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  #1  
Old 29-07-09, 20:24
jsim jsim is offline
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Default Dodge D60 - or not?

Hello,
I'm trying to identify the truck (lorry) in the attached photo. For quite a while I thought it was a D15, but now think it may be a D60, could some kind soul help please?

My reason for asking is that I believe that between 1943 and 1945 my father drove this truck the length of Italy and France, where his RAOC unit joined 21st Army Group in support of the Canadian Army and continued through the Low Countries to the Dutch/German border at Enschede.

Thanks,
John
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RAOC truck abt 1945.jpg  
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  #2  
Old 29-07-09, 21:14
Pete Ashby Pete Ashby is offline
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Default D60 ?

Hello John

The truck in the photo is Dodge T110L-4 D60 GS fitted with an all steel body and a two speed back axel made by Eaton.

regards

Pete
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  #3  
Old 29-07-09, 21:20
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Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is online now
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Default

Hi John,

Welcome to this forum and thanks for your interesting picture plus story.

Yes, the truck in your picture is a Dodge D60, or more correctly, a Dodge D60L 60-cwt GS (General Service) truck. The picture below shows the same type of truck, although with a different kind of cargo body (wood, the one on your father´s truck is steel).

Please tell us more about your father!

Thanks,
Hanno



P.S.: sorry, my posting crossed Pete´s

Last edited by Hanno Spoelstra; 29-07-09 at 21:24. Reason: added PS
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  #4  
Old 29-07-09, 22:34
jsim jsim is offline
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Default D60

Pete and Hanno,

I'm stunned by the quick response, thank you both very much.

Since you ask Hanno, here goes:

In November 1942 aged 31, and after 2 years service in the Home Guard, my father was called up into the General Service Corps to work on the construction of new camps for US troops near Burton on Trent. Six weeks later he was called up for military service and joined the Royal Army Ordnance Corps (RAOC) as a Storeman. He was asigned to 7 Forward Maintenance Stores Section (FMSS) which was a small, mobile unit designed to form the point of the supply network immediately behind the front-line troops. They dealt with all types of supplies except munitions. On completion of training his unit embarked at Liverpool for North Africa in October 1943. He had vivid memories of the convoy sailing through rough Atlantic weather and watching the small escort ships disappear in the wave troughs.

7 FMSS soon moved to Italy, landing at Brindisi then criss-crossing the country, passing through Lanciano, Pisa and Rome, reaching Rimini and the small city state of San Marino.

At some time in 1945 his unit was moved to the south coast of France and drove up the length of the country to join the 21st Army Group, 7 FMSS was then part of 7 Line of Communications (LoC) sub-area. He then served in Holland and Germany until his discharge in August 1946.

He saw out the final part of his military service as a corporal, in charge of a huge store of war materiel. He spent most of that time at Enschede in Holland where he was billeted with a family called Van Tromp. Mrs Van Tromp always sent a card at Christmas until her death in the late 1960's.

Apart from some photos and a few stories that's about all I know about my father's war. As I find the time I'm slowly trying to discover more about the places he saw and the job he did. The attached photo was taken at the same time as the first one. I've always presumed they were taken in Enschede and that the young boy may have been from the Dutch family who were such kind hosts to my father as he waited patiently to return home.

Thanks again,
John
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  #5  
Old 30-07-09, 18:59
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Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is online now
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John,

Thanks for sharing. I hope you found out more about your father's war. But it is great to hear you have traced the route he followed.

If you can get hold of Wheels & Tracks magazine back issue No. 55 (ref. http://www.afterthebattle.com/wtlist.html), you could read a bit more about the The Enschede Dump.

HTH,
Hanno
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  #6  
Old 30-07-09, 19:45
jsim jsim is offline
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Hanno,

That's a good lead, thanks, I'll try to get hold of a copy.

John
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  #7  
Old 03-08-09, 10:59
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gordon gordon is offline
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Default Just a quick addition

These trucks did come with a two-speed rear axle, but I think the two-speed axles were limited to those variants that had dual rear wheels.

Since the truck in the photo has single rear wheels I'd expect it to have a single speed rear axle, plus things like a transmission-mounted tyre pump.

Gordon
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  #8  
Old 03-08-09, 13:18
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David_Hayward (RIP) David_Hayward (RIP) is offline
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Default Census Number

I am miffed that I can't find the census number in my listing! The only gap that I have in the D-60-L series is those supplied under Demand SM 2891. I have no info on number runs.
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  #9  
Old 03-08-09, 22:15
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Default Wrong

edit - wrong again, the dual rear wheel trucks had the single speed rear axle - exactly the reverse of what I thought.

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  #10  
Old 04-08-09, 07:21
serge serge is offline
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Default Different kind of canadian dodge t110

Hello

About the kind of DODGE some own one speed rear axle and other two speeds rear axle.

DODGE D60 L4 : long wheel base , dual wheels at the rear with two speeds at rear axle and special body with steel storage. Side of body made of steel.

DODGE D60 L5 long wheel base , single wheel at the rear and always two speeds and common body.

DODGE D60 L9 : long wheel base , dual wheels at the rear with single speed at raer axle and common body.

DODGE D60 L12 long wheel base ,dual wheels at the rear with two speeds at rear axle and common body

DODGE D60 L14 long wheel base , dual rear wheels single speed at the rear but only for civilian use.

In any case fot L5, L9, L12 there was three kinds of body : steel body, and two kinds of composite body (wood and steel

My only question is about short wheel base . All of them own a DUMP and all trucks I saw belonged two speeds rear axle bit but some have single wheel at the rear axle and other two wheels. DODGE D60 L13 for DODGE with two rear wheels biut what denimination the the dump with single rear wheel?????

Regards Serge
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  #11  
Old 05-08-09, 10:10
jsim jsim is offline
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Default Rolling On

Nothing productive to add to the conversation, just to note my fascination at the interest and information stirred up by a simple question

Thanks guys, I'm learning a lot.

John
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