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Author: Subject: What's this from?
carcentric

posted on 4/4/06 at 09:52 PM Reply With Quote
What's this from?

http://img154.imageshack.us/img154/6332/12342eh.png
[img]http://img154.imageshack.us/img154/6332/12342eh.png [/img]





M D "Doc" Nugent
http://www.carcentric.com

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Mansfield

posted on 4/4/06 at 09:55 PM Reply With Quote
From the look of that dry stone wall it could be the peak district
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dave-69isit

posted on 4/4/06 at 09:55 PM Reply With Quote
what is it

its a beam axel
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daz_derby

posted on 4/4/06 at 09:56 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Mansfield
From the look of that dry stone wall it could be the peak district




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Mr G

posted on 4/4/06 at 09:59 PM Reply With Quote
I think I saw something like it in an episode of the waltons once....









Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a
car that you are still paying for - in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes
and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it.

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DorsetStrider

posted on 4/4/06 at 10:01 PM Reply With Quote
My guess would be the front wheels and axel from an OLD tractor?





Who the f**K tightened this up!

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owelly

posted on 4/4/06 at 10:22 PM Reply With Quote
Old tractors had no front brakes.
Possibly and rickety old car??





http://www.ppcmag.co.uk

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COREdevelopments

posted on 4/4/06 at 10:23 PM Reply With Quote
dont think it will fit for the back axle






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stevebubs

posted on 5/4/06 at 12:46 AM Reply With Quote
Axle from a carriage / horse cart?
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carcentric

posted on 5/4/06 at 02:13 AM Reply With Quote
CLUES

My belief is that the two rod ends are tie rod ends, but others (on another forum I frequent) say there's no king pin so it can't be a front axle (they think the rods are to actuate the brakes).

Didn't some old cars have very small king pins - about the size of a child's fist?

Also, the brake drums look quite large in diameter for their width - I associate that with 1930's cars.

Anybody else see clues?

These wheels were with the axle (no proof they fit the axle, however):
http://img89.imageshack.us/img89/361/1232mf.png

[Edited on 5/4/06 by carcentric]





M D "Doc" Nugent
http://www.carcentric.com

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Kissy

posted on 5/4/06 at 06:07 AM Reply With Quote
Yep the wheels look right, splined hubs, as per axle. The rods hanging out of the drums are the brakes. Look like ally back plates. Worth pickig up, identifying and sticking on eBay
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britishtrident

posted on 5/4/06 at 08:17 AM Reply With Quote
Hubs are for Rudge-Withworth wheels, no kin pins which make it the rear axle off a fwd, Axle is quite narrow but the brakes are fairly big indicating sporting pretensions. Look of the design and casting sugest its from from the period 1925 to about 1935

Only british fwd drive car that fits the bill is Alvis Rescued attachment alvis.jpg
Rescued attachment alvis.jpg

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