I was wondering how many surviving WW1 era wheeled AFV's there are, and their locations? I heard there's a 1915 Renault armoured car at Verdun, can anyone confirm this? The only ones I know of are;
UK
1919 Pierce-Arrow armoured car - Bovington Tank Museum 1920 Rolls Royce armoured car - Bovington Tank Museum 1920 Rolls Royce armoured car - RAF Regiment museum
Once there was a (German) "collectors group" which run the website www.reenactorsmovieservice.com (or simillar anming). As far as I remmeber they were restoring a Sd.Kfz. 3 or another Schupo-Sonderwagen. But I don't know what happend to them.
Austin-Poutiloff (Russki Austin) armoured car of 1918 (of terrain by Izhorski Work) Austin-Poutiloff (Russki Austin) armoured car of 1919 (in Kubinka museum) Izhorski FIAT armoured car 1917 (in Moskau Russian army museum).
@Rob, great minds think alike! For some small time I have been making (with Ivan's excellent help) a list of all the surviving armoured cars (rather than wheeled AFVs, which I'm thinking would include the Thornycroft ack ack in Duxford?).
I wanted it to be as neat as Pierre's lists of Renault FT, M1917 & Great War tanks, but I have met two problems so far, one easy, one not so:
1. I can't write pdf documents. So I've done it in excel. Easy!
2. Where does one 'draw the line'? For instance, the three vehicles you name (it is a Peerless, by the way) are not from WWI.
For the second problem I decided arbitrarily on the period 1895 to 1925.
Did you have a similar period in mind?
@Ivan: Hi. Are you saying Bush is a smelly goat? I think the shoe thrower was framed!
@Tim too: yes, the Autocar is in the Canadian War Museum, Ottawa.
Sorry, I do of course mean Peerless, not Pierce Arrow! I went for those three, despite being post-war, because they were First World War designs (at least the RR's were, and I think the body of the Peerless is very close if not identical to the Austin's)
I think the body of the Peerless is very close if not identical to the Austin's)
So is it! very close and not 100% identical. The body of Austin was projecting in Russia by Military automobile school in Petrograd - typical armouder body für Russian Imperial army with two turrels (must to be two for possible shutting on two side, so say Russian War-Ministerium!) , body of Peerless was very close as Austin-Body.
I have read somewhere that it is a genuine Austin armoured body on a Peerless chassis. The Peerless chassis was longer than the Austin chassis and so it can be seen projecting out past the armoured body at the rear. I don't think it is a copy of Austin armour; it is the 'real thing'. They put it on Peerless chassis because, allegedly, the Austin chassis was weak and bent out of shape. The British Austins were different to the Russian Austins, as Ivan says, because the British armour plate was inferior to the Russian armour plate, so the Putilov (Poutiloff?) works completely rebuilt the bodies. But the Peerless chassis is longer than the Austin body by some two feet.
Changing the subject; there are at least two Rolls Royces in Ireland. 'Sliabh na mBan' in Curragh barracks, and 'Tom Keogh' in private ownership. (There are replicas too, but I've lost track of how many!). And there is 'Wedding Bells' in India.
Three Lancias: the Lancia in Italy is in Trieste. The Lancia found in Afghanistan was last seen in 'Camp Warehouse', Kabul, but has dropped off the radar. The current whereabouts of the Lancia found in Libya is anybody's guess.
There are at least 4 survivors in the USA.
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Friday 10th of April 2009 03:19:30 PM
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Friday 10th of April 2009 03:30:17 PM
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Friday 10th of April 2009 03:31:25 PM
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Friday 10th of April 2009 03:34:37 PM
__________________
In wine there is wisdom, in beer there is freedom, in water there is bacteria.
I would agree that the Austin body is a genuine war time one, as in fact is the Peerless chassis. However, they were not mated together until after the war making it a post war armoured car. Still love it though.
All british Austins was projecting for Russian War-ministerium, 1, 2 and 3 Serie. $ Serie also, but there go not to Russia. Two turel stand horizontal (- -) by Russian Austin (Poutiloff) turrel stand diagonal (/), so was possible from two MG on one site to shooting. Rebuilt was many Austin of 1st and some oh 2nd series by Izhorsky Work (Kolpino, near St. Petersburg). Also Austin-Poutilov was only first party (no more as 10 cars) built by Poutiloff work, the rest by Izhorsky work.
