Project Waler was an unsuccessful Australian defence procurement exercise which sought to replace the Australian Army'sM113 armoured personnel carriers with more capable armoured fighting vehicles (AFVs). It was initiated in 1980 and cancelled in 1985 without any vehicles being procured. The goal of the project was to replace the Army's M113s during the mid-1990s with between 500 and 1,000 AFVs optimised for Australian conditions and built in Australia. Several years worth of scoping work was carried out, but the project was cancelled by the Australian Government in July 1985 due to concerns over the cost and capabilities of the proposed vehicles.
Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) women working on a Churchill tank at a Royal Army Ordnance Corps depot, 10 October 1942, by Lt. Taylor, War Office official photographer; restored by Adam Cuerden Nick-D rightfully called this out as a posed publicity photo, which is almost certainly true. But the unfortunate thing about historical imagery is that whatever gets passed down to us is all we get.
Self-portrait of Jeremiah Gurney, restored by Adam Cuerden Gurney's most famous contribution to the photographing of military history is grabbing a few photos of Abraham Lincoln after his death, which were ordered destroyed... but one copy was kept.
The work practices in the photo are insanely unsafe - e.g. notice the workers working on the back of the tank and inside the tank while a turret is being winched into position. I'd be amazed if this was allowed even under wartime OH&S rules. All the workers are also wearing very clean uniforms, which is not consistent with spending any time actually working on a tank. I was an oppose on the nomination as I didn't think it accurately depicted working practices. Nick-D (talk) 00:11, 11 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]