Radio Tractor
The Radio tractor was a mobile Signal Corps Radio used by the U.S. Army for ground communications before and during World War I. Prior to World War I, trucks were referred to as "tractors", and there were also telegraph tractors, and telephone tractors.
Radio Tractor | |
---|---|
Radio Tractor No. 3 on White Chassis | |
Type | Radio truck |
Place of origin | |
Service history | |
In service | 1914-? |
Used by | US Army |
Wars | World War I |
Production history | |
Designed | 1914-? |
Manufacturer | FWD, White Motor Company |
Produced | 1914 |
Variants | 3 |
Specifications | |
Mass | 1 1/2 ton |
Crew | 7 |
Armor | none |
Main armament | none |
Use
Very little information exists for these trucks, as most of the components were built before standardization. They first made their debut on the Mexican border in a radio intercept role, and later during World War I, some sets may have been reconfigured for RDF and other uses.
Components
- SCR-50, 2 kilowatt spark transmitter, crystal or vacuum tube detector receiver, 0.15-0.50 Megahertz
Variants
At least 3 variants are known:
- Radio Tractor No. 1
- Radio Tractor No. 2 (Four Wheel Drive)(Jeffery Quad), Unknown radio set
- Radio Tractor No. 3 (White Motor Company), SCR-50 radio set
The No.3 truck was also accompanied by a tender "Maintenance truck No. 5" later renumbered as K-5.
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gollark: ++delete the concept of cheese as an entity distinct from milk
gollark: ++delete <@341618941317349376> for anticheese heresy
References
- Signal Corps Storage Catalog
- Annual Report 1919 page 249
- 1918 Military Signal Corps manual
- New York Times 1915
- Electrical world vol. 66
- The Wireless Age
- Automobile journal Vol. 39
- https://web.archive.org/web/20121012130248/http://www.nsa.gov/public_info/_files/cryptologic_spectrum/umbrellas.pdf
External links
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