I bumped into this curiosity on motorgraphs.com. Some of their captions are very wrong and this one is labelled as a Siddeley 4 seater tourer of 1909 fitted with additional armour plating. I can't say I know much about early trucks so I can't say what it is.
I assumed, though from the source that it would be British but the soldiers are definitely post-1909 and are wearing Adrian style helmets. I assumed that these soldiers were therefore French and this was a WW1 era photo.
I don't recall ever seeing this vehicle before or anything similar but I'm curious if anyone knows more.
-- Edited by vollketten on Tuesday 26th of September 2017 07:38:19 PM
Starting point: Those soldiers are Belgian. Now where does that take us?
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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 am by no means an expert. But I do humbly offer the following observation.
I have stood next to, and spoken with the owner of, a 1912 Belgian Minerva motorcar.
That vehicle has a wheelbase remarkably similar to that of the depicted vehicle.
It is not beyond reason that such a vehicle was sourced, either by purchase,
donation, or governmental requisition, and converted in the then usual ad-hoc manner.
As the soldiers are identified as Belgian, a Belgian vehicle, would make sense,
after a fashion, hence my suggestion of Minerva open-topped motorcar.
That does not, of course, account for the style of wheels, but I imagine
the wheels would have been changed during the conversion/armouring of the vehicle.
I hope this suggestion helps in the research.
kind and Respectful Regards, Uyraell.
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