagen article also brought reactions. Some excellent shots of Wehrmacht photographer's origin included Morris-Commercial PU- and CS8-based Kübels and this example on a 1940 Ford/Marmon-Herrington 4x4 chassis used by the Luftwaffe 'somewhere in Europe' (or North Africa?). Other views show that with the exception of a rather crude windscreen (possibly a retrofit) it was a well-proportioned and good-looking car, with full-length running boards, but no Notek BO driving lamp. It's the ½-ton Ford Commercial type, Model 01C, with car style front end and left-hand drive, but we can't tell what and whose it was prior to capture and conversion.
http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/at...8&d=1089716761
Here's another interesting picture of a 1939 1-ton Ford-Marmon/Herrington with German Kübelwagen bodywork (source: Reinhard Frank, Ford im Kriege).
It is similar to the one shown above, but the body is shorter. This Umbau-Wagen or Kfz.15 (Behelf) was tested extensively in Köln, Germany. The body from the cowl rearwards is clearly of German origin, but where did the chassis/cowl come from?

H.

Bill Murray 11-12-04 03:20

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Another such???
Bill

nuyt 11-12-04 18:31

marmon-herrington/ford
 
Bill, your pic (great find!) looks to me like a Belgian Army Marmon-Herrington staffcar. The people look like Belgian army types as well. I don't think it is an Umbauwagen, but an Antwerp or otherwise Belgian product.

See also this thread on the Overvalwagen Forum:
http://www.network54.com/Forum/threa...eid=1094886876

About Hanno's pics: Pardon my ignorance, but could M-H have commercially supplied its conversion kits to Ford in Germany in 1939? If Ford was producing there, GM as well, why not could M-H have sold its stuff to or through Ford-Cologne?

And btw, didn't Ford Cologne also supply Ford COE trucks with M-H all wheel drive to Rumania well into WW2?


Nuyt

Overvalwagens!

David_Hayward (RIP) 11-12-04 18:55

Belgian?
 
I suggest Belgian as well. Chassis assembled by Ford in Antwerpen/Anvers. As to Romania, this was a subsidiary of Ford of Britain, and vehicles were supplied by Dagenham for assembly although the diverted [undeliverable] vehicles were sequestred by the Ministry of Supply..hence 'R' prefixes before the model number. These were Models R01T, left hand drive, with 01T front ends ex-USA, shipped to Dagenham and then meant to be shipped on. These were bodied as panel vans or converrted to ambulances.

I have never seen any reference to M-H sales to Ford Werke, Koln, although we now know that there were secret US truck sales, namely the WIFO trucks, which were assembled in Koln and then supplied to the German forces. I seem to recall seeing pix in WHEELS & TRACKS of Koln's answer to the Opel Allrad Blitz trucks, with 4-wheel drive. This would have been an idigenous transmission layout.

Hanno Spoelstra 11-12-04 20:58

Belgium - or Germany?!?
 
I agree, Belgium is most likely - especially since the Germans must have captured at least several dozens of 1-ton Ford/Marmon-Herrington chassis/cowls which had not been converted when the Germans invaded - see the thread Mystery Fords?

I like Nuyt's "ignorant" suggestion, though! From 1937-1939, Ford Köln sold V8-51 trucks to the Wehrmacht, and by 1938 General Schell, Director of Motorisation for the Wehrmacht, introduced a far-sighted plan to cut back on the numerous different makes of commercially-based vehicles in service. The Schell-Programm proposed to procure just a few standard chassis. This was both a threat and an opportunity for Ford Köln. If this is a factory-fresh 1939 model Ford-Marmon/Herrington, it could very well have been Ford Köln's proposal for the Mittlerer Personenkraftwagen (Medium Personnel Car) class. All that Reinhard Frank knows about it is that it "was tested extensively in Köln, Germany". Like Ford, Marmon-Herrington was selling their products all over the world to anyone willing to pay, so why not to Germany?
In the end, however, Horch (Auto-Union) was to build the Einheits programme vehicles in the medium chassis class, and they were also the main builders of the Einheits programme heavy chassis cars. Possibly as a recognition of their efforts, Ford Köln got a contract for some 2000 examples of the Schwerer Einheits Personenkraftwagen during 1939-1941 (when the Einheits models were pahsed out of manufacture). Ford Köln's s.E.Pkw was a built exactly as designed by Horch, except for fitting their own 3.6 litre 78 hp. V8 engine. And they were the first and last 4x4 vehicles built by Ford Köln during WW2.

