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Thread: OKA, does anyone know what happened?

  1. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ranga View Post
    I think that's the Oodnadatta Mail Run Tour vehicle.
    Nope ! , this one is



    This is an XT/LT OKA, don't know which, but I'd guess LT as the rear most bus body window is the same size as the others (on the XT the rear most window is about 6" narrower. The XT and the LT are very similiar to look at. Other visual differences between the XT and the LT is the XT has a small trapdoor in the panel under the windscreen, different spring mounts and an instrument binnacle that is 1/3 the width of the vehicle, the LT's is 2/3 the width of the vehicle.

    The main differences visually between the XT/LT and the NT is that the NT is longer wheelbase (to allow for the Allison auto), 5 stud 19.5 or 20" rims (XT/LT has 8 stud 16 or 19.5" rims), NT has round headlights (XT/LT square), NT has higher capacity square fuel tanks (round for XT/LT) with 'blue' tank on RHS. NT has bigger air cleaner, revised sun visor, indicators in bull bar which has rounded tubing as opposed to the XT/LT's more angular bar.

    The NT shown belongs to Wedgetails Tours from South Australia.

    Deano
    Last edited by DeanoH; 3rd March 2013 at 08:56 AM. Reason: correction

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by superquag View Post
    Dean,

    ...There is absolutely no comparison between an OKA's handling on highway or off road and that of a sixty series or a series LR, forward control or ...."

    My apologies, I was comparing the differant types of ride you experience when seated between the axles (leaf-sprung 4WD) compared with the preferable IMHO ride enjoyed when seated above or in front of the front axle.

    If you have to know, it was a very old Nissan, compared with a Jap imported diesel 4WD, torsion front and ELLIPTICALS on the rear.

    The Nissan with it's crude cart-springs and rock-solid shockers merely emphasised the motion.... that is, a pitch UP of the front, followed by a similar pitch UP as the rear axle hits the same bump. Net effect is, inertia makes the head snap forward...the snaps it backwards.

    With a Forward control the driver is pushed UP... only. There is a slight rotation when the rear axle lifts up over the same bump... but the lever (chassis) is so long, that the effect on the driver is minimal.
    Indeed, the natural reaction to being forced UP over a bump, is for the driver to lean or tense muscles to pull the head fractionally 'forward'. Only a gnat's hair, but enough to automatically counter the tiny 'head-back' snap induced by the car's rear going UP.

    A long - winded way of saying that a FC gives the front occupants a nicer ride. - A properly sprung FC makes it even nicer, and a heavier one nicer still.
    - Which you've noticed...

    In a bus, with the front axle a few metres behind the driver....the ride is heavenly, whatever the springs are !
    If you told any line haul truckie that a COE rides better than a normal control, he would shake his head and look at you with complete incredulity. The only reasons for the existence of COE trucks, whether high cab COE or low cab forward, are restrictive length and/or axle weight regulations.

    The best place for ride comfort is towards the centre of the wheelbase and as low as possible. High COE's have a much greater arc of pitch and full vertical movement. Low cab forward have lesser arc of pitch but an exaggerated vertical movement (a bobbing up and down). There are no longer any high COE's made in the USA since changes to regulations. All new trucks are bonnetted even rigid urban delivery vehicles. Hino even sell one with a bonnetted cab by Freightliner. The only new COE trucks one sees there are small capacity vehicles of Asian origin.

    Think of the chassis rails as a seesaw which pivots around the axles according to which axle is rising over a bump. The axle goes up 6" and the forward control cab rises with it. The normal control cab is closer to the centre and rises proportionately less.

    See "Principles of Vehicle Selection' and "Motor Truck Engineering" by J.Fitch. Industry bibles.
    URSUSMAJOR

  3. #33
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    After driving my Isuzu forward control 8 ton up Cape York as far as Bamaga
    quiet a few times I have to say being towed on a sheet of tin behind would have been dusty but just as comfortable

  4. #34
    Thomber Guest

    OKA Vehicles

    Just read a few comments here and I was extremely keen on buying an OKA at some later stage (wish list item until money available). However, I was lucky enough to drive a spanking new model OKA van in Kalgoorlie as I knew the agent in the Goldfields. Now there was a world's difference between this one and the old models- hard to describe the features in such little space but it was a heavenly experience! I am devastated that they stopped production! Will it ever kick off again???

  5. #35
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thomber View Post
    Just read a few comments here and I was extremely keen on buying an OKA at some later stage (wish list item until money available). However, I was lucky enough to drive a spanking new model OKA van in Kalgoorlie as I knew the agent in the Goldfields. Now there was a world's difference between this one and the old models- hard to describe the features in such little space but it was a heavenly experience! I am devastated that they stopped production! Will it ever kick off again???
    IVECO daily is the new OKA......

  6. #36
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Hjelm View Post
    If you told any line haul truckie that a COE rides better than a normal control, he would shake his head and look at you with complete incredulity. The only reasons for the existence of COE trucks, whether high cab COE or low cab forward, are restrictive length and/or axle weight regulations.

    The best place for ride comfort is towards the centre of the wheelbase and as low as possible. High COE's have a much greater arc of pitch and full vertical movement. Low cab forward have lesser arc of pitch but an exaggerated vertical movement (a bobbing up and down). There are no longer any high COE's made in the USA since changes to regulations. All new trucks are bonnetted even rigid urban delivery vehicles. Hino even sell one with a bonnetted cab by Freightliner. The only new COE trucks one sees there are small capacity vehicles of Asian origin.

    Think of the chassis rails as a seesaw which pivots around the axles according to which axle is rising over a bump. The axle goes up 6" and the forward control cab rises with it. The normal control cab is closer to the centre and rises proportionately less.

    See "Principles of Vehicle Selection' and "Motor Truck Engineering" by J.Fitch. Industry bibles.
    Have to agree with you Brian, having driven Mack Ultraliners, Kenworth K100's and compared them to "W" and later model Kenworth's. The bonneted Kenworths gave a far superior ride to anything COE.

    Funny thing though - when I had pilot vehicles, the most comfortable ride of them all was a Toyota Hiace LWB Van. Much smoother ride than the Falcon ute and panel van that I drove earlier in the piece, or the F100 that I had toward the end of that life. The F100 ended up mostly parked up, as I spent more time driving an Ultraliner with a 100 tonne Drake dolly & trailer behind me than escorting toward the end.
    Cheers .........

    BMKAL


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