Mega Super Service

Mega Super Service

For all Morris J type Vans, Morris JB vans and (BMC 50's vehicles)Torque! e-mail fiftiesvehicles@mail.com. The copyright of any photograph on this blog-site will remain with its owner. No infringement intended.

Monday, 25 February 2013

Vintage vehicle auction. Perth, Tayside.


Vintage Vehicle and Machinery Auction


Saturday 9 March 2013, 10am.

Errol Airfield, Errol, Perth PH2 7TB Admission: £5 Adults - includes car park and catalogue (Under 16s free)
Catering and toilet facilities on site.

Call us NOW on 01821 642574 if you'd like to sell your vintage vehicle (internal storage available). 
Or Download an Entry Form
. All vehicle types welcome, including:
  • TRACTORS
  • SCOOTERS
  • MOTORCYCLES
  • TRUCKS
  • HORSEDRAWN CARRIAGES
  • COMMERCIAL VEHICLES
  • BUSES
  • MOTORSPORTS
  • IMPLEMENTS
  • DIGGERS
  • LORRIES
  • VANS

  • Early entry ensures inclusion in our online catalogue and nationwide advertising campaign.
  • All entries must be on site by Wednesday 27 February to guarantee inclusion in auction catalogue.
    Updates are made daily, visit our Auction Catalogue for lot details and images.

Thursday, 14 February 2013

J type sill panels.

MTR restorations have an Austin 101 in their workshop. One of the jobs being undertaken are new sills and door runners.
So I understand while making one pair they thought they would make a spare second pair.
Simple design but complicated by the tapering and gently curves of the body work.



Great work guys.

Monday, 11 February 2013

Yet more far flung vans.

I was sent a picture of a J van coming out of some trees.
From the registration number it was not hard to work out the van lives in Tasmania.
Sending the picture to the MCJTV vehicle owners group soon produced the information to track the van down.
Yes they have a blog site for their organic fresh produce. I have e-mailed them in the hope they can supply a chassis number, we await further progress.
Now another interesting "new" van is this
A Left hand drive, square side lamps Morris Commercial van in a car museum in Portugal. I'm trying to track down further details. After an hour searching on the WWW
I have tracked down some further details. Listed as a 1950 van.

Seems to be owned by a vehicle hire company, hiring vehicles for films,TV, weddings and corporate events.etc
On another note, this blog site had its biggest number of hit's yesterday, 120 people checked it out, or maybe it was me 119 times. Thanks to all for the support.

Friday, 8 February 2013

Far Flung J type vans.

Recently spotted on the Indian version of e-bay /exchange and mart, (mumbai.oix.in)
was this advert.
Shame the advert has expired as I wonder what the other views of the van were like and what if any details were given.
I will have to check this site from now on! Current exchange rate equals £8,824.00
 This is the first Indian van I've ever seen. Thanks to M.P. for the picture.


The recent J van advert on e-bay has disappeared , a cash sale maybe?
Turns out this is the old Colin Ellis van, RGK 535, a telephone utility van serial number U69944. It was sold on e-bay about 3 years ago in a similar state, they don't seem to have done any work on this since purchase.


Will it be restored as a GPO van, a normal van or another damn retro ice cream van?

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Side lamp castings.

A small batch of side lamp castings have been produced. There are a couple of restoration projects out there that need these elusive parts.
One or two restored vans also have need of these castings, as a slight knock to the headlamp can easily crack the aluminium at its narrowest part.
These castings will need cleaning up, and both the headlamp bolt hole and side lamp hole with have to be drilled/filed out.
Not too much of a "big job", aluminium is not hard to shape.
Selling at cost price, £28 each plus postage which on a pair would be £2.36. in the UK.
Happy to post to anywhere in the world but postage will be higher.
( Example Australia would be £7.60 for a pair )
Would it be worth having a spare one?
e-mail fiftiesvehicles@mail.com . First come first served.

Tuesday, 5 February 2013

More e-bay sales items.


Armstrong Shock Absorber. Type AT7 / 1118 / C
New old stock. Metal is rust discoloured as can be seen in the photograph. Pulls open with no leaks.
Armstrong and Type number are embossed on the metal.
Suitable for the rear of Morris J type Vans 1950 - 53, chassis no. 001 to 17744.
J greetings card.
And saving the best till last.
 View of the dash panel, showing rotary ignition/light switch and the side valve engine with cylinder head removed.
 H.P. HO????SON Ltd, Heating Engineers, Bucks, Phone Bourne End ?????
Checking the local Telephone book, their no longer around.
Note Rubber wings, tyre pressures 22-24 painted on body work.
 Spot lamp bracket on the front and the headlamp mounting holes in the cab side.
GPO spec drivers seat base? and hinged mates seat.
 Might need a bit of filler.

 GPO spec ventilation grill insert in tray and opening windscreen.
 Body plate seems to be missing.
 Watch your step getting in.


