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List of specialist Churchill tank variants

This is a list of specialist variants of the Churchill tank .

Churchill Oke edit

A Churchill Mark II or Mark III with a flamethrower. Developed for the amphibious raid on Dieppe in 1942, the Oke flamethrowing tank was named after its designer, Major J.M. Oke. The design was basically a Churchill tank fitted with the Ronson flamethrower equipment. A tank containing the flame fuel was fitted at the rear, with a pipe from it leading to the fixed angle mounting on the front hull to the left, leaving the hull machine gun unobstructed. Three (named "Boar", "Beetle" and "Bull") were present in the first wave at Dieppe; they were quickly lost,[1] and abandoned.

Assault Vehicle Royal Engineers edit

 
Churchill AVRE with fascine on tilt-forward cradle. This particular example is a post-WW2 AVRE on the MK VII chassis.

Proposed by a Canadian engineer as a result of experience from the Dieppe Raid,[2] the Assault Vehicle Royal Engineers (AVRE) was a Churchill Mark III or IV equipped with the "Mortar, Recoiling Spigot, Mark II" (or Petard), a spigot mortar[a] that throws the 230 mm (9.1 in) [3] 40 lb (18 kg) Bomb Demolition Number 1 ("Flying dustbin") with a 28-pound high-explosive warhead. The Petard, developed by MD1, was designed for the quick levelling of fortifications. The Petard was reloaded by traversing the turret to point front, slightly to the left, with the barrel directly over the co-driver's sliding hatch. The regular two piece co-driver's hatch was plated over, and a small sliding hatch was installed to allow access to the Petard.[4] The Petard barrel would then be 'broken' vertically, and the co-driver would slide open his hatch. The co-driver would then push the projectile into the barrel.[5] The barrel would then be closed, the Petard traversed back down, and the turret rotated back to its original position.[4] The co-driver's hands were briefly exposed during the process.

 
AVRE 230mm Petard Mortar and its ammunition (projectile standing on its flat nose, with tail facing up, at right)

The AVRE could also be equipped with numerous other attachments, such as the Small Box Girder bridge, which was carried at the front of the tank and laid across ditches or narrow rivers up to 30 feet wide, and the Canadian Indestructible Roller Device (CIRD),[6] which was used to protect the tracks of a tank from mines. It could also carry fascines, which are large bundles of wood carried on the front of the tank and dropped into trenches to help the Churchill cross over them, devices to place explosive charges against obstacles, and bobbins: massive reels of canvas on drums that were unrolled in front of the Churchill to help it over soft terrain. They were used during the invasion of Normandy to help the Churchill over soft sand,[2] and also served to leave a trackway for following vehicles.

By the time of the invasion of France in June 1944, 180 AVREs had been converted. They were first deployed in Normandy by the 79th Armoured Division on D-Day.[2] They were extremely successful and served until the end of the war. A further 574 followed.[7] While the driver came from the Royal Armoured Corps, the five other crew were drawn from the Royal Engineers. One of the RE crew was a demolitions NCO sapper responsible for priming the "Flying dustbin" and who led the crew when they dismounted from the tank to place demolition charges ("Wade" charges).

Other versions that did not see active service were equipped with anti-mine ploughs, mine rollers, or special demolition charges to destroy reinforced concrete walls.[2]

Post-war, new Churchill AVREs were developed on the basis of a modified Churchill Mk VII armed with a breech-loading low velocity 165mm Royal Ordnance L9 demolition gun that fired a HESH round with about 40 lb (18 kg) of C4 explosive. The name of the AVRE was later changed to "Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineers".

Armoured Recovery Vehicle edit

 
Churchill ARV Mk II with front jib erected

Two marks of armoured recovery vehicle were built from the Churchill

Mk I – A turretless Mk I with a jib that could be fitted at front or rear. Production began in early 1942[7]

Mk II – A Churchill Mark III or Mark IV with a fixed turret/superstructure with a dummy gun. It was equipped for recovering other tanks from the battlefield. It mounted a front jib with a 7.5 ton capacity, a rear jib rated for 15 ton and a winch that could pull 25 tons.[7] With just a three-man crew, there was enough room to carry the crew of the tank being recovered. Armament was a single Besa machine gun.

