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Little Jo 13-08-11 01:43

Unusual looking truck
 
2 Attachment(s)
Hi All

Whilst scouting around my neighbourhood I noticed this unusual looking truck behind a cyclone fence. I can honestly say I have not seen one like it before. It is a left hand drive Ford. It is complete from what I can see and here appears to have some green colour paint. I was wondering if it may have been a military vehicle at some time. It is ugly which makes it interesting and it is for sale. Anyone out there in MLU world who knows anything about this type of Ford truck and if used by the military.

Cheers

Tony :no4:

Alex Blair (RIP) 13-08-11 02:49

'49 Ford cab over engine..
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Little Jo (Post 151290)
Hi All

Whilst scouting around my neighbourhood I noticed this unusual looking truck behind a cyclone fence. I can honestly say I have not seen one like it before. It is a left hand drive Ford. It is complete from what I can see and here appears to have some green colour paint. I was wondering if it may have been a military vehicle at some time. It is ugly which makes it interesting and it is for sale. Anyone out there in MLU world who knows anything about this type of Ford truck and if used by the military.

Cheers

Tony :no4:

Tony..
What you have there is a 1948-50 F5 or F 6 Ford C.O.E. ...a real beauty too..looks complete for chrome parts .It is post war but the military did use them too..
It would be nice fixed up and painted Fire engine red with black Fenders and hood..(wings and bonnets)..
And all the chrome redone..Give it to the wife to pick up Vegemite and beer at the store...
Show her how much you think of her..
Big love...Big truck..
Here is another one here..
http://www.flickr.com/photos/curtisp...ol-592717@N20/

:kangaroo :sheep:

Think of pulling into the car show with little Jo on the back..
Does this give you ideas..

http://www.flickr.com/photos/hugo90/...ol-592717@N20/


Or maybe something like this..
http://www.flickr.com/photos/theonly...ol-592717@N20/

Little Jo 13-08-11 03:18

Ford truck
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Alex Blair (Post 151295)
Tony..
What you have there is a 1948-50 F5 or F 6 Ford C.O.E. ...a real beauty too..looks complete for chrome parts .It is post war but the military did use them too..
It would be nice fixed up and painted Fire engine red with black Fenders and hood..(wings and bonnets)..
And all the chrome redone..Give it to the wife to pick up Vegemite and beer at the store...
Show her how much you think of her..
Big love...Big truck..
Here is another one here..
http://www.flickr.com/photos/curtisp...ol-592717@N20/

:kangaroo :sheep:

Think of pulling into the car show with little Jo on the back..
Does this give you ideas..

http://www.flickr.com/photos/hugo90/...ol-592717@N20/


Or maybe something like this..
http://www.flickr.com/photos/theonly...ol-592717@N20/

Alex

Thanks for the information and great photos. The guy wants $7,500.00 for it, but "She who must be obeyed" would not approve the deal. I have only just purchased a WW2 Jeep trailer to go behind my restored 1942 MB Willys Jeep. some of your photos did set me dreaming as I could see in my dreams the truck restored with the Jeep and trailer on the back. :rolleyes But alas it won't happen. Joyes of marrying an accountant. :nono:

Cheers

Tony :no4:

Mike K 13-08-11 03:32

Import
 
Highly likely to be a import . Why on earth would anyone do that when so many local commercials are still out there :confused ?

rob love 13-08-11 04:10

It is an earlier model of the ex-DND C500 firetruck I recently purchased. Info on it is in this thread: http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/sh...ad.php?t=16932
http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/at...1&d=1313192227Yours
http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/at...1&d=1311393630Mine

Little Jo 13-08-11 04:26

Fire truck
 
Hi Guys

Mike: Yes mate I agree, but is ugly and ugly can be beautiful. If I add a truck then it would be a Blitz.

Rob: I read your purchase with interest and I think it does lean towards a fire truck set up.

Cheers

Tony :no4:

Ryan 13-08-11 04:34

truck
 
I think this was on ebay very recently. The price sounds familiar too.

Alex Blair (RIP) 13-08-11 13:24

Not then..
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mike Kelly (Post 151298)
Highly likely to be a import . Why on earth would anyone do that when so many local commercials are still out there :confused ?

Mike..
In '48 when that was a new truck ,Australia probably had not engined up commercial truck production,and trucks like the Ford Cab over were rolling off America's production lines like popcorn..
a switchover from full bore wartime Fords to full bore civilian trucks and they probably exported them all over the world to country's recovering from war time austerity..
Cheaper and faster to import them than to wait in line for your truck..
My guess anyway.
:drunk:

Alex Blair (RIP) 13-08-11 13:31

Joyes of marrying an accountant
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Little Jo (Post 151296)
Alex

Thanks for the information and great photos. The guy wants $7,500.00 for it, but "She who must be obeyed" would not approve the deal. I have only just purchased a WW2 Jeep trailer to go behind my restored 1942 MB Willys Jeep. some of your photos did set me dreaming as I could see in my dreams the truck restored with the Jeep and trailer on the back. :rolleyes But alas it won't happen. Joyes of marrying an accountant. :nono:

Cheers

Tony :no4:

Tony..
Joys of marrying an accountant...
"The pen is mightier than the sword,,,...
depending on where you stick it..."!