I think we're onto something, aren't we?!?

H.

Bill Murray 12-12-04 00:28

I really hate it when I do this.
Pat beat me to the shower this morning and I had 10 extra minutes to get on the internet and decided to answer Hanno's post. Took me most of that time to find the misfiled pic I posted.
By the time I found it, I was out of time and had to run and just sort of stuck it up here with a couple of words.

In any case, yes, it is a Belgian Staff/Officers car as originally built and probably looking very like the pic on Nuyt's site but with the top up. It was not my intent to say it was an Umbau-Wagen but rather the possible basis for one.

So, what do we really know about these Ford/Marmon Herrington vehicles?? That they were procured in at least some numbers by Belgium and Holland, absolutely no doubt. That they were, in some form or another, tested by the German Forces as something they might have produced to more or less the same design seems quite likely and is the subject for an interesting research project.
We also know that the US procured at least some but it did not come to any volume production. I seem to recollect that I have seen or may even have buried in my collection, pics of similar vehicles in Romania, Hungary and the Baltic countries but these may have been German vehicles captured in Holland and Belgium.
To return to Germany, I sort of lost track of Bart's quest for the answer to the "WIFO" Ford story and so do not remember if he ever solved it or not. I would have to go back through the W&T collection to find out more.
And, yes, Nuyt, I believe there are pics out there of Ford/Marmon Herrington vehicles supplied to Romania as late as the 1941 year model. I think Bart's book has a photo.
Bill

nuyt 12-12-04 11:26

Axis and Axles
 
Bill, Hanno, David,

In my ignorance I always mix up Axis powers and powered axles.

Yes, Romania employed Ford/M-H COE trucks as prime movers and there are pics of these in Vanderveen pre-1940 book.

But I meant Hungary. According to Vanderveen (1989 Directory p.114 and 208), Ford Cologne built American 1939 pattern 4x2 Fords during 1939-42 and sent no less than 1500 of these Ford G917's to Manfred Weiss in Hungary.

Front-drive components were added by Manfred Weiss "to Marmon-Herrington design". The Fords were called Ford G917T 'Marmon' in Hungarian service.

So, at least Weiss (we know them for building Turan tanks and Straussler designed armoured cars similar to the Alvis-Straussler AC3 series) received the design of M-H axles through Ford Cologne and apparently took the initiative to paste and copy.
But the Hungarians acknowledged the origin of the FWD version, as it ('Marmon') appeared in the name of the truck!

Or did Manfred Weiss have a licence after all? Even when war was raging they took the effort to procure licences from Ford. The Ford V3000S was licence-produced by MW from 1941-44.

Greetings,
Nuyt

David_Hayward (RIP) 12-12-04 11:43

WIFO
 
I think Bart settled on the WIFO Fords as heavy trucks that were assembled 'in secret' after normal shifts. I can imagine that licenses were requested and taken up, judging by evidence that I found from GM in Germany pre-war records. The problem was one oif settlement of licence fees, and these may have never been paid unless a barter arrangement was set up, or, as I suspect, the components were delivered to Antwerpen/Anvers plant and then railed across the border. I have ample evidence that GM achieved this with Opel and GM Continental [just across the basin in the docks from Ford Belgium].

nuyt 15-12-04 19:33

another picture of the German Ford/Mh
 
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From Wheels and Tracks 30:

"A recaptured Kuebel with as its foundation a Ford/M-H 4x4 chassis, probably an ex-Belgian Army Model 91Y".

