Crossley Brothers (1904-l937) was set up by Francis and William, car production stopped in 1937, however commercial vehicles produced up until 1956.
Subject ID: 1138
MoreCrossley Brothers (1904-l937) was set up by Francis and William, car production stopped in 1937, however commercial vehicles produced up until 1956.
Subject ID: 1138
Subject ID: 1138
In 1913 The British War Office ordered the Crossley 20/25 for the new Royal Flying Corps (RFC). By 1918 they had over 6,000 of these vehicles with as staff car, tender (light truck), and ambulance bodies.
This is a custom built model with donor RAF Tender and white metal body.
The model is actually 1:47 scale but this option is not available on the Scale Selector.
Model Scale is actually 1:47th but option not available in Scale Selector.
In 1913 The British War Office ordered the Crossley 20/25 for the new Royal Flying Corps (RFC). By 1918 they had over 6,000 of these vehicles with as staff car, tender (light truck), and ambulance bodies.
2.75
2.75
pickup style with removable top and back awning, gold wire wheels
In 1913 The British War Office ordered the Crossley 20/25 for the new Royal Flying Corps (RFC). By 1918 they had over 6,000 of these vehicles with as staff car, tender (light truck), and ambulance bodies.
2.75
2.75
2.75
2.75
British car marques which were notable and important in their day, but now almost forgotten: Napier, Lea-Francis, Crossley, Star, Belsize and Straker-Squire.
Photos of veteran (pre-1905), Edwardian (1905-1916), vintage (1919-1930), and historic racing cars (1930 to The Great Misunderstanding).
We're trying to keep access to hobbyDB free forever, so we use ads to help offset the costs of running the site.
Please consider disabling your ad blocker to support our mission.
If you have feedback, feel free to contact us!
Click to continue without supporting hobbyDB
If the prompt is still appearing, please disable any tools or services you are using that block internet ads (e.g. DNS Servers).