How can she refuse you when you are doing it for her..??
What colour would she like her red truck with black fenders..??
What a beauty..
(Probably you wife too..)
:kangaroo :sheep:

Little Jo 13-08-11 15:24

Marrying an accountant
 
Hi Alex

After 46 years of marriage, I have learnt to move slowly, slowly and keep the hints going like water on a rock when it comes to letting the moths out of the wallet and you know what, it works, because it was my wife that actually said, "Go buy the trailer". "If you really need it". boy I hate it when they add that last line. :mad:

Cheers

Tony :no4:

Bob Moseley (RIP) 14-08-11 01:10

Solution
 
Hi Tony - I think your next project should be a shed. Don't tell Jo I suggested it though.

Bob

Little Jo 14-08-11 03:48

Shedding
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Bob Moseley (Post 151337)
Hi Tony - I think your next project should be a shed. Don't tell Jo I suggested it though.

Bob

Hi Bob

Hell mate, you have been to my place, where do you propose I put the shed, It won't be me that will be suggesting I rip up more of Jo's garden, why do you think I store some of my stuff off site. Harmony is the secret. :giveup

Cherers

Tony :no4: :no4:

Bob Moseley (RIP) 14-08-11 06:45

:bang: WIMP!! :bang:

lynx42 14-08-11 09:09

I remember, when I was a kid, seeing an International truck with the same type of cabin. They were always refered to as
"Haystacks". There is a restored one in Drouin, Mike, as well.
Another one in Boronia but not restored and in Just Cars magazine, there are a few advertised, but are recent imports.
Rick.

Mike K 14-08-11 10:35

yep
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lynx42 (Post 151360)
but are recent imports.
Rick.

Yes Rick , somebody must have brought in a few of those trucks for some odd reason . Not the usual thing you see like Caddies and Mustangs of which many have been imported recently and are still LHD . A friend of mine into 60's yank cars imported a 1970 caddy convertable , this was years before the LHD rules were relaxed . Cost him $8k to get it converted to RHD, a beaut job too. In Feb. 1988 , I went to Adelaide with him to look at a 1960 Chevy convertable ... a California car , but it was rusted badly in the floors and fitted with a factory 6 cyl. It was $6k at the time , we didn't buy it.It had a new top fitted to it .

Little Jo 14-08-11 15:05

Whimp
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Bob Moseley (Post 151353)
:bang: WIMP!! :bang:

Hi Bob

Hey mate. Definately not me :D :D :D

Cheers

Tony :no4:

Dianaa 15-08-11 09:25

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alex Blair (Post 151314)
Mike..
In '48 when that was a new truck ,Australia probably had not engined up commercial truck production,and trucks like the Ford Cab over were rolling off America's production lines like popcorn..
a switchover from full bore wartime Fords to full bore civilian trucks and they probably exported them all over the world to country's recovering from war time austerity..
Cheaper and faster to import them than to wait in line for your truck..
My guess anyway.
:drunk:

I would have thought tooling up for production of those COE trucks would be rather simple. The cab and top of the doors have the same pressings as the normal control cab and I rather suspect that the mudguards have similar if not the same outside profile. The biggest tooling issue is the extensive bonnet.

The advantages of the design are that the footwells are not as cramped as in the blitz designs and being so much higher the driver/offsider are away from the engine heat. I seem to remember lots of these style trucks running around Sydney as a kid in the 1960s, all of them RHD.

On the post war production, my great grandfathers transport business which started in the 19th century had so much trouble getting new trucks in the immediate post-war period that they bought crates of CKD F15a and F30 from the war surplus auctions. The trucks were all built up in-house without the front crownwheel and pinion nor the halfshafts and the C&P placed into store as spares for the rear diffs. About this time my dad swapped a ute for one of the F15As to use on his building company. A few years later when he sold the blitz, the buyer wanted the blitz for its off road capability and wasn't to be deterred from the sale even though dad suggested he'd never used the 4WD, my dad didn't have the heart to tell him that there was no diff centre installed.

Mike K 15-08-11 10:46

FSC Geelong
 
You can contact the Ford Discovery centre in Geelong. They have the local production records but I doubt if any LHD COE trucks were assembled locally around 1948 . LHD drive vehicles were banned in Victoria in 1948 because of a spate of accidents involving LHD ex army vehicles, many of which fell into civilian hands from 1945 onwards.

Locally assembled LHD drive vehicles are extremely rare here , and apart from myriad fully imported 1950's and 60's yank tanks from Nth America which became a popular business venture from the 1980's and keeps on going til today , the only LHD locally assembled vehicles you would see are street sweepers or cranes .

Mike


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