► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Dodge-civil origin with some euro cab?
Photo from eBay.de
Photo from eBay.de
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
40 Ford Panel Van?
Photos from eBay.de
Photos from eBay.de
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
...and something more posh:
Buick Phaeton (and could be LaSalle in the back? this prt of pic is a bit blury) 1939 Chevrolet Coupe Photos from eBay.de
Buick Phaeton (and could be LaSalle in the back? this prt of pic is a bit blury) 1939 Chevrolet Coupe Photos from eBay.de
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Ford DAFTrado Maybe there is some better photothread for this?
Photos from eBay.de
Photos from eBay.de
- Maxschnauzer
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Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hi jose,
That is a great pic of the Buick but IMO The blurry car in the background is a '39 Oldsmobile.
Cheers,
Max
Max
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hi Max,
looks like it. Thanks!
39 Chrysler?
Photo from eBay.de
looks like it. Thanks!
39 Chrysler?
Photo from eBay.de
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
39 Chrysler?
Photo from eBay.de
39chryslercabriobiarritz.jpg
[/quote]
Yes you are right.
Chrysler Convertible Coupe (1939)
Photo from eBay.de
39chryslercabriobiarritz.jpg
[/quote]
Yes you are right.
Chrysler Convertible Coupe (1939)
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hi all,
A Chevrolet M1939
Image from Ebay
Sturm78
A Chevrolet M1939
Image from Ebay
Sturm78
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hi Sturm,
Nice pic, thanks! But it is 1940 model.
Cheers!
Nice pic, thanks! But it is 1940 model.
Cheers!
"...and on the 8th day He made truck so that man, made on 7th day, had shelter when woman threw him out for the night."
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hi Sturm,
I agree with ilfil. The differences can be very difficult to distinguish in a lot of photos. For information, the major difference between the 1939 and 1940 models is the number of bars in the radiator grille. The 1939 has 17, the 1940 has 16. It is easiest to count the number of whole bars above the hole for the starting handle, there are 13 on the 1939, 12 on the 1940. The side lights mounted on the wings are a further indication, they were only factory fitted to the 1940 model, but were sometimes added as an upgrade at a later date, so cannot be considered a definitive identifier for the 1940 model.
I hope this is helpful for future identifications, first the 1939 with retro-fitted sidelights, the standard 1939, then the 1940.
Kerry.
I agree with ilfil. The differences can be very difficult to distinguish in a lot of photos. For information, the major difference between the 1939 and 1940 models is the number of bars in the radiator grille. The 1939 has 17, the 1940 has 16. It is easiest to count the number of whole bars above the hole for the starting handle, there are 13 on the 1939, 12 on the 1940. The side lights mounted on the wings are a further indication, they were only factory fitted to the 1940 model, but were sometimes added as an upgrade at a later date, so cannot be considered a definitive identifier for the 1940 model.
I hope this is helpful for future identifications, first the 1939 with retro-fitted sidelights, the standard 1939, then the 1940.
Kerry.
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Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hi Kerry,
No need for annoying bar count, one of the main differences is immediately visible, and it is the radiator grille header, much wider on 1940 WA and WB models.
IMHO the marker lights on your 1939 truck aren't retrofitted but it is of Benelux origins. GM Continental used to fit them from 1937 on.
Cheers!
No need for annoying bar count, one of the main differences is immediately visible, and it is the radiator grille header, much wider on 1940 WA and WB models.
IMHO the marker lights on your 1939 truck aren't retrofitted but it is of Benelux origins. GM Continental used to fit them from 1937 on.
Cheers!
"...and on the 8th day He made truck so that man, made on 7th day, had shelter when woman threw him out for the night."
- Maxschnauzer
- Financial supporter
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Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hello Gentlemen,
Here are a couple more comparisons I use, from a previous post by ilfil:
Here are a couple more comparisons I use, from a previous post by ilfil:
Cheers,
Max
Max
Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Bedford
Ford-dont know origin and specification?
Photos from eBay.de- Maxschnauzer
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Re: ► Photothread: Allied Vehicles in German Service
Hi Jose,
Judging from the size of the bed I would say this is the V-8 1940-42 1 ton F3, in Dearborn terminology. I'm not sure of the equivalent Köln type designation but I think that one probably had single pane windscreen.
Or maybe it is an umbau based on that chassis?
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- 1940-Ford-Pickup-1 ton F3.jpg (50.73 KiB) Viewed 2071 times
Cheers,
Max
Max