Ref; Landycam -REMLR
Here's a pic from Cooma's Landy graveyard. Both chassis have a few front-end mods, one has coil springs, both have homemade radiator panels. SMHEA custom jobs? Spotted any other clues?
Ref; Landrover Specials
.This picture comes from the Snowy Mountains Hydro Electric Authority archive. It is not known if this was a "proper" Forest-Rover or a locally built special [-LA].
Ref; Landycam -REMLR
Here's a pic from Cooma's Landy graveyard. Both chassis have a few front-end mods, one has coil springs, both have homemade radiator panels. SMHEA custom jobs? Spotted any other clues?
.
While I cant absolutely refute some of this information, I can state that throughout the 1960s and into the 1970s the vehicles in almost every batch* took two to three months to be dispatched between the first vehicle dispatched and the last. In fact SIIa vehicles were still being sold in 1973 a year after the SIII was first produced.
If there were shortages of supply and back orders the vehicles would have all been dispatched within days of each other.
However I will accept that there may have been delays in getting some variants because of the batch system where they only produced a single variant and then changed to a different variant.
I didn't look at the series one dispatch books but I believe there would be similar patterns in dispatch.
* Batches vary from 6 to 24 or more vehicles but most are batches of 12 vehicles
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
Pretty sure it isn't a grey, they have a cap with breather in the centre on the rocker cover. It could be a red with a bashed about rocker cover maybe to clear the firewall. Looks to be leaning over too, but given the condition it might not have run that way.
Jeff

Edit it's not a Chevy ! More likely a lent over red Holden, there is a PCV and the rubber grommet that it fit's into, the same position as a Holden engine.
Hi Jeff
I think it's a fifties Chevrolet Blue flame six cylinder, given the modification to the front of the chassis for the length.
The colour of the rocker cover is another clue , it's loose and laying towards the carby, that carby looks like the type fitted to the Chevy engines.
.
Last edited by wrinklearthur; 26th January 2015 at 10:52 AM. Reason: Retraction
I was told this about 20 years from my Subi mechanic who used to do some work on an old Brumby I had in the early 90s. He was a bit of an automotive historian so I didn't question it. He also stated that he used to work for Land Rover. I was quite young and probably naive to such things and I must admit that when I was told I thought that Land Rover missed a massive opportunity (assuming he was right of course).
2006 TDV6 Disco
Not necessarily - vehicles may well have been allocated to dealers well ahead of time but not actually dispatched for quite some time after they were actually ready, for all sorts of reasons. These could include transport, slow paperwork, customer agreements etc. But as they were already allocated, they could not be sold to new customers.
(An extreme example of this sort of thing is Minerva's experience with CKD kits - 80" were still being dispatched to Minerva long after the 86 was in production, much to Minerva's concern, because they had been manufactured and stockpiled to meet the entire Minerva order back in 1950?.)
Today there is a tendency to forget how business was carried out fifty or sixty years ago, when nearly all communications were by surface mail, vehicles were mostly dispatched by rail (remember state regulations forbade the use of road transport where a rail service existed until about 1960) and "just in time" had never been heard of, and having to order vehicles years ahead was normal in the post-war car shortage situation..
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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