Well, I do not think so: It's similar to the one on Hanno's pic. Why would the German army bother to rebuild captured Belgian Ford/M-H's? They were all staffcars anyway. They did not rebuild the Daf-Ford and Chevy staffcars and Pag-trekkers either.

Maybe Ford Cologne produced a small series of these after all?

Greetings ,
Nuyt

nuyt 27-12-04 13:35

hungarian ford marmon
 
http://forum.axishistory.com/viewtop...ghlight=marmon

Thanks Bill!

Nuyt
Overvalwagens!

Bill Murray 27-12-04 15:51

Nuyt:
If I forgot to pass on that link to you, please accept my apologies. Today is my first real day off from the store since 25 November and I am sure I missed a lot of things. I am just now trying to get caught up and probably have a couple of other items I need to get either to you direct or here on MLU.
Also, go to www.worldwar2.ro/forum/index.php?showtopic=1404 for a series on Romanian trucks including several Fords.
Bill

nuyt 27-12-04 18:33

no need
 
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to apologize, Bill, I thought it was just funny!
Anyway, I scrounged this picture from the Tanks! website:

A Romanian 1940 Ford/M-H 4x4 COE artillery tractor with Romanian body:

Tony Smith 25-01-05 09:13

Re: Belgian?
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally posted by David_Hayward
I suggest Belgian as well. Chassis assembled by Ford in Antwerpen/Anvers.

I have never seen any reference to M-H sales to Ford Werke, Koln, although we now know that there were secret US truck sales, namely the WIFO trucks, which were assembled in Koln and then supplied to the German forces. I seem to recall seeing pix in WHEELS & TRACKS of Koln's answer to the Opel Allrad Blitz trucks, with 4-wheel drive. This would have been an idigenous transmission layout.

Is this a Belgian Ford built by Ford Koln? I think it is post war.

David_Hayward (RIP) 25-01-05 13:04

Koln's M-H chassis
 
I was reading late last night Bart Vanderveen's article on the 1943 German Ford COE 4 x 4 chassis. I have no idea whether the wartime COE 4 x 4 that they produced used a copy of the M-H transfer case...not having seen a M-H casing close-up save that Bart claims that the Ford had nothing to do with M-H!

The Romanian factory was a subsidiary of the British company as you know. The Ford Motor Company Limited and probably Henry Ford and Son Limited of Cork, Eire were with Ford Werke AG subsidiaries of the Ford Motor Company of Dearborn. All other Ford companies were subsidiaries of Ford Motor Company of Canada Limited. I have just found that in 1938-9 Ford of Britain offered both 8-cwt and 30-cwt chassis converted to 4 x 4 with M-H components. Given that Dagenham supplied the Romanian factory with US-style vehicles, the Romanian trucks could have been exported from Dagenham. However it is equally likely that they and the Hungarian operation were supplied by Koln. The reason I suggest this is that the Romanian 1940 models that had been ordered were not able to be delivered from Dagenham and so were taken on by the Ministry of Supply. This would have left a gap for the German arm of the empire to step in. Bart suggested that Koln produced their last 4 x 4 in 1956, and used the same type of front wheel drive as the wartime COE Koln product! Bart says that the Hungarian operation assembled a 4 x 4 version of the German Ford with M-H technology with normal control and soft-top cab.

Opel supplied the Hungarian Army with Opel cars and trucks for instance, although Yugoslavia received direct Chevrolet military truck exports in 1940 from the US and not from Opel.

I would like to know whether the Fordson 4 x 4 drivetrain owed anything to M-H, and whether Dagenham licence-built transfer cases etc.

Hanno Spoelstra 25-01-05 22:13

Re: Koln's M-H chassis
 
Quote:

Originally posted by David_Hayward
This would have left a gap for the German arm of the empire to step in. Bart suggested that Koln produced their last 4 x 4 in 1955, and used the same type of front wheel drive as the wartime COE Koln product!
Did Ford Köln produce a 4x4 truck during WW2?

