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Thread: Land Rovers during the Snowy Scheme

  1. #111
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    Quote Originally Posted by stealth View Post
    What is the vehicle in the background in that photo?
    The vehicle is in fact a slat grill WW2 Jeep.
    The metal roof fitted to the vehicle proves it as it is domed slightly.
    Post war jeeps had a slightly higher windscreen to give the driver more head room.
    Any hard roof conversion of a WW2 jeep needed the roof higher than what the standard canvass was to save the drivers head.
    The number plate is in a typical position for a WW2 jeep post war.
    The RHS mud guard can not be seen due to the blokes hat and the other side guard is not seen cause front on there is little to see of a front edge of a WW2 jeep mud guard anyhow.

    Dodge powerwagons were extensively used and most were fitted with a step side rear body.( many pictures of these)
    Most other vehicles were normal 4x2 drive trucks of the time.

    Very early Toyotas used a F110 motor and a 4 speed gearbox with a deep first gear for off road work.
    The same motor and gear box was used in both the landcruiser and FQ10/15 one tonne 4x4 truck and a 6x6 2.5 tonne truck which was a Japanese versions of the American M37 and 2.5 Deuce army trucks .
    Having a little to do with a FQ15 the early Landcruiser should have been well made and reliable, but lacking in certain design aspects ......ie stiff suspension.
    The japs learnt from their mistakes and landrover didn't and the rest is history.

  2. #112
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    Serendipity today. (We drove Perenties down to the back of Jindabyne delivering batteries (8 x 67kg each veh) for a solar pwr setup.)

    Had brekky at Bredbo. We ate in the carpark beside the Monaro Hwy. A ute pulled up and an old gentleman walked around the Perenties and then we chatted.

    This gent was aged and still driving a workute but he said he was a retired Land Rover mechanic who did his apprenticeship with LR, starting in 1951 I think he said. The garage down the road (he meant Cooma) worked on Hydro LRs and "was part of Grenville Motors." (?)

    He commented that most weeks they fitted 8 to 10 reconditioned diffs. They fixed them after removal and always had plenty in stock ready for a repair order. He said they did engines like that as well. He said "The early engine Landy was the best, unstoppable climbing rough hills", and "the second engine had more HP but the same gearbox and other parts -it wasn't up to it", and "The new one wouldn't go most places the first one would. It wasn't done right."

    "The Landcruiser changed a lot of buyers minds. It didn't get so dusty inside. The japs had a proper door hinge, they took the time, and the seal rubber worked, Land Rover's fitting was very basic and the Landcruiser was almost posh like that, the door shut properly. Then they (LR) came out with a ball and spring on a pin and they still didn't work well enough."

    We talked about axle splines and diffs some more and then we went on south.

    Oh the diffs began a few comments about Rover P3s. He said "Not many on the site knew it but SMHEA owned three P3's. Hudson had one but why did he need three? No one ever found out. Right from new there was a rattle under the passenger floor somewhere. I did warranty work and I spent hours and hours pulling out me hair and never did find out the cause. I'd ask the chauffer about it and he said he couldn't hear a rattle. It must be another driver. I could hear it plain as day, I wasn't dreaming, and the office had a complaint in but I got no help with it from the drivers and gave up. They all had the same rattle. Years later when they put me in charge it came back to haunt me, it was a curse."
    Last edited by Carzee; 26th October 2015 at 09:18 AM. Reason: txt

  3. #113
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    Snowy Land Rovers - How Many?

    I may be reviving and old thread, but here goes.

    I am doing a story on the Snowy Mountains Scheme Land Rovers for the next issue of The BMC Experience.

    I have tracked down a stack of info, but one thing that I am still confused about is the number of Land Rovers used by SMA.

    In Noel Gough's book, Mud Sweat and Snow, Bert Knowles says 715 Land Rovers were bought between November 1949 and December 1966. The implication is that they stopped buying Land Rovers in December 1966.

    The first Land Cruiser owned by the Snowy Scheme (as opposed to Thiess) was bought in 1967.

    However, I saw somewhere on this thread a figure of 1300+ (can't recall exact figure) and that SMA was buying Land Rovers right up to the end of construction, which was 1974.

    Bert Knowles said that when the Land Cruiser became available to SMA in the late 1960s they stopped buying Land Rovers.

    So, can anyone (Diana?) tell me exactly how many Land Rovers were bought by the SMA (not including other bodies like police, forests, SEC, etc)?

    Also - in 1997 The Snowy bought one Defender 110 and four Discos (2 each three-door and five-door). Does anyone know what became of these and does Snowy Hydro (as it is now called) still have any Land Rovers on its fleet?

    Thanks, Watto.

  4. #114
    DiscoMick Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Watto View Post
    I may be reviving and old thread, but here goes.

    I am doing a story on the Snowy Mountains Scheme Land Rovers for the next issue of The BMC Experience.

    I have tracked down a stack of info, but one thing that I am still confused about is the number of Land Rovers used by SMA.

