- Description
- Use
- Notes and references
- External links
A Queen Mary trailer is a British semi-trailer combination designed for the carriage and recovery of aircraft. The trailer was made by Tasker Trailers of Andover, with Bedford or Crossley Motors tractors. Description Features included: - Very low floor and ground clearance, typically around {{convert|12|in|mm|0}}.
- Single axle.
- Wheels outboard of load area.
- Side rails to allow carriage of wings upright, resting on their leading edges.
Load was 5 tons "distributed evenly". These features were a natural result of the intended load, aircraft being typically light but long. The name is presumed to derive from its length, a reference to the RMS Queen Mary of the Cunard Line. Use The vehicles were used by the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm during and after World War II. Post-war civilian operators included Silver City Airways. Notes and references- [https://web.archive.org/web/20110605062216/http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/london/collections/aircraft/aircraft_histories/72-A-571%20%20Tempest%20TT5%20NV778.doc Reference to delivery on Queen Mary Trailer], RAF Museum, Hendon
- Crossley vehicles collection
External links- Photographs of Queen Mary trailer towed by a Bedford tractor at 2 M. T. RAF Lichfield; this is similar to the well-known Airfix model in the RAF Recovery set.
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20050330001445/http://members.aol.com/famjustin/Miles8.html Photograph and brief text], a Hawker Tempest on a Queen Mary trailer following a crash landing.
- Picture of a recovered crashed Lancaster bomber being transported on a Queen Mary trailer
- A picture of a de Havilland Comet airliner fuselage being carried on a Queen Mary trailer
{{DEFAULTSORT:Queen Mary Trailer}} 2 : Military trailers|World War II vehicles of the United Kingdom |