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1919 2 ton Collier Truck


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William H. Collier  built The marathon automobile in Jackson Tennessee 1907 to 1910 then moved

to Nashville Tennessee 1910 to 1914  , Then Collier started his own Truck company  in 1916 to 1922 . There are only two known . Found this Collier truck on e-bay . Been restoring in last 3 years , ( COLLIER MOTOR TRUCK COMPANY )

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Edited by Marathon Man (see edit history)
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Who did the wheels? Any idea if it’s a three ton unit?

 

There are some similar heroic restorations on the links below. Nice bunch of guys, a father and sons family that restore WWI trucks.


https://hmvf.co.uk/topic/314-ww1-dennis-truck-find/

 

 

https://hmvf.co.uk/topic/9672-ww1-thornycroft-restoration/

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19 hours ago, edinmass said:


Who did the wheels? Any idea if it’s a three ton unit?

 

There are some similar heroic restorations on the links below. Nice bunch of guys, a father and sons family that restore WWI trucks.


https://hmvf.co.uk/topic/314-ww1-dennis-truck-find/

 

 

https://hmvf.co.uk/topic/9672-ww1-thornycroft-restoration/

 

Thanks Ed,

One of my favorite threads to follow.

 

Their current efforts to bring a WW1 era Peerless Lorry back to life is fantastic:

https://hmvf.co.uk/topic/35087-ww1-peerless-lorry-restoration/

 

Wonderful work on the Collier! Please keep posting!

Edited by Terry Harper (see edit history)
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On 2/5/2022 at 7:07 PM, edinmass said:


Who did the wheels? Any idea if it’s a three ton unit?

 

There are some similar heroic restorations on the links below. Nice bunch of guys, a father and sons family that restore WWI trucks.


https://hmvf.co.uk/topic/314-ww1-dennis-truck-find/

 

 

https://hmvf.co.uk/topic/9672-ww1-thornycroft-restoration/

canton tire co . in Ohio did the rubber & some amish also in Ohio did the wood wheels & the metal fellow. The truck could be a 3 ton but the old papers show its a 2 ton ?

Edited by Marathon Man (see edit history)
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Probably the only difference from a 2 to a 3 ton is springs and wheels. The rest is probably identical, except gearing. The truck just looks like it’s a 3 ton job......but one would expect dual rear wheels most of the time, except that you wheels look like they are heavier than just about any single wheel I have seen from that era.

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