Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 11:06
I bought a nice little D1310 International 2-tonne truck from a bloke in Geelong in 1995. I flew over to pick it up, fully intending to drive it
home.
I also knew another bloke in Geelong who was a machinery and vehicle dealer, and a wrecker (I'll call him Mac), and after I picked up the Inter, I thought I'd pay him a visit - on the off-chance he might have sold something to W.A., that needed to go across as
well.
I had in mind something that could fit on the tray of the Inter to help cover the fuel costs.
However, once in his yard and talking to him, he said he had a truck to go to
Norseman in W.A.
It was an 8-tonne diesel Commer "Knocker", fitted with a Hiab crane behind the cab, and a tipping tray behind the crane.
This was interesting! I reckoned it would be easy to fit the Inter on the back of the Commer, and drive the Commer to
Norseman!
Once at
Norseman, I could unload the Inter and then have a modest 700km drive back to
Perth in the Inter!
We agreed on $1300 as a payment figure for delivery, and I reckoned this would be easy money.
So, I said to Mac, "Sounds good, show us the Commer!".
Well, talk about a shock. We walked up to the Commer, Mac opened the door, and about 50 big spiders scuttled for cover. The interior of the cab was full of cobwebs!
I said to him, "You sure, this thing actually GOES?"
"Too bloody right it does! I'd drive it to
Brisbane tomorrow", he says. "Best truck ever built, nothing ever goes wrong with them! It's even fully licenced, and it has a pink slip as
well!
"I'll go find a battery for it", he says, running off to scrounge a very secondhand battery.
Well, after he digs up about 4 batteries with no life in them, he actually finds a used battery that will start the truck.
He cranks it up, and sure enough, the old Commer diesel promptly bursts into life with a cloud of blue smoke.
I hop in and drive it around to the ramp to load up the Inter. I note with some concern, the rust right around the roofline, hidden by the copious amounts of duct tape!
This thing actually has a pink slip? Ye gods, I hate to think what you need to have wrong, to be defected in Victoria!
We load the Inter up, he fuels the truck up, and off I go, heading for
Bendigo, first stop.
As I leave his yard, I'm startled to see what I thought was a bushfire starting up near his yard!
No, it wasn't a bushfire! - it was just the colossal column of blue smoke left by the Commer, as I gunned it up the street!!
For those who don't know, the Commer Knocker was quite an amazing piece of engineering for the 1960's.
It had power steering, air brakes, and the "Knocker" engine (properly known as the Rootes TS3), was an amazing piece of work - a horizontally-opposed-piston engine (6 pistons in 3 cylinders, facing each other), with cranks on the ends of the conrods driving a central crankshaft.
Did I mention the "Knocker" was 2 stroke, and supercharged as
well? The noise they made at full revs, would make the bunyips turn tail and run!
Add in the fact that the vertical exhaust ended at the roofline, right near your right ear, and you get some idea of the noise you had to put up with, driving them!
Well, I must admit, the old Commer actually drove O.K., even if she was
well-worn. Flat out at 85kmh - but that was a good top speed for trucks built in the '60's, when the blanket speed limit for all trucks was 80kmh.
But there was a worrying imbalance in the left front tyre, that got worse as I travelled towards
Bendigo!
Next thing, there's a loud BANG!! - as the LHF tyre bursts!
I get out to
check the damage, and see what I could do about changing the tyre. Guess what! Yep, there was no spare wheel, no jack, and no wheelbrace to be found!
I got on to the blower to Mac (thank God for the old analogue mobile phones), and told him my problem.
"No worries", he says, "I'll bring you out a spare".
Half an hour later, he arrives with a spare for the Commer in the boot of his big old Mercedes - along with a jack and wheelbrace, too!
We change the tyre and off I go again.
I close in on Bordertown as it's getting dark, and I go to turn the lights on. Yep, you guessed it! No headlights!
But I had
parking lights, so I just squeezed into Bordertown as dark fell.
I pulled up in the main street outside the pub and shut her down to see about a bed for the night.
Yes, I could get a bed, so I went back out to start the Commer to shift it - and guess what?
That battery didn't have enough guts in it to crank it up again! Oh
well, she stays in the main street overnight.
Next morning, I thought I'd be needing to round up another battery - but surprise, surprise! - the old Commer cranked right up.
She did take 4 litres of water, and 2 litres of oil, before she was right to start again, though!
So, off we go, on to
Adelaide and then
Port Augusta! Somewhere through the Riverland, I blew an airline along the rear of the chassis, and started losing air.
I stopped at a garage in a small town (can't recall the town now), and got them to repair it, and off I went again!
Took a shortcut through the Northern part of the Mt Lofty ranges to avoid the main part of
Adelaide, and made it Pt
Augusta by early afternoon. We were cooking with gas!
Then, west of Pt
Augusta, in the farming area - more fun.
Remember that cabin roof that was held on with duct tape?