Taken from the e-bay advert,

up for auction is my mates classic 50s Jtype panel van!

morris jtype panel van
for full restoration v5 in his name states build of manufacture 1950 many period parts still there has an 
unusual opening drivers windscreen all dash panels and dials are there gearbox & some engine parts 
are there chassis in good con needing miner repair to 1 outrigger theres a new old stock rear cross 
member not fitted and some spare front doors and wing rolls & steers freely but will need a trailer etc 
to remove cud deliver at buyers expence
this not a quick job it needs a lot of work but a very rare and interesting vehicle so well worth saving or 
using all the good parts to save another!
item located in our unit near bangor n/wales has been dry stored until last week space needed viewing 
recommended any qz mail me and ill ask my mate thanks for looking

item advertised elsewhere at £2500
so reserve the right to remove
deposit via paypal and rest on collection preferred open to sensible offers!!!

Monday, 4 February 2013

TV ad: Cadbury Dairy Milk: Joyville Special Delivery

The Australian Cadbury JB van is hitting the road and TV screens.


 The van has been restored and given a "striking " paint job.


The van as seen on promotional posters. Details of the advert are,
The Joyville-wacky commercial was filmed in New Zealand (so it’s alluringly pretty) and follows the Joyville driver in his Joymobile as he makes his journey to deliver three different chocolate creations, towing fifty thousand purple helium balloons behind him. Joyville surfers deliver life-sized chocolate surfboards. Joyville dog trainers present a giant chocolate sausage dog and an archaeologist accompanies a Dairy Milk T-Rex.
Watch the video here.

TV ad: Cadbury Dairy Milk: Joyville Special Delivery

Thursday, 31 January 2013

100 Years of Morris.

Now you will know or if you don't you do now that in the spring of 1913 William Morris's first car, the Morris Oxford was produced for £175.
To celebrate 100 years of Morris and the 65th anniversary of the launch of so many "new" models of car and commercials many events are being planned this year.
It is 65 years since the 1948 Motor Show, the first motor show after the war and a bright new era was dawning, remember "export or die".
So we have the big 65th anniversary J rally in Birmingham, being organised by the J register and a big two day event at Cornbury Park, Oxfordshire,
 ( www.cornburypark.co.uk ) the same weekend, 15-16th June. Many many car and van clubs will be there.





 Other clubs are still being added, all will be doing a display, what a sight this will be.
The Morris Isis, Cowley and Hindustan club, The 6/80 & MO club, The POVC and The Morris LCV group have all just announced they will be there! Still many more clubs have yet to announce their intentions. Check out www.morriscentenary.org.uk and  www.jtypevan.com for further details.
Will you be there?


Wednesday, 30 January 2013

The resurrection of Pippy.


The story of Pipe Perfection’s Australian Morris J Van.

Ask any plumber and he’ll tell you they stumble across all sorts of things as they visit their customers. That’s how Darren Clancy came up with the idea of restoring a J Van.

Darren was doing some plumbing work for Newtown car photographer, Peter Bateman, when he set eyes on the photographer’s Morris J-Type van. It was love at first sight – but the van was definitely not for sale.

“I decided there and then we’d have to get one,” recalls Darren. “Apart from anything else, a vintage van looked like a fun way to help promote our expertise in plumbing for vintage houses.”
J-Type vans don’t come on the market that often, but pretty soon Darren and partner Alayne had tracked one down near Cairns and a deal was done.

A van that earned its crust
Like most J Vans (as they are known), the Pipe Perfection van was put to work as soon as it was ready for the road in 1958. After arriving in Australia in CKD (Completely Knocked Down) form, it was assembled at the Nuffield plant in Rosebery in Sydney.

First delivered to Guest’s Bakery in Wangaratta, it was soon sporting the Sunnycrest livery after Guest’s was taken over. After long service – perhaps 20 years – ownership passed to the ‘Wang Rovers’ footie club, which used it as a their party van and mobile Esky. Worse still, it was painted in a glittering purple!

Luckily, the van was then purchased by J Van enthusiast (or custodian, as they like to be called) Steve Hartnell, who took it to Queensland and commenced restoration. Sanding back the hideous purple paint revealed the Sunnycrest red – and the van’s history literally came to light. While restoration stalled, Steve had painted the van the green it is today before putting it on the market in 2011.

Missing in action
After finding the van, the next hurdle was transporting it 2,500kms back to Sydney.
You might think that sending a truck to bring a small van back to Sydney would be pretty straight forward. Not so, as it turned out. The first truck driver refused to load the van because it had some parts in the back. The next trucking company subcontracted the job – and then the fun really began. “The van left Cairns as planned, but the trucking company lost track of it,” says Darren. “This went for about three weeks, at which stage we asked whether we should report it stolen from their yard!”

