I just liked them the simple design and the rugged practicality, liked the idea of a vehicle that would go anywhere and could be hosed out when it got dirty. I liked the fact that I could remove the roof and fold down the windscreen in the summer.
I wanted one!
My first experiance with one happenned when I joined the local CFA at St Andrews in Vic. It was this one.
It was bought as a tray and modifyied by the brigade, I believe the previous owner used it to collect dead livestock from farms.. It was proberly the slowest fire truck ever built. Had a Rover six that had done a lot of miles, the cabin was too small for anyone over 5 ft and it didnt stop or steer all that well.
The best bit was it went anywhere, steep gullys across the sides of hills on rediculous angles. We used to get her into places where none of the other local fire trucks could go. Her main job was to set up as a quick fill and supply water from dams or tanks in an area with no reticulated water.
During the Ash Wednesday fires she was the only truck left in the ST Andrews, Hurstbridge Kinglake and Dimond Creek area all the CFA owned trucks were off doing their stuff we moved her down to the Hurstbridge Fire Station so it was located in a central place for the surrounding townships.
The next experiance was when I purchased a series 2 short wheel base for $ 200.00 this was used on the property to collect fire wood and other work on what was a very steep 20 acres, supplied the firewood for 10 years and only got bogged once when after too many beers and managed to fall into one of the Dams on the block. Didnt drown it moter still running but on way too much of an angle to back out.
We recovered it the next day with the fire truck pictured below.
Many years passed and I now have the Disco but still have fond memories of the first 2.


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