Class: Trucks, Fire truck — Model origin:
Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Author | Message |
---|---|
◊ 2010-10-22 20:16 |
Looks no newer than from the 1940's. |
◊ 2010-10-23 05:33 |
1930's Chevrolet/GMC |
◊ 2010-10-29 02:51 |
Look at the windows and compare to other pictures, I think it looks like a Seagrave with a heavily modified body. |
◊ 2013-04-25 16:59 |
|
◊ 2013-04-26 10:22 |
From the view in the later thumb I reckon it is a Dodge circa 1939-40. |
◊ 2013-11-07 21:16 |
^ so is this a DODGE then ? |
◊ 2014-04-19 21:28 |
Dodge-based but don't know who the fire truck maker was. |
◊ 2014-11-24 07:00 |
Call it a Dodge? |
◊ 2015-08-22 05:56 |
Thanks to the front end visible in mike962's thumb, it can be identified as a fire truck based on a 1939-47 Dodge Job-Rated cowl + chassis indeed. More precisely a 1941-42 W-Series, due to the chrome bars in the lower part of the grille. (1939 T-Series have a grille trim that looks like a down pointing arrow; the grille trim of the 1940 V-Series has a V-shape lower part; the 1946-47 W-Series -same name as for the 1941-42 models- had no extra chrome but the cross) Wheel rims and wheelbase indicate a heavy-duty model, which means, as pre-war truck, any model among the 1½-ton WF-Series, the 2-ton WH-Series and the 3-ton WK-Series. But unless someone is able to measure the exact length of the wheelbase, I don't think there is any clue to tell a model over another. (This said, some parts of the movie were apparently shot in Thailand. So couldn't it be the Fargo equivalent of the W-Series?) |