    In Noel Gough's book, Mud Sweat and Snow, Bert Knowles says 715 Land Rovers were bought between November 1949 and December 1966. The implication is that they stopped buying Land Rovers in December 1966.

    The first Land Cruiser owned by the Snowy Scheme (as opposed to Thiess) was bought in 1967.

    However, I saw somewhere on this thread a figure of 1300+ (can't recall exact figure) and that SMA was buying Land Rovers right up to the end of construction, which was 1974.

    Bert Knowles said that when the Land Cruiser became available to SMA in the late 1960s they stopped buying Land Rovers.

    So, can anyone (Diana?) tell me exactly how many Land Rovers were bought by the SMA (not including other bodies like police, forests, SEC, etc)?

    Also - in 1997 The Snowy bought one Defender 110 and four Discos (2 each three-door and five-door). Does anyone know what became of these and does Snowy Hydro (as it is now called) still have any Land Rovers on its fleet?

    Thanks, Watto.
    I don't know the answer, but I had the impression the 1300+ included forestry, police etc.

  5. #115
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    Quote Originally Posted by Watto View Post
    I may be reviving and old thread, but here goes.

    I am doing a story on the Snowy Mountains Scheme Land Rovers for the next issue of The BMC Experience.

    I have tracked down a stack of info, but one thing that I am still confused about is the number of Land Rovers used by SMA.

    In Noel Gough's book, Mud Sweat and Snow, Bert Knowles says 715 Land Rovers were bought between November 1949 and December 1966. ... <snip>
    Thanks, Watto.
    This question is not as easy as one would think.

    The Grenville records are hand written then photocopied and then scanned, accessing the numbers will be a time consuming task.

    Further to that as has been said, not all Land Rovers on the scheme were purchased directly for SMHEA. Some were owned by NSW Forestry and others were NSW Electricity Commission and still more were owned by individual contractors, such as Kaiser Walsh Perini Raymond. There were five vehicles dispatched to a local agent Monaro Trading prior to the first vehicles sold to the SMHEC which could have been "used" on the scheme. There are also ten 1949 models sold to the Commonwealth Dept of Supply, where we don't know the destination federal agency, these could also have been used on the Snowy Scheme.

    The first batch of vehicles we know went to the SMHEA were a batch of six 1950 model vehicles to the Dept. of Workers Housing on 28/11/1949. Given their chassis numbers these would have been painted deep bronze green and yet we know from the National Archives (image no. 4240211) at least one 1948 model in sage green was used on the scheme.



    The scheme was officially completed in October 1972, when the scheme went into the operational phase. The successor company Snowy Hydro is an unlisted company, therefore vehicle purchases since October 1972 should not be considered as part of the scheme. It is also possible that purchases late in or after completion may well have been purchased directly from the local Cooma Rover/Land Rover dealer P.D. Murphy or another local company Monaro Trading.

    As I already said to Watto, it will take time to compile the answers.

  6. #116
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    It would be nice to have a definitive (or as close to) answer for how many Land Rovers were actually used on the scheme with a breakdown of whichever operator (private/government/contractors, etc) used them. That way it may help combat the Toyota 'advertorials' that the Land Cruiser built the Snowy Scheme, forgetting that few were used and only late in the piece.

    Good luck with the fact finding and compilations - a VERY worthwhile endeavour. I will definitely be keeping an eye on this thread!!

  7. #117
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    It is already known that hundreds of Land Rovers were owned and used by the Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electricity Authority in the 9 years before the first Land Cruiser was purchased by a minor contractor Thiess for use on the scheme. In that period all the major surveys, site access roads and worker camps were built with the help of Land Rover and a variety of trucks and other non-Toyota vehicles.

  8. #118
    DiscoMick Guest
    http://www.4wdonline.com/Places/Au/SMHEA/LandRover.html

    Another member (Bytemark - thanks mate) posted this useful link elsewhere so I'm just adding the link here to preserve it for future reference.

    Sent from my SM-G900I using AULRO mobile app

  9. #119
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    Just remember that Anthony Maeder's article is at least a dozen years old (from my first reading it) and the comments that were contemporary when first published are well out of date today. Particularly the comment about the fire engines, in fact Anthony owned one of those Land Rover fire engines and sold it about 15 years ago, so I suspect the article may actually be as much as a quarter century old.

  10. #120
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    i just received this via email

    Your listing of early Land Rovers on the Snowy Scheme includes a welder equipped pre production 1950 Land Rover deliverd June 1950 This vehicle was allocated to the Plant engineer Pat Mullens,I was his assistant and driver. The Lincoln welder was for me to do running repairs on machinery in the regions this saved a lot of down time and cost the alternative being for the machine to be taken to the plant workshop at Polo flat Cooma for repair.I was responsible for the care & maintanace of the vehicle. This of course was at the very beginning before the road network had been built the access was rough, the Land Rover did a terrific job & never let us down regardless of conditions. If anyone knows the location or any information on this Landy I would like to try to find it to restore . Thank you Jim Pearson (Port Macquarie)
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