During Land Rover's lifetime there
have been many varied, weird and wonderful ambulance conversions carried
out. However, for mainstream (British) military use there has only
been one major player - Marshall Special Purpose Vehicles (aka Marshall
Military Engineering) of Cambridge.
Broadly speaking, there have been four generations of the Land
Rover-based Marshall Field Ambulance.
First Generation
The First Generation utilised an extended and raised body on either
a Series II/IIA or, less commonly, Series III 109". These were
in production from the late Fifties right up to the early Eighties
and were based on the MoD specification 109" of whatever Series
was in production at the time. The Dutch also used a number of these
in a slightly modified form. Roughly 2,000 of these were made during
the production lifespan.
Second Generation
The Second Generation was based on a rebuilt 101 Forward Control
and had a comparatively short production run. All 101-based Ambulances
were built during 1981-2 using factory-remanufactured 1976 vehicles,
101FC production having ceased in 1978. All share the GJ-series
of registrations.
Third Generation
The Third Generation might be considered a sort of stop-gap measure
as Marshalls didn't have it all their own way. Based on the 127"
chassis (an extended 110 chassis, the modification being carried
out by in-house by Land Rover Special Vehicles), there are two versions
of the body - that of Marshalls and Locomotors. While both being
very similar, Marshalls managed to carry over the rounded corners
at the front of the body, echoing the aesthetics of the earlier
version, while the Locomotors body adopts a more slab-like approach.
The 130 is a quantum leap from the 101, which in turn is a quantum
leap from the 109. With the 127-based version, the process of evolution
is very clear to see. For a military vehicle, it is also surprisingly
civilian - this is because it's not based on an MoD-specification
vehicle, but one built by LRSV. Like the V8 110s the MoD used for
special applications prior to the adoption of the military-modified
300Tdi, the basic electrical system, switchgear, lighting, dashboard,
cab and seating are normal factory build.
Fourth Generation
The current version is based on the military-spec Defender XD130
(and, in this guise, is also known as "Pulse" or, less
accurately, "Wolf"). Hopefully someone will be able to
clarify whether there have been different versions of this design,
particularly as the base vehicle has developed from the original
Land Rover 127 to the current XD130, using a purpose-built 127"
chassis.
The first two generations are well represented within the ranks
of EMLRA, including an armoured variant for use in Northern Ireland,
and some 3G 127-based examples have started to appear. Alas, no-one
has yet been able to obtain an XD130 - but it probably won't be
too long as they are now beginning to appear, although with prices
at the thick end of £15,000 they won't be a common sight for
some time. In early 2003 a Club-based consortium nearly secured
a desert-specification ex-works demonstrator, but unfortunately
some rather more heavyweight commercial concerns found out and immediately
whisked it away (leaving its UK V5 documentation behind) to an undisclosed
export destination... just before the second session in the Gulf
kicked-off.
A detailed breakdown
of the Marshall Land Rover ambulance history was published jointly
in the summer of 2006 by the EMLRA and IMPS - see Newsletter No
88 for the feature, or view a PDF version of the feature here.
