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The attached Flight picture shows Alexander Ogilvie's Wright biplane being
towed out at the July 1912 'aviation week' at Bournemouth on the south coast of England. Ogilvie was the 7th person to qualify as a pilot in the UK. My off-topic question is very straightforward and concerns the vehicle towing the aircraft: what kind is it? I have every confidence that someone here will know. |
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Must be a British car the steering wheel is on the wrong side.
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wrote in message
... Must be a British car the steering wheel is on the wrong side. Not necessarily. Even up to the 1920s there were still cars made in the US with steering wheels on the right. -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
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"Dave Kearton" wrote in
: wrote in message ... Must be a British car the steering wheel is on the wrong side. Not necessarily. Even up to the 1920s there were still cars made in the US with steering wheels on the right. Even today there are still right-hand drive vehicles produced in the U.S. They just happen to be either huge dumps to work with a mine's dragline or little postal delivery vehicles. -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO (If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.) |
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On 2012-04-25 16:34:29 -0700, Savageduck said:
On 2012-04-25 13:26:24 -0700, Netko said: This is a multipart message in MIME format. On Wed, 25 Apr 2012 03:20:55 +0100, wrote (in article ): Must be a British car the steering wheel is on the wrong side. I'd be happy to live in a world where right is wrong and left is right if only someone could tell me what kind of car it is. Attached is an enlargement of the vehicle to see if that helps. It seems to me to have a fairly distinctive body shape and surely somebody must recognise that badge/logo on the radiator grill. Then again, what I know about makes and models of cars would barely fill a thimble. And, to set the record straight, the picture was taken at Bournemouth's Aviation Week in July 1910 and not as I said originally. It was at the same event that Charles Rolls, co-founder of Rolls-Royce, was killed when taking part in a spot landing competition. Rolls was only the second person in the UK to be killed in an aviation accident (the first being Percy Pilcher in 1899). image I am not able to ID the vehicle myself. However, I have posted an ID request, together with both of your images, in one of the best automotive forum sites, http://www.ultimatecarpage.com in their Classic Car forum. I will report any response which might be forthcoming. Well, my guys at Ultimatecarpage seem to have come through. The vehicle is apparently a custom coachwork, 1910 Delahaye Type 32 Roadster. The radiator badge is not a "B", but the stylized Delahaye badge of the pre-WWI "Brass car" era. Then the radiator itself is positively diagnostic. Here is that badge & radiator so you can make your own comparison. -- Regards, Savageduck |
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On 26/04/2012 03:45, Savageduck wrote:
On 2012-04-25 16:34:29 -0700, Savageduck said: On 2012-04-25 13:26:24 -0700, Netko said: This is a multipart message in MIME format. On Wed, 25 Apr 2012 03:20:55 +0100, wrote (in article ): Must be a British car the steering wheel is on the wrong side. I'd be happy to live in a world where right is wrong and left is right if only someone could tell me what kind of car it is. Attached is an enlargement of the vehicle to see if that helps. It seems to me to have a fairly distinctive body shape and surely somebody must recognise that badge/logo on the radiator grill. Then again, what I know about makes and models of cars would barely fill a thimble. And, to set the record straight, the picture was taken at Bournemouth's Aviation Week in July 1910 and not as I said originally. It was at the same event that Charles Rolls, co-founder of Rolls-Royce, was killed when taking part in a spot landing competition. Rolls was only the second person in the UK to be killed in an aviation accident (the first being Percy Pilcher in 1899). image I am not able to ID the vehicle myself. However, I have posted an ID request, together with both of your images, in one of the best automotive forum sites, http://www.ultimatecarpage.com in their Classic Car forum. I will report any response which might be forthcoming. Well, my guys at Ultimatecarpage seem to have come through. The vehicle is apparently a custom coachwork, 1910 Delahaye Type 32 Roadster. The radiator badge is not a "B", but the stylized Delahaye badge of the pre-WWI "Brass car" era. Then the radiator itself is positively diagnostic. Here is that badge & radiator so you can make your own comparison. Brilliant stuff Savageduck, well done. -- Moving things in still pictures |
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On Thu, 26 Apr 2012 03:45:01 +0100, Savageduck wrote
(in article 2012042519450116807-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom): Well, my guys at Ultimatecarpage seem to have come through. The vehicle is apparently a custom coachwork, 1910 Delahaye Type 32 Roadster. The radiator badge is not a "B", but the stylized Delahaye badge of the pre-WWI "Brass car" era. Then the radiator itself is positively diagnostic. Here is that badge & radiator so you can make your own comparison. My thanks to you and the people at Ultimatecarpage for taking the time to ID the vehicle. Much appreciated. |
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G'day,
maybe if you put it up on alt.binaries.pictures.autos - that lot would certainly suss out what it is. see ya Conscious Pilate "Netko" wrote in message ... The attached Flight picture shows Alexander Ogilvie's Wright biplane being towed out at the July 1912 'aviation week' at Bournemouth on the south coast of England. Ogilvie was the 7th person to qualify as a pilot in the UK. My off-topic question is very straightforward and concerns the vehicle towing the aircraft: what kind is it? I have every confidence that someone here will know. |
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