Aargh! This would indicate that the famous and oft-cited Holt G9 was a film prop, covered in plywood. Which collapsed on the set.
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I suspected the 'armour plate' was mild steel. But not wood!
But it's a good link, LincolnTanker, thanks. There are some new pictures of the Jeffery Quad armoured car, and I think the other one is a White, maybe?
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Brilliant find, LT.
-- Edited by James H on Friday 7th of May 2010 01:17:22 AM
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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
I think it is wood, there is a what appears to be a typical wooden frame on the ground with some sheet attached. The 'plate' has broken in a wooden sort of way above the tracks.
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The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity(Dorothy Parker)
But wait, there's more. Maybe this is the "other" G9 but the double somersault bit is the same. And the weight! 13 tons is a lot of plywood. Familiar picture but a more informative caption.
Mind you, this is from History's Greatest War where some of the captions are less than 100% correct, I think.
The heroine her maiden name was Irene Foote she was a chorus girl who married Vernon Castle, they became famous in the US for ballroom dancing and apparantly started a craze... Vernon was killed in an accident in 1917 training pilots....
there a poster on the vid for Mrs Vernon Castle Patria.... 37 secound in....
Vernon flew 150 missions on the western front for the RFC.... an interesting article on the Castles here...
"In a single stoke, her marriage and her career were lost forever. In a larger sense the absurd, naive, wonderful world America had shared with the Castles had also been destroyed by the war, never to be found again."