Buzzer
ERF-NGC-European:
Found online so not sure where this was taken. Ouistreham perhaps? I do remember those Norby Trailer Savoyade tilts (bottom right). I used to pull them out of Dover docks on traction work - mostly triaxle ones. Being a short-arse I wasn’t so keen on those high drop-sides.It shouldn’t be too difficult to date this image, as the period will be somewhere between the beginning of series 2 Scanias and the beginning of Ferrymasters trailers bearing the P&0 logo.
0
It looks very much like the extension that was built at Ouistreham for Brittany Ferries not all that long ago.
I sailed into and out of Ouistreham many times from 1992, some times in a 16 ton Volvo, some times in my
Mercedes van, and a couple of times by car, doing a few important parcel deliveries, and back to Portsmouth
on the night sailing, In those days the ships were " Duke de Normandie " and the new " Normandie ".
Cheers, Ray.
The photo looks very much like Ouistreham but I am not too sure as the west of the trailer parking area there is a beach and no grassland as depicted in the photo, directly north is the sea, to the east is another beach that’s further away and no grassland?
Ray Smyth:
Froggy55:
0Can anyone tell me more about the numberplate of this truck? Moreover, it bears an unusual axle display.
Thanks.
[/quoteHi Froggy, The number plate is from Downpatrick in Northern Ireland. Cheers, Ray.
Thanks!
Ray Smyth:
ERF-NGC-European:
Found online so not sure where this was taken. Ouistreham perhaps? I do remember those Norby Trailer Savoyade tilts (bottom right). I used to pull them out of Dover docks on traction work - mostly triaxle ones. Being a short-arse I wasn’t so keen on those high drop-sides.It shouldn’t be too difficult to date this image, as the period will be somewhere between the beginning of series 2 Scanias and the beginning of Ferrymasters trailers bearing the P&0 logo.
0
It looks very much like the extension that was built at Ouistreham for Brittany Ferries not all that long ago.
I sailed into and out of Ouistreham many times from 1992, some times in a 16 ton Volvo, some times in my
Mercedes van, and a couple of times by car, doing a few important parcel deliveries, and back to Portsmouth
on the night sailing, In those days the ships were " Duke de Normandie " and the new " Normandie ".Cheers, Ray.
I am not fully certain that the photo is Ouistreham, If it is, It will be from 20 or 30 years ago
before the outward extension was created. Cheers, Ray.
Buzzer:
Buzzer
Is this built on a bus chassis?
Dennis Javelin:
Buzzer:
BuzzerIs this built on a bus chassis?
Yes it is Leyland Tiger cub, only two ever done started life for Portsmouth corporation, Buzzer
Buzzer:
Dennis Javelin:
Buzzer:
BuzzerIs this built on a bus chassis?
Yes it is Leyland Tiger cub, only two ever done started life for Portsmouth corporation, Buzzer
Thanks
Which reminds me of my first road haulage wagon. It was an Albion with no model name and the overhang was enormous but over the back axle rather than the front. Made it very easy to steer with a bit of extra weight over the tail. We only discovered its origins when the brakes failed on a hill in Herefordshire. I managed to stop it on the handbrake and it was rescued into the local dealer, Prialls, I think was the name. They couldn’t find the right part to replace the faulty one and eventually solved the mystery, it was a coach chassis.
Your Albion with a long rear overhang would be a Victor the regular model name for Albion bus chassis.
Cheers, Leyland 600
Leyland600:
Your Albion with a long rear overhang would be a Victor the regular model name for Albion bus chassis.
Cheers, Leyland 600
Thanks Leyland, I am sure you are right, though that is not a name I have heard before. I remember the terrifying descent though, I had the handbrake pulled back and locked as hard as I could, legs locked straight and back against the back of the cab. There was a sharp corner at the bottom where it levelled off and I arrived stationary at a set of traffic lights. Pulled gingerly across the road and parked before setting off to find a phone.