Category: Ambulance (General)

This is part of an exercise in responding…



This is part of an exercise in responding to casualties in the aftermath of a ‘dirty bomb’ attack. Personnel in protective suits and masks wash wounded casualties and transfer them from the ‘dirty’ end of the inflatable hospital to the ‘clean’ end via a rolling platform.



The casualty is transferred to a clean spinal board and further treatment takes place. The inflatable building takes minutes to set up anywhere and is illuminated from outside via the translucent roof. The walking wounded and other contaminated persons go through a series of showers that are run in parallel to this facility.

HW03 GGK This Jumbulance (multi-purpose jumbo ambulance) is…



HW03 GGK This Jumbulance (multi-purpose jumbo ambulance) is a huge 2003 Mercedes Benz 814D truck. It is liveried in luminous-yellow Isle of Wight colours and has bodywork by WAS. We have been infomed that this ambulance has been of the road due to an accident where a 4×4 driver hit it. He told the police that he could not see it coming around a roundabout!

P58 GCM The ambulance shown is a British Red…



P58 GCM The ambulance shown is a British Red Cross (Lancashire Branch) UVG Premia bodied Ford Transit 2.5 Diesel. The livery is a mixture of ex-Mersey Regional Ambulance checker stripes with a full yellow & red body stripe and rear red stripe added to meet Red Cross standards. The “RED LANCS ONE” markings are the vehicle’s radio callsign as recognised by the local ambulance service.

M403 RPY This TENYAS Ford Transit ambulance has a…



M403 RPY This TENYAS Ford Transit ambulance has a bad case of tin worm, but was still operational in 2003.



The rear view of this familiar-shaped vehicle. Close inspection of the writing on the sides shows that the word ‘Cleveland’ has been deleted from in front of ‘ambulance’, but not replaced by the new supertrust’s name, even though the merger happened in 1999!

YD52 TWF The rear view of an identical 52…



YD52 TWF The rear view of an identical 52-reg ambulance, with another in the background. TENYAS’s ambulances had problems when first delivered with a hydraulic lift they had fitted to the rear of the vehicle. It hung below the vehicle and caught on speed humps in trials.

SB 72 AA and H158 WYT, A RAF ambulance 6-wheeled…



SB 72 AA and H158 WYT, A RAF ambulance 6-wheeled Pinzgauer alongside a RAF 1990 Ford Transit ambulance. The Pinzgauer is a tried-and-tested 30-year-old design that allows access to rugged, slippery, boggy and steep areas with ease.



A look now in the rear of the 6-wheel ambulance showing the equipment carried.



A comparable look into the back of the Ford Transit ambulance.