Tetrarch tank
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Tank, Light Mk VII, Tetrarch I |
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| Tank, Light Mk VII, Tetrarch I | |
|---|---|
| General characteristics | |
| Crew | 3 (Commander, gunner, driver) |
| Length | 4.04 |
| Width | 2.31 |
| Height | 2.10 |
| Weight | 7.5 |
| Armour and armament | |
| Armour | 16 |
| Main armament | 40 mm 2 pounder
50 rounds |
| Secondary armament | 7.92 mm Besa MG
2,025 rounds |
| Mobility | |
| Power plant | Meadows 12 Cylinder 165 hp |
| Suspension | coil spring |
| Road speed | 40 mph, |
| Power/weight | |
| Range | 224 |
The Tank, Light Mk VII, Tetrarch I was a British light tank produced during the Second World War, initially for the reconnaissance role but later for use by airborne forces.
Contents |
- Prototype produced by Vickers-Armstrong in 1938.
- Production started in 1940.
- Production halted due to poor performance of light tanks in battle.
- Adopted for airborne forces 1941, production restarted.
- Given Tetrarch name in 1943
- Road wheels could be used with tracks removed for faster speed on roads.
- Skid steered by bowing the tracks through lateral movement of the centre road wheels.
- Turret design was later used on the Daimler Armoured Car
- A small number were deployed during Operation Ironclad, the invasion of Madagascar in 1942.
- Airborne Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment, 6th Airborne Division- landed by Hamilcar glider as part of Operation Overlord on June 6, 1944 on the River Orne
- Rhine crossing March 24, 1945.
- About twenty Tetrachs were supplied to the USSR, where they were photographed in training.
- Close support version: 3 in (76 mm) howitzer.
- One Tetrarch was fitted and tested with a propeller drive and canvas collapsible flotation screens in June 1941 at Brent Reservoir. The test was a success and Straussler DD (Duplex Drive) was adopted for the Valentine and Sherman.
| Light tanks | ||
|---|---|---|
| Vickers 6-Ton | Mk II | Mk III | Mk IV | Mk V | Mk VI | Mk VII Tetrarch | ||
| Cruiser tanks | ||
| Mk I | Mk II | Mk III | Mk IV | Mk V Covenanter | Mk VI Crusader | Mk VII Cavalier Mk VIII Centaur | Mk VIII Cromwell | Challenger | Comet | Sherman Firefly | Ram (Canada) | Sentinel (Australia) | ||
| Infantry tanks | ||
| Mk I Matilda | Mk II Matilda | Mk III Valentine | Mk IV Churchill | ||
| Scout Cars |
|---|
| Daimler Dingo | Dingo Scout Car (Australia) | Humber Scout Car | Lynx Scout Car (Canada) | S1 Scout Car (Australia) |
| Light Reconnaissance Cars |
| Humber LRC | Morris LRC | Otter LRC (Canada) |
| Armoured Cars |
| AEC Armoured Car | Coventry Armoured Car | Daimler Armoured Car | Fox Armoured Car (Canada) Guy Armoured Car | Humber Armoured Car | Lanchester Armoured Car Marmon-Herrington Armoured Car (South Africa) | Morris CS9 | Rhino Heavy Armoured Car (Australia) | Rolls-Royce Armoured Car | Rover Light Armoured Car (Australia) | Standard Beaverette | Armoured Carrier Wheeled Indian Pattern (India) |
| Armoured Trucks |
| Bedford OXA | C15TA Armoured Truck (Canada) |
| Armoured Command Vehicles |
| AEC ACV | Guy Lizard ACV |
| Avenger | Black Prince | Centurion | Excelsior | TOG 1 | TOG 2 Tortoise | Valiant | Harry Hopkins | Alecto | Thornycroft Bison |
| Unarmoured vehicles |
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| British armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II |
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