Gadget Guru
New member
- 16
- 0
- 0
- Location
- Northern California
Howdy all,
I'm a new guy here. My girlfriend just won a military trailer in a local municipal auction up here in Northern California. Only $100, and less than ten miles from home!
After extensive research online, we were not able to identify it. A preliminary guess is munitions trailer, or some other airfield-only use.
It is a true wagon, with steerable front axle, and is designed to be in a "train", though the rear pintle hitch is missing. There is no suspension or ability to articulate, so off-road use seems out of its design parameters. The Budd wheels have a rather narrow track, perhaps for obstacle avoidance while snaking the heavily-loaded "train" around the airfield. I plan on reversing the wheels to establish a wider track, perhaps a foot or more wider. The tires hold air well enough to drag it home behind our old 3/4 ton 4x4 pickup. We bought a new pintle hitch and adapter some years ago, to retrieve the pair of M101A2 trailers.
The data plate # starts with "EOD", which may be a coincidence, or may mean "Explosive Ordnance Disposal".
I'm a new guy here. My girlfriend just won a military trailer in a local municipal auction up here in Northern California. Only $100, and less than ten miles from home!
After extensive research online, we were not able to identify it. A preliminary guess is munitions trailer, or some other airfield-only use.
It is a true wagon, with steerable front axle, and is designed to be in a "train", though the rear pintle hitch is missing. There is no suspension or ability to articulate, so off-road use seems out of its design parameters. The Budd wheels have a rather narrow track, perhaps for obstacle avoidance while snaking the heavily-loaded "train" around the airfield. I plan on reversing the wheels to establish a wider track, perhaps a foot or more wider. The tires hold air well enough to drag it home behind our old 3/4 ton 4x4 pickup. We bought a new pintle hitch and adapter some years ago, to retrieve the pair of M101A2 trailers.
The data plate # starts with "EOD", which may be a coincidence, or may mean "Explosive Ordnance Disposal".
Last edited: