Class: Cars, Chassis Cab — Model origin:
Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Author | Message |
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-- ◊ 2013-12-21 16:03 |
Custom made, I think. The cab belongs to a Chevrolet, however the chassis belongs to something else. The wheels are different and more modern. -- Last edit: 2013-12-21 16:24:55 |
◊ 2013-12-21 16:38 |
Probably a junkyard special |
◊ 2013-12-23 17:54 |
Why not listing it as Chevrolet? As the most visible and identifiable part comes from that... It wouldn't be the first one with a different chassis, after all. |
◊ 2013-12-27 18:25 |
ok |
◊ 2013-12-28 05:45 |
I'd say a late-1940's 4400. |
◊ 2018-11-10 05:44 |
1951 door (hole of the 1947-51 lock barrel under the handle with 1951+ vent window): was the 1949+ fuel pipe cut apart and the resulting hole plugged and painted? Or is it just a 1947-48 cab with two 1951+ doors? If I'm not mistaken, the length and bulge of the hood indicate that the cab "donor" was a light-/medium-duty Advance-design 3000-Series (if a Chevrolet) or a light-duty New Design 100/150/250 (if a GMC). The Chevrolet hood side badge is not what could be called a trustworthy clue to identify the make of the cab → 1947 & Chevrolet by default. |
Retganber ◊ 2020-10-16 12:26 |
GAZ-53 with some parts from the Advance Design truck |
◊ 2020-10-16 16:05 |
Pretty sure the GAZ was never sold in Colombia. They did have Ladas though. |
Retganber ◊ 2020-10-22 19:26 |
Well, the movie producers could have bought a GAZ truck and put some parts (doors and bonnets) from the Advance Design truck into it |