Rubber van wings
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Rubber van wings
Hi. Just a thought. Having just been to my first Moggyfest i noticed something. None of the glorious LCV vans had rubber wings. Got me thinking, have they long since rotted away? no one makes new ones?, they are not practical in modern use? Not now road legal? hmmmm!
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1964 Morris 1000 Traveller
1964 Morris 1000 Traveller
- geoberni
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Re: Rubber van wings
Well that's easily answered.Wes wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 8:31 am Hi. Just a thought. Having just been to my first Moggyfest i noticed something. None of the glorious LCV vans had rubber wings. Got me thinking, have they long since rotted away? no one makes new ones?, they are not practical in modern use? Not now road legal? hmmmm!
Rubber wings were unique to GPO Postal and Telephone Engineer vans as a customer requirement when the Vans started production in Oct '53.
Around Jan/Feb '55, they switched to standard metal wings, apart from a small follow-up batch of about 120 vehicles.
So they were only built for around 14 months.
That's a very small number of SII vans compared to the massive number of S3 & S5 vans over the subsequent 15 years or so.
If you do the calculation of allocated chassis numbers, it amounts to about 10,000 vehicles, out of a total production run approaching 327,000.
Basil the 1955 series II


Re: Rubber van wings
Ah OK makes perfect sense 

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1964 Morris 1000 Traveller
1964 Morris 1000 Traveller
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Re: Rubber van wings
The closest total production figure is 327217 - official figure of 326627 is WAY out when known chassis numbers are totted up.geoberni wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 9:19 amWell that's easily answered.Wes wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 8:31 am Hi. Just a thought. Having just been to my first Moggyfest i noticed something. None of the glorious LCV vans had rubber wings. Got me thinking, have they long since rotted away? no one makes new ones?, they are not practical in modern use? Not now road legal? hmmmm!
Rubber wings were unique to GPO Postal and Telephone Engineer vans as a customer requirement when the Vans started production in Oct '53.
Around Jan/Feb '55, they switched to standard metal wings, apart from a small follow-up batch of about 120 vehicles.
So they were only built for around 14 months.
That's a very small number of SII vans compared to the massive number of S3 & S5 vans over the subsequent 15 years or so.
If you do the calculation of allocated chassis numbers, it amounts to about 10,000 vehicles, out of a total production run approaching 327,000.
Further investigations uncovered it was an inside job!!
- geoberni
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- Joined: Fri Aug 04, 2017 11:19 am
- Location: North Leicestershire
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Re: Rubber van wings

That makes the overall percentage of Rubber Wing vehicles even smaller then. Certainly explains why nobody has attempted to reproduce them.
Do you know who produced the Rubber Wings?
Was it subbed out to a company like Dunlop?

Basil the 1955 series II


Re: Rubber van wings
Interesting bit here:
https://www.theautopian.com/this-amazin ... r-benders/
about them all having dents from the factory.
Also:
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?t=1951723
shows that it wasn't unique to just Minors and other vehicle manufacturers had them, maybe they all used the same rubber manufacturer and it may be possible to find the supplier through other vehicle history (if it wasn't in-house).
[img]download/file.php?avatar=1401_1646150056.jpg[/img]