Meanwhile, the word went out among the J Van fraternity – which turned out to be the right move. Soon, Brisbane truck driver and J Van custodian Michael Freeman called Peter Bateman saying that he’d just seen a green J-Type going south over the Gateway Bridge! “This was the first we knew of it even having left Cairns,” says Darren. “Mike had some contacts and was able to find out where it was.”



Getting stuck into restoration
By now it was January 2012. Luckily, the local mechanic who services Pipe Perfection’s vans had done his apprenticeship on Morris vehicles and was able to get the engine running again. The radiator was full of rust and mud and had to be rebuilt. “I’ve seen some blocked drains in my life, but this rivalled any of them,” says Darren. Meanwhile, Darren and Alayne were busy sourcing parts from the UK, New Zealand and Australia – and where they couldn’t be found, had them custom made.

Replacement drum brakes turned out to be the hardest parts to find. Darren recalls, “We called, emailed and hassled people from Campbelltown to the UK with no luck, but the Peter Bateman located what we needed in the roof of a home in the northern beaches.”

Another challenge was rewiring the old girl. Unable to find an auto electrician who was interested in the task, Darren spent 30 hours rewiring the van, using some 20 metres of wiring in the process. “It was a bit like restoring the plumbing of an old house,” comments Darren, “If you can’t get what you need ‘off-the-shelf’, you have to use a little ingenuity to solve the problems that arise.”


Then it was time get a ‘Blue Slip’ – and after a minor setback on the first attempt, the Pipe Perfection J Van – by now named ‘Pippy’ by Darren and Alayne’s kids – was back on the road after a rest of nearly 30 years!

The finishing touch
There was one last thing to do before the J Van could start earning her keep as a mobile billboard. “We wanted to signwrite her for the business,” says Alayne Clancy, “But the modern livery of our other vehicles didn’t seem right. So we came up with the idea of using the old plumber’s wrench as a symbol and the slogan ‘Have a happy day’. And you know, that’s what our little van does. She puts a smile on the face of every one who sees her.”


As a matter of interest, Pippy has become perhaps the most travelled (including being towed) J Van in the world. It went from Wangaratta to Darwin and then on to Cairns then back to Sydney!

About Morris J Vans
It is not known how many J vans worked in Australia but thousands were assembled at the Nuffield (BMC) plant in Joynton Avenue, Rosebery in Sydney. Although the plant is long gone and has been replaced by a huge apartment development, new streets such as Morris Ave and Wolseley Ave serve as reminders of the area’s past. So does the area’s new name, Victoria Park – the name of a racecourse that occupied the ground before the Nuffield works.

Large customers included the NRMA with 101 J-Types and the Gas & Fuel Corporation, while many bakery fleets across the country relied on them to deliver fresh bread to homes and businesses.

John Young

About Pipe Perfection
Pipe Perfection is Sydney’s only plumbing expert with a money-back happiness guarantee. Being based in the inner west, Pipe Perfection has built up specialised expertise in taking care of plumbing, drainage, roofing and gas installation and repairs for the vintage houses so popular in the area – with an old-fashioned commitment to punctuality and courtesy. Need a plumber? Call Pipe Perfection… and have a happy day!
Many thanks to Susan Attwood for sending me this story and pictures.

A list of chassis number and registration dates.

J/R 010 10/1949--J/R 649 1949--J/R 755 1/1950--J/R 1061 12/1949--J/R 1102 12/1949--J/L 1518 1950--J/R 1612 03/1950--J/L 2935 1951--J/R 4491 11/1950--J/R 6050 12/1950--J/R 6187 1/1951--J/R 10916 12/1951--J/R 10972 1/1952--J/R 14776 12/1952--J/R 145931/1953--J/R 15455 1/1953--J/R 16261 03/1953--J/R 18124 1952--J/R 19902 12/1953--J/R 20658 02/1954--J/R 21720 12/1953--J/R 23555 1954--J/R 24274 1954--J/R 25618 12/1954--J/R 25079 1/1955--J/R 25741 05/1955--J/R 29869 11/1955--J/R 30963 11/1955--J/R 3183110/1955--J/R 32465 11/1955--J/R 33340 1/1956--J/R 35466 1/1957--J/R 35671 12/1956--JB/MR 37200 06/1957--JB/MR 39547 12/1957--JB/MR 39012 1/1958--JB/MR 39648 1/1958--JB/MR 42533 1/1959--JB/MR 42677 12/1958--JB/MR 43367 1959--JB/MR 45648 1/1960--JB/MR 45693 12/1959--JB/MR 46009 02/1960--JB/MR 47648 12/1960--JB/MR 47907 12/1960--JB/MR 48069 01/1961--JB/MR 48219 01/1961
Approximate Production data for each year.
1949 750 vehicles -1950 5347 -1951 5051 -19524098 -1953 5027 -1954 6000 -1955 6894 -19563169 -1957 3284 -1958 3131 -1959 2965 -19602516 -1961 362
Total produced 48620


Ardingly Vehicle Show 12/7/09. Picture taken by Clive Barker.