AEC Roadtrain
AEC Roadtrain | ||
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Kerb weight 7 LT 19 cwt (8.08 t) | |
The AEC Roadtrain was a prototype road train designed by the British Overseas Mechanical Transport Committee and built by Leyland Motors and Associated Equipment Company (AEC) in the early 1930s to meet a British Army requirement for an offroad capable heavy transport vehicle to open up remote areas of the British Empire.
Design
The AEC Roadtrain consisted of an eight-wheeled tractor unit and two eight wheeled trailers, the entire train was 71 ft 8 in (21.84 m) long. The roadtrain's 12 wheels were articulated and independently sprung, assisting in movement over uneven terrain. Each of the roadtrain's 12 axles were fitted with a single brake drum, alternating sides down the length of the train, whilst the braking system acted upon the rear trailer and moved with decreasing power towards to front tractor unit.[1][2][3]
Tractor unit
The tractor unit was an 8x8 vehicle powered by a 130 horsepower (97 kW) six-cylinder AEC diesel engine of 540 cubic inches (8.8 L) displacement, driven through a 4 speed manual transmission and 3 speed transfer case. All wheels had single tyres, the steering for the tractor unit was from the first and fourth axles, with the vehicle pivoting on the centre two axles, traction was applied to all eight wheels through four differentials.[1][2][3][4]
Trailers
The roadtrain's eight wheeled trailers were self-tracking, following in the tracks of the tractor unit. The trailers were fitted with two bogies at either end that turned in opposite directions, each bogie fitted with a turntable connected to the other by a spring loaded linkage.[1][2][3][4]
History
Development
At the 1927 British Colonial Office conference it was determined it would be more cost effective to develop a land tractor or road train than to invest the high costs required to install
Production units

Only four (some sources state three) AEC Roadtrains were ever produced. The first prototype unit was constructed by Leyland Motors whilst the subsequent units were all built by AEC's wholly owned subsidiary company Hardy Motors. The trailers were all produced by R. A. Dyson & Co. of Liverpool.[1][2][3][5]
African unit
The first AEC Roadtrain was completed in December 1930 at a cost of £12,000 and was fitted with a 539 cubic inches (8.83 L) six-cylinder petrol engine. This first unit completed 5,500 miles (8,900 km) of laden and unladen tests at the War Department's grounds at Farnborough, on completion of the trials the unit was shipped to the Gold Coast for further trials before it was put to work.[1][2][3][5]
Arriving in
Australian unit

Following the success of the first road train, a second was built by AEC at a cost of £7,000, the inclusion of AEC components including the engine contributing to the £5,000 saving from the first vehicle. The second unit had initially been destined to go to South Africa who had been involved in funding the program from the beginning, but the Government of Australia committed to pay £1,000 a year for two years to the British Overseas Mechanical Transport Committee, and on this basis a last minute decision was made to test the vehicle in Australia. Other countries considered included
Arriving in Australia in early 1934, following some local testing it set out in April from Adelaide to Alice Springs via Oodnadatta under the command of Captain (later Brigadier) E. M. Dollery, Chief Inspector of Mechanical Transport for the Defence Department in Australia, with a British crew comprising a Captain E. C. Roscoe, two driver/mechanics as well as a local cook. The road train covered the 1,100 miles (1,800 km) of unmade roads in three weeks, and carried all fuel and supplies for the trip.[1][2][3][5][6] Captain Dollery later wrote:
"We tracked over trackless wastes of sandhills. Some days we only progressed two or three miles. We drove a car ahead to reconnoiter the most practicable routes and we usually had to make our own tracks to consolidate the sand, then we winched the trailers over one by one. When we reached the Hugh River we had to cross it eleven times in twenty two miles, each crossing involving a different tactic ... This was a completely new development in motor transport and all the new innovations were novel to us. It was the first time too we ever had a vehicle driven on all eight wheels, with a braking system that acted on the rear trailer first and so on back down the trailers to the prime-mover itself. But of course, the most striking part of its design, in regard to Australian conditions, was its ability to negotiate sharp turns."[2]

In Alice Springs the road train was loaded for its first commercial trip, a load of timber and corrugated iron for the first building to be erected in Tennant Creek, a pub.[2][7]
The Government Roadtrain, as it became known in Australia, was purchased by the Australian Government later that year for £2,000 and remained in central Australia. Operated by the
The Australian Government Roadtrain is believed to be the only surviving example and is located at the National Road Transport Hall of Fame in Alice Springs.[2][3][5][4]
Russian units

A third and probably a fourth AEC Roadtrain were sent to the Soviet Union in 1935. The Russian units were delivered with three trailers each with a gross vehicle weight of 30 long tons (30.5 t; 33.6 short tons) and a load carrying capacity 15 long tons (15.2 t; 16.8 short tons), one of the trailers delivered to the Soviet Union was fitted with a hopper for the carriage of grain, another was fitted with a fuel tank of 2,500 imperial gallons (11,000 L; 3,000 US gal) capacity. After trials were completed, they were used to carry heavy tools, stores and equipment to the Ural Mountains throughout World War II. There is some speculation that one of the Soviet units was later sent to Tanganyika.[2][3][5][8]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i The Argus, "Road train for military use tests in Australia", published 13 February 1934, retrieved from Trove 30 October 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n National Road Transport Hall of Fame, "The AEC 8x8 Government Roadtrain", roadtransporthall.com, retrieved 30 October 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j TrucksPlanet.com, "8x8 Government Roadtrain", trucksplanet.com, retrieved 30 October 2018.
- ^ a b c d Trailer magazine, "Australia's first road train at ITTES", trailermag.com.au, retrieved 30 October 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f Emma Haskin, "75 years since first road train", abc.net.au, retrieved 30 October 2018.
- ^ ISBN 9780681890176.
- ^ Famous N Territory Road Train Still in Service Truck & Bus Transportation June 1946 page 22
- ^ The Sydney Morning Herald, "Road-trains for Russia", published 13 August 1935, retrieved from Trove 31 October 2018.