Here is a picture of a hall in Izhorsky work 1915 - Left is White-Mgebrovv, reiht is rebuilding of Austin 1st.
-- Edited by Ivan on Friday 10th of April 2009 11:51:07 PM
-- Edited by Ivan on Friday 10th of April 2009 11:52:03 PM
@PDA: yes, the picture you have linked is the car in Munster. But is not a Sd.Kfz.3 (it had no turrets!) - it is a Schupo-Sonderwagen Daimler/21.
Schupo is short for Schutzpolizei (Protection police = Constabulary?). The Schupo-Sonderwagen was also produced by Benz (Benz/21) and Erhardt (Erhardt/21).
I believe the Rolls in the RAF Regt Museum is a replica from the Larry in Arabia movie. There is a surviving 1914 in the Indian Army tank museum. albeit not complete.
-- Edited by Nailcreek on Saturday 11th of April 2009 04:12:46 PM
1. I can't write pdf documents. So I've done it in excel. Easy!
You don't often actually 'write' pdf documents, you create them from documents prepared in other things. Acrobat itself is somewhat expensive, and you really only need it if you want to do fancy stuff wiv yer pdfs. There are two options which are both zero-cost
1) Dowload something like Cute pdf or Primo pdf which install themselves as printers on your pc. You then create your document in something like Excel and then print it to a pdf file. Generally works fine
2) Download OpenOffice which is a free office suite, compatible with MS Word and Excel, and which can save files directly in pdf format.
Neither of these options will give you an editable pdf, but for turning other documents into pdfs for posting on websites, or emailing to people they're fine. If you want to update your document you just update it in Excel or whatever and then output a fresh pdf copy
(I'm only what my son calls a WW1 nerd for a hobby, I'm an IT nerd for a living)
Second Russian Austin-Poutiloff on a terraine of Izhorsky Work in Kolpino (near St. Peterburg) with original russian Gussmatic tyres! And new good replica..
Especially for Ivan and Eugene. I'm at home now and a'll write.
As far as I know, the AC at Kubinka is replica only. Real car displays at Artillery Museum at St Petersburg. Real car with unreal history.
In accordance with Communist's legend, Lenin made a speech from this AC when come back to Russia from the emigration. Wery nice? but Lenin come back at Russia at April 1917, and ACs of this type ware bilt not earlier then October 1017. Ivan can say more exactly.
-- Edited by Aleksandr on Wednesday 29th of April 2009 04:24:10 PM
Especially for Ivan and Eugene. I'm at home now and a'll write.
As far as I know, the AC at Kubinka is replica only. Real car displays at Artillery Museum at St Petersburg. Real car with unreal history.
In accordance with Communist's legend, Lenin made a speech from this AC when come back to Russia from the emigration. Wery nice? but Lenin come back at Russia at April 1917, and ACs of this type ware bilt not earlier then October 1017. Ivan can say more exactly.
-- Edited by Aleksandr on Wednesday 29th of April 2009 04:24:10 PM
Alexandr,
no-no!!! It is the same Russian Austin (Austin-Poutiloff) "Vrag Kapitala". It was in Artillery museum in SPb, now it stand in Kubinka, original, no replica! The "legend of bolsheviks" is no more "great legend" This car was built anno 1919 (!!!), Lenin in sommer 1917 stand possible on a British Austin... Your second pictre is original "Izhorsky FIAT from Army museum Moskow. If me say - only THREE original ACs, built before 1920, living in Russia 2x Austin-Poutiloff (Kubinka "Vrag Kapitala" and on terrain of Izhorsky work and 1x Izhorsky FIAT in Moscow).
I have the book, published in 1994. It is photo album of displays of Kubinka Museum. The authors not show Austin, buit wrote that it is ÌÀÊÅÒ - model, mock-up. And I saw Austin in Artillery Museum in 2006 last time, and I think that it is real car.
And of course, second car is Fiat from Russian Army Museum. I forgot to write it.
Anno 1994 stand in Kubinka a replica (very bad maked of truck GAZ 53 chassis), today is original "Vrag Kapitala"!!! It is the same Austin-Poutiloff, 100% original (only tyres is new).
Picture 1: Leningrad from Revolution museum, ca. 1980.
Picture 2: St. Petersburg in Artillery museum, ca. 1995.
Picture 3: In Kubinka, ca. 2005.
-- Edited by Ivan on Friday 1st of May 2009 03:29:09 PM