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#1
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Quote:
I had a look with the magnifying glass and I am pretty sure it is a "7". But the you may get a better look having the actual tin. Cheers Tony
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Anthony (Tony) VAN RHODA. Strathalbyn. South Australia |
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#2
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Hi all - firstly, as far as I am aware, there is no provision on a Carrier for this type of can. The Carriers that carried the Vickers MMG had a condensor can but that was a different style. The Carrier depicted carries a Bren Gun and therefore has no need for a condensor can.
Bob
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Chevrolet Blitz Half-Track Replica - Finished and Running Ford F15 - unrestored Ford F15A X 2 - unrestored Website owner - salesmanbob.com |
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#3
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Bob
2 gallon petrol can found in the bin at the rear of a Bren carrier there is space for a 1 gallon oil can too. Nice can.... Ben |
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#4
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In the second picture taken from above, it looks a lot more like a T.
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Adrian Barrell |
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#5
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does look like a T... however where is the can now ? seems unlikely that a flimsy can would make it back from Aussie service in North Africa to say the UK after all this time.
EDIT: also i had not realised that they would even number the tin for a carrier.... i always thought that they would have a pile of fuel cans which you would grab at a fuel cache leaving your empties as you went ?
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is mos redintegro __5th Div___46th Div__ 1942 Ford Universal Carrier No.3 MkI* Lower Hull No. 10131 War Department CT54508 (SOLD) 1944 Ford Universal Carrier MkII* (under restoration). 1944 Morris C8 radio body (under restoration). |
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#6
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The name 'flimsy' was used to describe the four gallon petrol/kerosine tins that these products were supplied in back in the days before bulk handling. They were often pierced to drain the contents and discarded. They were a failure when it came to rough handling in the field.
The two gallon can was far more robust and made as a re-useable, long lived container for on board vehicle use so no surprise that they are still around today. The word BREN is stencilled on the can above the number which seems to further identify the can as belonging to this vehicle. Who among us would not carry extra fuel when in the field and there was no better container at the time except for those in the hands of the enemy. David
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Hell no! I'm not that old! Last edited by motto (RIP); 14-02-12 at 23:57. |
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#7
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still seems weird... decanting fuel into the can that you stencilled up rather than just pick up another can
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is mos redintegro __5th Div___46th Div__ 1942 Ford Universal Carrier No.3 MkI* Lower Hull No. 10131 War Department CT54508 (SOLD) 1944 Ford Universal Carrier MkII* (under restoration). 1944 Morris C8 radio body (under restoration). |
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#8
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When I ran the stores section for the maint section at my last unit, I even branded the mechanics creepers,brooms, squegees and drain pans, otherwise by Monday morning they were all gone; either to the other batteries, or else homes. It got so bad one of the sections would have to remove the bulbs from their trouble lamps on Fridays and put them back in on Mondays....there were guys too thrifty to buy their own 50¢ lightbulbs. As to the travel of artifacts between continents, in the last 50 years the world has got awful small. And with Ebay, nothing is too far out of reach.....in fact it's as close as your keyboard. |
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