View Full Version : Commer 2 stroke
ceylon220
27th September 2008, 14:18
First driving job that I had,long before HGV licences came into being,as long as you had a car full licence you were allowed to drive all types of HGVs, well my first was on an old Commer 2 stroke loading brewers grains from the whiskey distilleries up Scotland and loading sawdust from saw mills up and down the country using a wide mouthed aluminium shovel(bl--dy hard work) all for £3 aload,when coming up the hill at night thro Selkirk you would think that the wagon was a rocket starting up, the sparks would fly out of the exhaustin a mass of light, twice I was pulled up by the police in Selkirk to inform me that I had fire on board especially when she was pumping exhaust smoke out as well, talk about a firework display--those were the days,gone but not forgotten. :eek:
G-CPTN
27th September 2008, 16:55
Ay, the old TS3 was an 'impressive' brute under load.
Supercharged so that the exhaust was blown out . . .
http://www.oldengine.org/members/diesel/technical/TS3.htm
I don't know whether the 'boost' was adjustable.
Mandator
27th September 2008, 22:10
I had an AEC MK3 complete with sliding doors and push-out windscreen and it was a bugger for throwing flames out of the exhaust - not very good for a tanker carrying flammables:D.Was sent back to the yard early one morning by Sheffield police with instructions to "get it sorted".The fitters,as always shoved some additive in the derv tank,affectionally known as "Cabdrivers Linctus" and all was well until the next time.:)
Tonym
14th October 2008, 20:10
Suttons of St Helens had 5 TVW (Transport Vehicles Warrington), Alf Sutton was one of the partners who set this short lived company up to build lorries useing Sentinal parts when Sentinals closed down and the three Artic units were engine with the TS3 with only a single silencer and a home designed exhaust brake, shunting one of these in London was an endless time of being pulled up by the Law who would claim we had no exhaust fitted although we had, the TS3 were eventually swapped for Gardner 6LW's.
wilfo098
14th October 2008, 20:38
I have lived in Maidstone all my life and when I was young upto 1951 I lived in St Peters Street and about 500 yds away was the Tillings and Stevens factory (The building is still there) this street was one of the busiest in the town with 2 breweries and the Sharps toffee factory. all day long they would test the the engines and the testbed trucks would come and go . I would often cadge a slow ride down the street to the works on these and the "Vulcan" trucks built oposite T&S, just a chassis with ply panel and pespex to shield the driver with flying helmet like a pilot (I wonder what health and safety would say today)When I first started proper driving in 1963 at "Reeds Corrugated Paper" "Tovil we had Commer pantec's with these engines and for our use they were I belive a joy to drive ,full width seat in cab etc and climbing Wrotham hill in the dark with the fireworks a joy to behold. Jesse Ellis also built lorries in St Peter st about 1900 ...Regards. Alan
G-CPTN
14th October 2008, 22:12
Info on your local makes:-
http://www.fleetdata.co.uk/tilling-stevens.html
http://www.fleetdata.co.uk/vulcan.html
and Commer:- http://www.fleetdata.co.uk/commer.html
wilfo098
15th October 2008, 09:43
Thanks for the responce I think personally the Vulcan was a nice little truck they used to leave here with just the front (scuttle)? I have a nice poster (repro ) from the local toy fair.. The LEN cabinet works across town used them mostly with a few Fordson Thames I could post a picture of Fordson with our football team.. I started with LEN after school as a pre Aprentice, ie gofer . but I was advised by a workmate to go and see the world so I did.. Best wishes
Alan
billyboy
15th October 2008, 10:32
Never worked a commer two stroke but did manage to get a ride in one, A tractor unit for Daultons transport.. Quite impressive.
A local company had a flat bed two stroke which blew its exhaust I could hear it coming a mile away. what a racket. The fitters welded it up for the next morning
Energumen
15th October 2008, 21:18
Oh Dear, I feel another 'silly boy' reminiscence coming on.
It was as I remember, the year, (in the sixties), that the Causeway, between Weymouth and Portland was severely damaged and massive mounds of beach cobbles, washed into the rear yards of the properties at the Portland end of the Causeway, before the hill which climbs up to the Prison/ Old Quarry.
