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Cargo Hold of C-133 Cargomaster
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Pallets Readied for C-133 Cargomaster
The Douglas C-133 Cargomaster, a four-engine, turboprop transport, was larger and faster than earlier Douglas military cargo airplanes. The Cargomaster went into production without a prototype and had an unusual circular fuselage with top-mounted wings. The C-133 could fly the equivalent of 22 loaded railroad boxcars nonstop between Los Angeles and New York for about 5 cents per ton per mile. It carried fully assembled tanks and transported the Douglas-built Thor intermediate-range ballistic missiles. Douglas built and delivered the last Cargomasters in 1961. NASA used Cargomasters to drop-test early space capsules and to transport a variety of space products. Douglas built 50 Cargomasters, but after the C-133, Douglas did not build transports specifically for the military for another 10 years.
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Unique identifier
BI41711
Boeing ID
EST 16534 C-133
Type
Image
Size
2864px × 2316px 6MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
airfields
airplanes
cargo
copy space
day
Douglas Aircraft
full body views
ground shots
historic production status
large
loading ramps
military
military livery
monoplanes
out of production
propeller planes
right rear views
tarmac
transports
trucks
Restrictions