I thought that trucks were railway goods wagons (rather than carriages that carry people) and also used for trolleys on stations.
Still prefer "Carrier" over the term "Trucking" but as I've already said. Happy to be out of step. :)
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I thought that trucks were railway goods wagons (rather than carriages that carry people) and also used for trolleys on stations.
Still prefer "Carrier" over the term "Trucking" but as I've already said. Happy to be out of step. :)
To complete the picture, courtesy Australian C.O.D. :-
Lorry n Brit. 1.=Truck 2. a long flat low wagon 3. a truck used on railways and tramways.
Truck n 1. a large, powerful motor vehicle for transporting goods etc 2.an open railway wagon for carrying freight 3. A vehicle for transporting troops, supplies etc 4. a railway bogie 5. a wheeled stand for transporting goods.
I suggest that these definitions cover the Australian meanings of the word.
John
While it is called '4x4' the day will come where some newcomer doesn't know where to post about his 6x6 or 8x8 and skimming the board titles will not even stop and read in this one simply because the title says 4x4
heh - and define "heavy" in relation to the core reason this forum exists (Land Rovers).... "Heavy Offroad Vehicle means anything that isn't a Landy and weighs more than your average Landy"
https://www.aulro.com/afvb/images/im...015/01/487.jpg
Yep! That fits the definition perfectly. Don't it?
Old naval saying regarding the difference between a ship and a boat: a ship can carry a boat, but a boat can't carry a ship. Ergo, if it can carry a landy it's a truck. If it can't, then it's errr..... something else
:rolleyes:
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I used to be a Lorry Driver.
My Mini Panel Van (tare 630Kg, GVM 960Kg) was registered as a Lorry.