We were either under canvas at Wyke Regis, or hutted at Chickerell Barracks, I am unsure as, the years seem to run into one another nowadays.
Well, cab happy as ever, I am driving , back to our Barracks at Brighton, a non eventful trip. But on our dispersal from the barracks, and it being early morning, I am volunteered for the 'Milk Run', taking all the people , whom were without transport, along with their heavy kit, home.
The only vehicle that was empty and with troop seating available at this time, was the Commer Q4 3ton Cargo.
So orf I go with all the lads aboard and gradually drop my human cargo in all areas of the Town. My personal kit being the last dropped off, and other, more personal, and temporarily suspended duties fulfilled, I set off to return to the Barracks.
Well it was a very steep hill and at a point where the road formed a sharp left hand bend, though on a trolley bus route, it was not more than about twenty feet wide, and there were parked vehicles, slightly offset on alternate sides, creating a slalom effect.
When I was at a point where I was at a diagonal angle between two such vehicles, the engine coughed and died, Shute!, no petrol and the first early buses would start running out soon.
I have no alternative but to coast back round the bend and obstructive vehicles, to a point where I can get alongside the Kerb.
A helpful paper boy appeared and offered to see me back, good job too, we know about those 2 inch mirrors from the Wife's handbag. What a helpful young man, I could barely and intermittently see anything in those mirrors, he disappeared behind me and became a phantom voice, "come on, come on, come on, come"-Crunch!. In my off side mirror, a bit of kerb between vehicles, and just behind the truck, the offside rear corner of a parked Bedford dormobile caravanette. Shute!. Only creeping, very little damage at all. The boy, not only helpful, but now invisible, had vanished, I felt so sorry for him, he must have been shushing himself.
I Got the truck into the side after the Bedford owner had moved his vehicle, then it was time to ring my Corporal at home, (I have since learned what he was doing, after two weeks away). filthy habit. He eventually turns up with a can of petrol and gets me going.
But how stupid am I, just to prove it, he notices two jerry cans on the rack behind the cab, and yes, they are full.
Too quick to jump in the cab again, did not realise the fuel had run low, (it had been filled prior to leaving Weymouth), did not realise there were full jerry cans aboard. I need not have run out, need not have had to reverse out of the middle of the road, nor, interrupted my Dear Corporal's coupling activities.
More painfully, I did not need to have made, such a complete pillock of myself.
Again, did I hear you say?.
billyboy
15th October 2008, 22:02
heh heh heh I do like an honest man.
davepenn54
31st October 2008, 16:58
The Roote's TS3 was a brilliant engine as long as you kept it revving:D
I had one in the 70's a Commer Maxiload 16 tonner drove it for about 18 months. It was secondhand from Borden Chemicals down Hampshire way (Borden). I can even nearly remember the reg;:o YCR 821J?
At the time the small general haulage co; I worked for ran about 10 rigids (Dennis's) and a couple of artic's (Foden S80's) one day this Commer ran into the yard with our livery on it and I just went into the office and asked if I could have it. Nobody else wanted it but I loved it :D Gotta say the first time it 'de-coked' itself I crapped myself :o I was carrying cable drum's form BICC at Leigh down to London and as I was on the unlit stretch of the M6 North of Hilton Park Service's I saw sparks flying everywhere behind me and I thought the chains holding the 2 x 5ton cable drums had broken & hit the tarmac. By the time I'd crept onto the HS and checked everything was OK I remembered what somebody had said to me about this 'de-coking' thing.
It was a great motor and with a double passenger seat it was easy to kip in and I really loved it and it sounded like a lorry :D.
If I had beeen looking to be an OD I'm sure that would have been a great start up motor :D never had any trouble with it apart from a broken drivers seat.
Mr-Tomcat
11th February 2009, 22:54
A TS3 engined Commer killed a man from Holyhead/Anglesey years ago going up Rhuallt Hill. I understand the engine went in to reverse, the lorry was never returned to it's operator as it was not wanted.
