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SAMIL Trucks (South African MILitary) are the standard logistical transport vehicles of the South African National Defence Force (and its predecessor the South African Defence Force). SAMILs are currently re-manufactured by Truck-Makers in Rosslyn , Pretoria , Drakensberg Truck Manufacturers in Wallmansthal , N1 Trucks in Wallmansthal and ...
6-ton 4x4 truck: Place of origin: South Africa: Production history; Designer: Armscor based on Magirus Deutz 192D12AL: Produced: In production up to 1998: Variants: Cargo (as in photo) [1] Recovery [1] Telecommunications workshop [1] Battery charging workshop [1] Mobile welding workshop [1] Water tanker [1] Fuel tanker [1] Pantry vehicle [2 ...
When light-duty trucks were first produced in the United States, they were rated by their payload capacity in tons: 1 ⁄ 2 (1000 pounds), 3 ⁄ 4 (1500 pounds) and 1-ton (2000 pounds). Ford had introduced the "One-Tonner" in 1938 to their line of trucks. [23] The "Three-quarter-tonner" appeared in the Ford truck lineup in 1939. [23]
Isuzu (South Africa) Mahindra Motors African ; Tata Motors Africa ; Ralph (truck manufacturer) SAMIL (South Africa) SNVI ; UD Trucks (Southern Africa) Uri (Namibia and South Africa) Volvo Trucks (South Africa)
A standard dump truck is a truck chassis with a dump body mounted to the frame. The bed is raised by a vertical hydraulic ram mounted under the front of the body (known as a front post hoist configuration), or a horizontal hydraulic ram and lever arrangement between the frame rails (known as an underbody hoist configuration), and the back of ...
Jie Fang 1-Ton Truck: Light: COE – China/United States: China FAW-GM: Jie Fang 2-Ton Truck: Medium: COE – China/United States: China FAW-GM: Jie Fang 3-Ton Truck: Heavy: COE – China/United States: China Fiat: Fiat Ducato: Light: Conventional: Peugeot Boxer, Citroën Jumper: Italy: Europe, South Africa FNM: Agrale: Light: Electric: FNM 832 ...
Mid -1939 saw a complete revamp of Bedfords, with only the HC van continuing in production. The new range consisted of the K (30–40 cwt), MS and ML (2–3 ton), OS and OL (3–4 ton), OS/40 and OL/40 (5 ton) series, and the OB bus. Also on offer was a new 10–12 cwt van, the JC, derived from the new J Model Vauxhall car.
The Ford P100 is a car-based pickup truck that was built by Ford from 1971 to 1995, initially in South Africa, and later Portugal. It was based on medium-sized Ford passenger cars, originally the Cortina/Taunus and from 1988 the Ford Sierra. Initially marketed as the Ford Cortina Pickup, [1] the P100 name was adopted in 1982. [3]