Well, the duct tape got very tired, West of Pt
Augusta, and decided it couldn't hold onto the roof any more!
First, the front of the cabin roof started lifting and flapping. Then it got worse - it opened up on all three sides!
I could see this old Commer rapidly becoming the first Commer convertible truck around!!
So, I pulled up, pinched some wire from a nearby fence, and after cutting it into short lengths, I punched holes in the four corners of the roof and the cabin, and wired the roof in place!
I must admit, it looked pretty good, and it was much stronger than duct tape!
So, I was back on the road again and flying (
well, flying along at 85kmh, anyway).
Nightfall came, West of
Kimba, so I pulled off the highway into a
gravel pit (before dark! - I was getting cunning now!), and camped up for the night.
It was early December and quite pleasant weather - but during the night, a late-season cold front rolled through, and it went down to 3 degrees overnight!
Do think that sad battery would start the Commer in that cold, next morning? Not a hope!
So, what next? The battery in the Inter was too small to crank the Commer - but the Inter had an alternator! And I found some more fencing wire!
So, with some judicious twisting, I fabricated up a set of very long jumper leads (keeping in mind the fact I couldn't unload the Inter, as I needed a ramp to unload).
I hooked up the fencing wire jumper leads between the Inter and the Commer batteries (making sure they didn't touch any metal anywhere, seeing as they had no insulation) - but after about 40 minutes of running the Inter, the Commer still wouldn't crank over fast enough to start!
So, I flagged down a passing truckie (that took a while!), and he pulled into the
gravel pit and he gave us a jump start! We were cooking with gas again!
I got going and went nearly all day without any drama - but just West of
Caiguna, about 2:00PM, the air pressure started dropping! The air compressor had packed it in!
What was worse, the rear axle was fitted with maxibrakes!
They're the brake boosters that come on, when the air pressure drops! I ground to a halt with the rear brakes locked on!
I had just passed a Main Roads, roadside
camp compound, so I walked back, borrowed a long socket and ratchet off the blokes there, and went back to the Commer, and wound the rear brakes off, by screwing up the long bolt that compresses the internal big spring in each booster, that applies the brakes, when the air pressure drops.
I now had no brakes, and no air pressure - but I had less than 350 kms to go! So, off I went!
I reached the outskirts of
Norseman just on dark, found a
gravel pit with a suitable bank of dirt in it, to use as a ramp, about 5 kms out of town.
I backed up to it, stalled the Commer in reverse to hold it in position, and unloaded the Inter, and drove into town to find the Commer owner (he worked for the Shire council).
I found him easily, told him where his truck was - and warned him it had no brakes - handed him the keys - and I was finally shot of the worst, nerve-wracking drive, I think I've ever endured!
Cheers, Ron.
AnswerID:
612902
Follow Up By: Member - Trouper (NSW) - Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 12:39
Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 12:39
Ron, What a tail, that would make a good story for "Outback Truckers" !!!
Jeff
FollowupID:
883254
Follow Up By: ian.g - Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 12:41
Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 12:41
Think you should sell the movie rites for this yarn, would be a knock out. Cheers Ian.
FollowupID:
883255
Follow Up By: pop2jocem - Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 13:17
Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 13:17
Ron, I'm just guessing here, but I would imagine if them 50 large hairy spiders that had found board and lodging in the cab of the Commer didn't abandon ship at the sound of that 2 stroke diesel bursting into life, the ensuing clouds of burning oil and partially burned fuel would have done the trick. (;-))
Oh the sounds of a Commer Knocker in full flight......LOL.
Cheers
Pop
FollowupID:
883256
Follow Up By: Bob R4 - Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 13:27
Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 13:27
Nothing will ever quite compare to the sound of a Knocker motor on full song.
Every once in a while you get to hear a GM wind up, but the old Knocker was in a class of its own.
Thanks for sharing your story Ron.
Bob
FollowupID:
883257
Follow Up By: Ron N - Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 17:23
Sunday, Aug 06, 2017 at 17:23
There's an amusing postscript to the Commer Knocker story. The bloke who bought it rang me up about a week later.
He said he'd found the problem with the air compressor - it was simply a broken disc valve in the compressor head. He sourced a new one, and she was right to go again!
Then he said - "Geez, how much oil did you go through on the drive over?"
I said, "
Well, it took about 2 litres a day, on average".
He said, "Do you know where it went?"
"Well", I said - "I thought it was burning it, judging by the exhaust smoke!"
"No, it couldn't have been burning too much", he said - "Because there was about 10 litres of oil splattered all over the drive train and chassis! It took me nearly 3 days of pressure cleaning, to get all the dirt, and all the oil coating, off!"
Despite all that, the bloke was quite happy with the Commer - he reckoned it suited him fine as a
farm truck, as he had a small
farm South of
Norseman - and for what he paid for it (I think it was $6000), he got a tip truck and a crane combined, for the money.
But as for ever being a roadworthy rig again? - not a hope!
Cheers, Ron.
FollowupID:
883261