
Here's a result of some desk duty at the AWM library for a few days making summaries and notes.
With the help of archives from the AWM and the fantastic number of books that have been published... REMLR ARN information can checked against a simple data foundation of dates and facts. A foundation that is trustworthy as any available, but also easily updated or corrected if an error comes to light.
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The "REMLR SVN Timeline" is in spreadsheet format and is compiled from sources such as:
An AWM official history of Australian Army in Vietnam ("Fighting To The Finish" by Ekins and McNeill, Appendix B)
http://www.awm.gov.au/histories/seasia/fighting-to-the-finish/The official
HMAS Sydney "Reports On Proceedings", monthly reports from 1965 to 1973 (excl. 1967) archived at the AWM. eg (1965)
http://www.awm.gov.au/collection/records/awm78/329/awm78-329-11.pdfand my summary notes of the
Sydney ROPs:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0ByrmtN4GydAxa1kxYmJoV2ZCdjA/editA number of books published by
RAR Battalion Associations detailing their 'Tours' in South Vietnam.
An AWM volume, "
Mud & Dust", by Michael Cecil (2009)
http://www.awm.gov.au/shop/item/9781741107678/#.Uuw6Zj2SywAA book about HMAS Sydney, "
The Vung Tau Ferry and Escort Ships (1965-1972)" by Noel Payne and Rodney Nott (2001).
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HERE IT IS:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AirmtN4GydAxdHRTX0pKMHRrVkR6Y3JRdnlRV0t0VkE&usp=drive_web#gid=0This spreadsheet is a direct result of the following threads:
http://remlr.com/forum/index.php?topic=206.0 "A couple of logistical resupply photos"
and
http://remlr.com/forum/index.php?topic=933.0 "VTF Notation in the ARN Database"
and
http://remlr.com/forum/index.php?topic=215.0#msg1654 "Document - Australian Unit Allocations in South Vietnam" [dated may 1972]
WHY?
In brief, I have researched the shipping and unit allocation dates to build up and cross-check any details on files pointing to specific units who used certain vehicles in SVN. The shipping files are not neatly sorted, and some handwritten forms are dated only with a day and a month but necessarily a year. Its all a bit of a lucky dip. The majority of the "Bills Of Lading", shipping manifests, telexes and other shipping documents seen so far do not mention a specific unit source in relation to a vehicle in the main; but some do have their Units recorded, eg., 17 Construction Sqn.
Big thanks to Mike Cecil, Zulu Delta (Glen) and Tommy (Stuart).
In the next few weeks, the ARN spreadsheet listing "SVN service" for Australian Army vehicles with source document references.

* observations so far
1. some vehicles are sent over, come back to be fixed, and are then sent back over again.
2. some vehicles are obviously in a pool. At the 1ALSG vehicles were used by numerous members of the various units. "Sign here, take that one, here's the keys". On one log that documents "visitors to vessels", certain ARNs come and go on the log over a 48 hour period and they are driven by a number of different members with correspondingly different unit identification. Yet other 1ALSG units, eg, 33 Dental Unit, have their own allocated or establishment vehicle. Units of the 1ATF also have their specific vehicles.
3. loading and unloading the Vung Tau Ferry and other ships was honed to an art form as the years of the war went along. Preparations, meetings, and stores planning SOPs etc are archived at the AWM as well. Where to stow the 6x6 or the MBT so the trim of the ship is optimal? I have seen a "Trim Plan" (HMAS Sydney) in the archives so far; it folds out as large as a blueprint. Impressive.
4. Aid shipments, cargo for local civil affairs units and some large shipments from Canberra to Khmer (aka Cambodia). There are more than a few. I knew we sent 'shiploads' of Dodge trucks, etc, to Cambodia ( eg AWM film F10747 --
http://static.awm.gov.au/video/F10747.WMV ). There were 3 shipments; a typical load was 134 trucks and parts. But how about the Jeparit delivering sub-machine guns to Vung Tau? They were delivered in December 1970, just in time for Christmas, and well before the trucks etc. They were sent via the Dept of Supply to the AUSTEMBA in Phnom Penh to hand over as "Aid" -- 3000 Thompson submachine guns (23 pallets) with a further quantity of pallets of magazines and 85,000 rounds to suit. Was it WW2 surplus? I wonder what PM John Gorton was up to? In October 1970 the Lon Nol government had been installed in Cambodia, and it was pro-US and anti-communist.
(Something something something CIA something redacted redacted perhaps)