M25 tank transporter | |
Origin: | United States |
Type: | 40 ton (36,287 kg) 6x6 Tank recovery truck-trailer |
Is Vehicle: | yes |
Service: | 1941–1955 |
Wars: | World War II |
Designer: | Knuckey Truck Company |
Manufacturer: | M26: Pacific Car & Foundry Co. M15: Fruehauf Trailer Co. |
Variants: | M26A1, M26A2 |
Spec Label: | M25[1] |
Weight: | Empty[2] M26: 48000lb M15: 36600lb M25: 84300lb Loaded M26: 103000lb M15: 36600lb M25: 164300lb |
Length: | M26: 25feet M15: 38feet |
Width: | M26: 10feet M15 12inchesft6inchesin (ftin) |
Height: | M26: 11feet |
Crew: | 7 |
Armour: | front NaNinches sides, rear NaNinches |
Primary Armament: | .50 cal M2 machine gun |
Engine: | Hall-Scott 440 gasoline |
Engine Power: | 240hp |
Transmission: | 4 speed x 3 speed |
Fuel Capacity: | 120USgal |
Vehicle Range: | 1201NaN1 |
Speed: | 28mph |
The M25 tank transporter (G160) was a combination 6x6 M26 armored heavy tank transporter/tank recovery tractor and companion 40-ton M15 trailer introduced into US Army service in Europe in 1944–45. Manufactured by Pacific Car & Foundry Co., it was a substantial upgrade over the Diamond T M19 transporter/trailer duo introduced in 1940.
Nicknamed the Dragon Wagon, it was replaced by the 10 ton 6x6 M123 semi-tractor beginning in 1955.[3]
In 1942 a new 40 ton semi-trailer tank transporter was needed with better off-road performance than the M9 24 small-wheel trailer, and greater capacity than the 30 ton 8 large-wheel Shelvoke and Drewry semi-trailers used by the Diamond T tractor unit. Designed by the Fruehauf Trailer Company of Detroit, Michigan,[4] it was heavier than the Diamond T could manage. A companion M26 tractor was designed by the San Francisco-based Knuckey Truck Company. When it could not keep up with the Army's demands, production was awarded to the Pacific Car & Foundry Co. of Seattle, Washington.
Designated TR-1 by Pacific Car, the chain-driven 12-ton 6x6 M26 tractor was powered by a Hall-Scott 440 10901NaN1 6-cylinder gasoline engine developing 240hp at 2000 rpm and 810lbfft at 1200 rpm. Developed for the M26, it was used to uprate the Diamond T. Some 2,100 Type 440s were built. Baxter notes "over 1,300" M26 and M26A1 being built.[4]
Unusually, the tractor unit was fitted with both an armored cab and two winches with a combined pull of 60 tons,[4] allowing it to do light battlefield recovery work.
A later unarmored version of the M26 tractor was designated the M26A1. An experimental ballast tractor conversion was evaluated by the British Fighting Vehicle Proving Establishment[4]
After the war, some of them (both armored and unarmored) were bought as surplus and used to carry oversize loads such as transformers, locomotives and heavy equipment.[5]