M2 high-speed tractor | |
Origin: | United States |
Type: | Aircraft tug |
Service: | By 1943 |
Used By: | US Army |
Wars: | World War II |
Design Date: | February 1941 |
Manufacturer: | Cleveland Tractor Company |
Number: | 8,510 |
Is Vehicle: | yes |
Length: | 1662NaN2 |
Width: | 702NaN2 |
Height: | 682NaN2 |
Weight: | 14700lb |
Suspension: | Volute spring |
Speed: | 22mph |
Vehicle Range: | 100miles |
Engine: | Hercules WXLC3, 6-cylinder, petrol engine |
Engine Power: | 1500NaN0 |
Crew: | 3 |
The M2 high-speed tractor (or colloquially M2 Cletrac) was an aircraft tug used by the United States Army Air Forces from 1942.[1] [2]
The M2 is a fully tracked vehicle designed to tow aircraft on primitive airfields. It was equipped with a winch with of cable, an auxiliary generator (3kW at 110 volts DC), and an air compressor (3 stage, 16.7 CFPM, 2,000 PSI)
The M2 was standardized in February 1941 as Medium Tractor M2.
Surviving examples are at the Estrella Warbird Museum,[3] the Wright Museum,[4] the AAF Museum in Danville, VA, Overloon War Museum,[5] the Pima Air & Space Museum,[6] the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum, the Yanks Air Museum, Chino CA, the March Field Air Museum in Riverside CA, The National WWII Museum in New Orleans, Bright's Pioneer Museum, Plainsburg CA, two at the Danville Armour Museum, Danville, VA, and one privately held in Belton, SC, USA. Abroad, one can be found, in perfect condition, at the American Air Museum, in Duxford (UK).