Andrew.
jamescookes
3rd July 2009, 09:42
Oh what memories ear pluggs ,speed.Yes drove one for a couple of years , until the govnor stuck, frightening,it got faster and faster at 80mph the piston came out through the block and we ground to a halt rapidly.It wasn't an experance i want to repeat in a hurry.
james
Mike Lowe
14th July 2009, 09:14
Around 1960 I was a Field Engineer with CAV in Acton, doing field trials of experimental diesel injection equipment. I heard then of a TS3 engine which broke a fuel pipe which passes across the top of the engine. Diesel got sucked into the manifold in huge quantities, despite what the governor would have been trying to do. I'd love to know what revs it reached, and exactly what blew up first!
zola1
18th November 2010, 22:09
Hi,
Just say hi and enclosing a couple of nice pics of my late dads Commer back in the day. AER Inskip haulage firm in Bedford.
He used to repair these wonderful old lorries back then, discovered these old pics and thought i would share them. hope you like them ?
Any info on these great lorries be wonderful to find some more info...any about still ?
cheers :)
Derrick
dmackay
18th November 2010, 22:14
Tidy looking truck zola1
zola1
18th November 2010, 22:17
Tidy looking truck zola1
Cheers, dad loved his trucks always cleaning and fixing them :)....can you help at at all as i'm trying to get hold a model of one of these any ideas where ?
Derrick
G-CPTN
18th November 2010, 22:19
Search through the contributions on here - there is quite a lot about the Commer TS3 to be found . . .
zola1
18th November 2010, 22:25
Search through the contributions on here - there is quite a lot about the Commer TS3 to be found . . .
Cheers will do :)
jamescookes
20th November 2010, 00:54
Tidy looking truck zola1
Great to see some pics of the old commers,haven't seen any for years in that format still some Maxiloads about ,mostly preserved though.
There used to be a company in Dorset call Fernalls ran a lot of these late 50s early 60s i think.:)
jonogelly
30th December 2010, 21:26
hi i am a newby to this site
just came across this page about TS3
i used to drive one on hire to Edgar allan's of Sheffield local delivery's in the week then a load of twist dills to Port Talbot and boy did it de-coke its self been pulled up many a time by motorist saying your lorries on fire
G-CPTN
30th December 2010, 23:06
Tell that to the youngsters of today and they wuddern berlieve ya!
zola1
31st December 2010, 18:03
hi i am a newby to this site
just came across this page about TS3
i used to drive one on hire to Edgar allan's of Sheffield local delivery's in the week then a load of twist dills to Port Talbot and boy did it de-coke its self been pulled up many a time by motorist saying your lorries on fire
hi,
have you got any pics ?
cheers
jonogelly
1st January 2011, 18:22
hi sorry but pics got lost in house move
zola1
2nd January 2011, 16:00
no worries,
there are few good links on the net here's one
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wol_U4mkjs
great sound ! : )
G-CPTN
2nd January 2011, 16:25
Fantastic bark!
Just as I remember . . .
jonogelly
2nd January 2011, 21:55
Thats one sound you never forget after 45 years it still sounds great
G-CPTN
2nd January 2011, 22:37
Another evocative sound:- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4KDR15Hp-Y
zola1
3rd January 2011, 19:53
Fantastic, : ) does anyone know where there is show this year that we can see any of these Commers will be at ?....i'm thinking maybe the Gaydo show ?any thoughts guys.
cheers
G-CPTN
3rd January 2011, 20:22
I don't think I have seen any 2-stroke Commers at the (small) truck shows that I have attended, but, no doubt, there will be some out there on the circuit . . .
zola1
3rd January 2011, 20:49
i guess they are few and far between ?, i wondered if there had been any restored ?, i'll do some searching and post some info if i find anything
cheers
G-CPTN
3rd January 2011, 20:57
Photos that I have found were taken at the Great Dorset Steam Fair in 2008:-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/fryske/2821243967/in/pool-408566@N20/#/photos/fryske/2821243967/
http://www.gdsf.co.uk/visitors_information/picture_gallery.aspx
Looks like Gaydon could also be a possibility . . .
zola1
3rd January 2011, 21:59
thanks for the links, i'm going to make gaydon this year what date is it on ?
cheers
G-CPTN
4th January 2011, 06:16
http://www.heritage-motor-centre.co.uk/event/classic-and-vintage-commercial-show-2/
zola1
4th January 2011, 22:23
cheers : )
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