H.

David_Hayward (RIP) 25-01-05 22:29

Model #
 
Officially Model V3000A, Ford Koln model G198TWA of 1943. The transfer case, front axle castings and forgings were prefixed G19TA. These were launched in1942, and 758 were built 1943-44.


The 1956 model was apparently the FK4500A/G700 4 x 4. If the 1953 FK 3500/G798BA used the Marmon-Herrington/Ford transfer case, does this mean that the '56 model alo used M-H components? It appears that Koln produced their own casing to M-H design.

Hanno Spoelstra 27-01-05 09:52

Re: Model #
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally posted by David_Hayward
Officially Model V3000A, Ford Koln model G198TWA of 1943. The transfer case, front axle castings and forgings were prefixed G19TA. These were launched in1942, and 758 were built 1943-44
Ah yes, I remember it now.

http://www.autogallery.org.ru/k/f/fo...V3000A_BVV.jpg
Source: http://www.autogallery.org.ru/gfordde.htm

Hanno Spoelstra 04-08-06 00:08

Re: Re: Belgian?
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally posted by Tony Smith
Is this a Belgian Ford built by Ford Koln? I think it is post war.
Correct, it is a Belgian Army ambulance built in the 1950s by Ford Köln - see/hear more at http://www.fordkeulen.nl/.

They came in 4x4 configuration, too.

H.

Hanno Spoelstra 24-10-06 23:05

1 Attachment(s)
Back to the subject!

This picture was autioned on Ebay as WWII German Photo - Luftwaffe CAR Item number: 140003697229

Hanno Spoelstra 24-10-06 23:25

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And another 1939 Ford with with German Kübelwagen bodywork. It does not look like it has a Marmon-Herrington 4-wheel drive conversion, though.

nuyt 24-10-06 23:42

Its a Daffie!
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Hanno Spoelstra (Post 59940)
And another 1939 Ford with with German Kübelwagen bodywork. It does not look like it has a Marmon-Herrington 4-wheel drive conversion, though.

see here:
The Great DAF PAG-trekker thread!
Cheers,
Nuyt

nuyt 24-10-06 23:46

ebay?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Hanno Spoelstra (Post 59937)
Back to the subject!

This picture was autioned on Ebay as WWII German Photo - Luftwaffe CAR Item number: 140003697229

Weird that they are selling that pic on ebay: it's known already:
1:35 MCP kits

Hanno Spoelstra 02-11-06 16:25

Re: Its a Daffie!
 
Quote:

Originally posted by ericnuyt
Its a Daffie! see here:The Great DAF PAG-trekker thread!
Nuyt, I'm not sure this is a DAF PAG-trekker. The one pictured here has a half doors with canvas tops, whereas the DAF only had half canvas "doors".

http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/at...=&postid=59940

H.

Rich Payne 02-11-06 21:37

Marmon-Herrington 1 ton
 
I'm not sure if this image belongs with this thread but it is a nice picture from the Belgian publication "Mei 1940" by Peter Taghon and I've not seen it anywhere else.


http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/3...gtonvj0.th.jpg

It is captioned as showing a recently captured Antwerp built Belgian C.47 artillery tractor with the additional information that it ended it's days on the Russian front.

Rich.

Bill Murray 02-11-06 23:13

Thanks very much, Rich, for that posting.
There are precious few shots of that vehicle and yours has a lot of details that I have not previously seen.
Bill

Rich Payne 02-11-06 23:23

Quote:

Originally posted by Bill Murray
Thanks very much, Rich, for that posting.
There are precious few shots of that vehicle and yours has a lot of details that I have not previously seen.

Glad you like it Bill. If there's some way you can let me have an e-mail address, I'll send you an uncompressed scan through.

Rich.

Bill Murray 02-11-06 23:27

Hi Rich:
Clicking on the thumbnail gave me enough.
For future reference though, my email is mostoysinc@aol.com
Bill


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