The following warnings occurred: | |||||||||||||||
Warning [2] Undefined property: MyLanguage::$archive_pages - Line: 2 - File: printthread.php(287) : eval()'d code PHP 8.1.31 (Linux)
|
Milk Delivery A7 - Printable Version +- Austinsevenfriends (https://www.austinsevenfriends.co.uk/forum) +-- Forum: Austin Seven Friends Forum (https://www.austinsevenfriends.co.uk/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Forum chat... (https://www.austinsevenfriends.co.uk/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=14) +--- Thread: Milk Delivery A7 (/showthread.php?tid=6218) |
RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Bob Culver - 08-06-2021 Back to the original posting ...it does not seem a very practical vehicle, although suppose it could stop with minimum obstruction and venture down narrow lanes. If the churns had no tap must have all been very laborious and difficult to avoid rain entry.I can remember milk being home delivered into a billy but cannot recall seeing the vehicle used. To about 1950 in large city horses with 4 wheel wagons still in use, but milk bottled. In hilly Wellington the road often is below footpath and houses. The horse would walk on its own to meet the next descent of the footpath. RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Archivist - 08-06-2021 The Archive holds a copy of the appropriate brochure if anyone is interested in seeing how Austin suggested how the car could be used.. http://www.archive.a7ca.org/wp-content/uploads/BR_784A.pdf Hugh RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Mike Costigan - 08-06-2021 Yes, if the number is non-transferable then it will be marked as such on the V5C. Because your Ruby had already been registered with DVLA the number retains its transferable status. RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Ivor Hawkins - 08-06-2021 (07-06-2021, 10:59 PM)Tony Griffiths Wrote:Yes Tony, my V5 is marked non-transferable.(07-06-2021, 04:15 PM)Ivor Hawkins Wrote: Yes, mine was made non- transferable via the local DVLA office when applying for the missing new style log book, I had an old green continuation book but I have a feeling that while it was asleep in the back of a garage for many years it missed the new V5 registration process. (07-06-2021, 04:48 PM)Tony Betts Wrote: Hi ivor,Hi Tony, I fully understand that some cars haven’t been robbed of their numbers and like you, I have had to accept the fact that I’ve had three of my cars and motorcycles issued with age related numbers, two were robbed of their numbers by previous owners (real shame as one was even rarer than the milk delivery seven) and one was because all the original paperwork and history was lost. I think what irks me is that the numbers are so distinctive! RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Tony Betts - 08-06-2021 hi ivor, i fully understand it. i have a 1925 diamond, flat tank motorcycle. it had a MR _ _ _ _ reg. although the reg had been robbed before i bought it. it still has its original number plates with reg numbers on. so as i dont use it on the road, ive left it as is. but it still annoys me to think that someone robbed the number. even though motorcycle numbers cant, or never used to be able to be transfered to cars. something to do with it costing less to register a motorcycle. i notice with austins advert for the milkfloat, it show the churns also loaded were the passenger seat should be. so i would have expected them to be fitted with a fold flat passenger seat. although the latter picture shows it with two full seats? tony RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Bob Culver - 08-06-2021 Thanks Archivist. A lot of handling involved. Have to pour into portable container then into measures, then into customers container. In the rain with water dripping off nose into the milk. I guess useful for spread our runs, otherwise would have to return to depot for more. No fridges, dont know what a typical house would use each day. I presume those models had a side or dim light as dynamo would never keep up otherwise.Am astonished 6 have survived although probably useful generally. RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Hedd_Jones - 08-06-2021 Bob, i'm not sure you understand the purpose of the vehicle. In Britain a smallholder would milk his cows, take what he needed for himself, and the sum total of his production would be decanted into churns. For 2 or 3 churns 'production' I would have expected that the milking would have been by hand, that is, the farmers wife and or daughters will have done the milking. For such small quantities, the farmer will have had to take his milk to the local dairy, or possibly to a central location where a number of such farmers would deliver to and the milk collected by the dairy. The dairy would then pasteurize and sell in bottles, or supply to industry in bulk. So the milk delivery Seven is a dual purpose vehicle, the farmer could buy an Austin 7 to do this delivery, but he could also use it as a car. The alternative around 1930 was probably a van. I do wonder what the tax arrangements would have been, was this a dodge to avoid some tax, being classed as a commercial vehicle? Latterly the dairies (or the nationalised industry - The milk Marketing Board) collected the churns on a lorry. I believed this ceased in the UK in 1979 when tankers took over. RE: Milk Delivery A7 - JonE - 08-06-2021 the first hatchback... RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Hedd_Jones - 08-06-2021 (08-06-2021, 01:06 PM)JonE Wrote: the first hatchback... The milkman round here delivers milk out of a Corsa......so nothing is new RE: Milk Delivery A7 - Tony Griffiths - 08-06-2021 I see that it has a 5.6:1 back axle - if one turned up to a VSCC trail with full churns aboard - bolted down of course - it might be a winner. |