01-03-2022, 09:05 PM
Aah! Well spotted, Robert. That makes sense - so this will be in the Longbridge body shop before the complete assembly was united with the rolling chassis.
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Friends' Gallery Picture of the Month - March 2022
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01-03-2022, 09:05 PM
Aah! Well spotted, Robert. That makes sense - so this will be in the Longbridge body shop before the complete assembly was united with the rolling chassis.
01-03-2022, 10:02 PM
(01-03-2022, 12:33 PM)squeak Wrote: I can't recall a 2 piece windscreen on an Australian built seven, and have associated the swaged waistline as a feature of the Holden built Austin bodies but not other local coachbuilders. As far as I am aware all Australian Chummy bodies had an angled one piece windscreen and as Russell notes mainly Holden bodies had the swage, although I believe they supplied Melbourne Motor Body and possibly others with panels.
01-03-2022, 10:45 PM
Tony I have examples 27, 28, 29 with vertical windscreen pillars (no slope) and lamp brackets attached. The 29 car has gloveboxes as well.
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02-03-2022, 12:49 AM
Both 1928 Chummys with lamp brackets here have angled screens and from memory two Holden coupes as well so I don't know.
02-03-2022, 01:53 PM
(01-03-2022, 08:56 PM)Robert Foreman Wrote: If you look closely Mike you will see they are on trestles and not fitted to a chassis. Like other photos I've seen the body is fitted out and dropped onto a running chassis. I was just about to make that point myself. Note the factory roof - it's a rather lightweight structure - and the mezzanine floor. Do we have any more picture of the interior of the Austin works to compare it with?
02-03-2022, 06:55 PM
The thing that struck me was how young most of the workers appear to be. People in pre-war photos normally look about 25 years older than they actually are so this bunch must be in their early teens.
I mentioned earlier that the image appears in a book about the American motor industry. I have found a review of the book on this Danish website: https://viaretro.dk/2015/02/boghjoernet-...mbly-line/ ![]() Google translates the caption as: "The British wanted tea breaks and small cars. It did not suit Ford, so therefore Austin Seven had good sales." |
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