Author | Message |
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◊ 2010-02-03 19:16 |
RHD, "T H A..." - Thames my idea. |
◊ 2010-02-03 19:42 |
Yeah...I believe so...! |
◊ 2010-02-06 21:01 |
Definitely; like the left-hand one above. Obviously British: RHD and Kleenex on dashboard. -- Last edit: 2010-02-06 21:01:49 |
◊ 2010-02-06 21:10 |
Oh, Kleenex on the dashboard is typical British? This one is for sure absolutely typical German: Link to "handarbeitsforen.de" Sometimes even with a Barbie-doll inside. |
◊ 2010-02-06 21:17 |
Well, in cars (other than hatchbacks) the Kleenex is usually on the rear window shelf, but windscreens misted up easily on early 60s coaches like this one. -- Last edit: 2010-02-06 21:18:34 |
◊ 2010-02-07 17:47 |
Ford Thames chassis with what looks like Duple Yeoman coachwork. The thumbnail quoted by Chris40 is captioned "Double Duple" and the Ford variant was called Yeoman as opposed to Vega on the Bedford or Commer. |
◊ 2010-02-07 18:10 |
I expect therefore its a Thames Trader [507E] Duple Yeoman with the same divided windscreen as here? http://www.flickr.com/photos/8874887@N07/1817273018 -- Last edit: 2010-02-07 18:15:09 |
◊ 2019-02-16 13:06 |
Two-piece windscreen with the larger rear glasses - 1959-1960 Duple Super Vega "Lookalike" FS60/7 (7ft 6in wide) and FS60/8 (8ft wide) on Thames Trader [507E] chassis. Duple Yeoman naming for Ford's Thames Traders only introduced in 1961 on three-piece windscreen updated styling. -- Last edit: 2019-02-16 13:17:23 |