Armoured Dozer
I have just found a great picture of "Slippery Sue" a Canadian Armoured dozer.
It is on British Pathe film ID 2145.01 frame 189 and on. The AoS is 344 with an Army Group diagonal b/ left to t/ right. According to "British Miltary Markings 1939-1945" that AoS should have the bar below. Is this another book error? Can anyone make out the WD serial. I have last 4 numbers as 1007. Cheers Kevin :salute: |
"Slippery Sue" should be from 1 Mechanized Equipment Company, 1st Canadian Army.
Cheers, Chris |
AoS
Hello Chris,
Thanks for that. Any idea of the colour of the AoS? Cheers Kevin |
uh....Chris.....
First...Howdy.
Long time no hear. Second, your timing is awful. I'm just putting the finishing touches on my Resi-chunk D7 (un-armoured) from the same unit....Steve G. and I looked into a photo of one from the same unit some time back and concluded that it would be an RCE unit, not RCASC.....so, a blue background was duly hand painted on my Dozer. Same number and A of S sign style though. Steve mentions in an email that the dozers wre operated by company HQ of Field Park Companies. So am I repainting this thing in time for Capcon next weekend or what? :) Cheers Don |
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Hi Don,
I thought you had dropped off the face of the world. Good to hear from you again. I was perfectly happy with dozers being under the RCE umbrella myself, sporting a 344 over a blue background AoS. When I saw a good front frame of "Slippery Sue" in this Pathe film though, the AoS looks to me to be of two distinctly different shades of paint with a split white bar. I'm guessing the colours here and the Corps affiliation, so I'm open to suggestion. Cheers, Chris |
Don,
Further to my last, the more I look at the photo and having enlarged it, the more I'm leaning towards the distinct possibility that it could be a single light coloured AoS sign behind that "344". That's more in keeping with the RCE parent corps, which makes more sense to me. The white bar signifying an army unit affiliation. How's that for waffling? If it were me, I wouldn't repaint that D7 of yours. Cheers, Chris |
For what it's worth, the AoS marking in question is that of 1st Mechanical Equipment Company, R.C.E., who were Army Group Troops (21st Army Group)
Cheers :) |
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Another 'armoured dozer' of the 1st Mechanical Equipment Company, R.C.E. - Udem, 1945.
Cheers :) |
Mark,
Thanks for clarifying that. Now if you can dispose of that AoS sign I mistakenly posted, that would be great. No sense misleading people with my faulty interpretation. As an aside, the RCE certainly had some colourful names for their dozers. I seem to remember 'Picadilly Commando' as being another. Cheers, Chris |
'nother 'dozer
This is from the Cdn Archives. taken in Italy. Only markings I can make out are on the side - M7/21
http://www.servicepub.com/images/pa142069.jpg |
Re: Armoured Dozer
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Another 'dozer' of the 1st Mechanical Equipment Company, R.C.E. - Caen, Aug 1944.
Cheers :) |
Thank you for your help.
Great help and advice as always guys.
Chris You wouldn't happen to have a scan of "Piccadilly" by any chance. Cheers Kevin |
If you have it, Picadilly Commando appears on page 198 of Don Graves's South Alberta Regiment history.
Cheers, Chris |
Can you confirm......
The spelling please Chris?
Piccadilly ( as in London ) has two c's. I have just found another little gem of a dozer on British Pathe called "Jaq (c) ueline", although I am not sure what sort it is. Cheers Kevin |
Yes, the name has two c's.
Cheers, Chris |
Armoured Bulldozer
Here is a drawing by official Canadian War Artist Capt. O.N. Fisher. Caption reads "Engineers clearing roads through Caen". AoS number is '48'
http://www.servicepub.com/images/dozer.jpg |
Re: Armoured Bulldozer
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Cheers :) |
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Here's anther picture of an Armoured Dozer
IWM BU 4333 "A bulldozer demolishing a road block for the entry of British armour into Bremen." Date: 1945-04-25 Attachment 118553 Source: https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/i...ject/205428687 Attachment 118554 Source:https://www.ebay.com/itm/1945-German...m/393069131554 |
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Looking through a museum’s archive of scans, I just came across these two pages from the London Illustrated News from 11 November 1944, that I thought might be interesting/amusing here:
Attachment 120122 Attachment 120123 (In the scan, the first page was blank above the part shown here, so I trimmed it down.) |
Jakko,
Thanks, interesting to read how they tried to explain the weapons of war to the general public. |
British Pathe: Invasion Scenes Europe 1945
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Note you can view it as a film or as stills. Attachment 120127 |
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A minor part of these bulldozers, but I found PDFs of original manuals for the winches used on the D6A and D7A:
Attachment 129601 Attachment 129602 The serial numbers indicated are technically not for the armoured versions, but the D6A was basically a D6-5R with an armoured cab and hydraulic dozer blade and the D7A was a similarly modified D7-7M, so I doubt the winches would have been very different. Edit: I just realised that site is making linking to the right page difficult. In the menu on the left, choose Allied Winch → Operator’s Manuals → Archive to find the ones I mentioned above. |
Allied Systems Company archive
Nice find Jakko!
Good to see some manufacturers still provide this sort of information to the users of their products. |
There is probably more stuff there that some restorers might find useful, but I didn’t really look beyond a quick glance.
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D7A No.31 "GLADY'S", Rue de la Gare at Caen, read more here: https://flic.kr/p/2b1zaVX
Attachment 132747 |
Nice find :)
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Armoured Dozer with the number IT1019 at Blainville (Calvados), France - read more here https://flic.kr/p/26Vw7u1
Attachment 132748 |
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Jakko, There were other options for winches (for those who dont know) There were (Carco ?) twin drum winches used on "cable controlled" equipment. Some Cats (D7) had cable controlled blades and a second drum was used to operate the bowl on a scraper. I assume the millitary dozers used in airfield construction were fitted with them?
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