Armoured Ramp Carrier edit

 
A Churchill tank of the North Irish Horse crossing the Senio in Italy on two stacked Churchill ARKs, April 1945
 
Churchill Ark Mk II (UK Pattern)

The Armoured Ramp Carrier (ARK) was a turretless Churchill with ramps at either end and trackways along the body to form a mobile bridge. Fifty of these were built on Mark II and Mark IV Churchills.[7] The Link Ark or Twin Ark was two ARKs used side by side to give a wide crossing. The ramps on these were folding types giving a longer, 65 ft (20 m), crossing.[8] The Twin-ARK was used for the post-war Conqueror heavy tank.

Ark Mk II had a wider, 4 ft (1.2 m) instead of the usual 2 ft (0.61 m), trackway on the left side so narrower vehicles could also use the ARK. These were conversions of the Ark Mark I in mid-1944. The "Italian Pattern" Ark Mk II ( initially called "Octopus") was produced in Italy using US ramps on Churchill Mk III chassis and did not have trackways on the tank itself (vehicles drove on the tank's tracks).[9]

"Lakeman Ark" was an experimental design for attacking very high obstacles. It was a turreted Churchill with the trackways built above the height of the turret, and long ramps at the rear.[10]

Bridgelayers edit

 
A Churchill bridgelayer of 51st Royal Tank Regiment in action during a demonstration in the Mezzano area, 30 March 1945.

The British already had experience of bridge-laying tanks with the Valentine tank and the Covenanter tank, and began work on a Churchill-based bridge-layer in 1942. The bridge ("Bridge, Tank, 30 ft, No.2 "), which could support a tank of 60 tons or be used by Class 40 wheeled traffic, was carried on top of a turretless Mk III or Mk VI chassis. When the obstacle was reached, an arm (driven by hydraulics in the tank) pivoted at the front of the tank and placed the bridge in position. The Churchill Mk VII was used with the No. 3 bridge from 1945 to 1946.[11]

Bridges could also be deployed by the Churchill. "Skid Bailey" was a bridge formed from Bailey bridge parts on skids that was moved into position by one or two Churchill AVREs. Usual use was to bridge cratered roads while under fire.

The "Mobile Bailey Bridge" was a complete bridge suitable for class 40 traffic spanning a 70–80 ft (21–24 m) gap. The bridge itself was 150 ft (46 m) long with 10 ft (3.0 m) ramps at either end. This would be assembled at a safe distance from the gap and then pushed to the site by a Churchill AVRE with another aiding by towing from the front; the middle of the bridge was supported by Orolo unpowered tracked roller units. At the site the AVRE pushed the bridge out over the gap and then disconnected itself.[12][11]

The "Mobile Brown Bridge" was an improvement on the Mobile Bailey. Named after a Canadian Royal Engineer in Italy, the Bailey bridge was carried on a Churchill which had its turret removed while an AVRE carried and pushed the rear of the bridge. With the first Churchill in position the AVRE would push the bridge out over the gap; an extra 20 ft tail on the bridge acted as a counterweight while the bridge was put in position.

The "Mobile Dalton Bridge", named after an RE officer, was a 140 ft (43 m) long Bailey bridge that was carried on an ARK while a second AVRE pushed. The process was the similar to the Brown Bridge. When the ARK reached the near side of the gap, it stopped and the AVRE pushed the bridge (riding on rollers on the top of the ARK) out over the gap. Once the far end of the bridge was on solid ground the AVRE disengaged and the ARK backed out under the bridge.[11]

Churchill Crocodile edit

 
The flame projector on the Churchill Crocodile was in the hull machine gun ball-mount in the hull front plate leaving the main gun unaffected

The Churchill Crocodile was a Churchill VII that was converted by replacing the hull machine gun with a flamethrower projector. The fuel, and the compressed gas to drive it, was in an armoured wheeled trailer towed behind. It could fire several one second bursts out to a distance of over 150 yards. The Crocodile was one of "Hobart's Funnies" – another vehicle used by the 79th Armoured Division. A working example can still be seen at the Cobbaton Combat Collection in North Devon.[citation needed]

The combination of projector and trailer was produced as a kit that could be fitted to a Churchill; no more than 800 kits were produced.[13])

Gun Carrier, 3-inch, Mk I, Churchill (A22D) edit

 
Churchill Gun Carrier in Dorset, 25 March 1943

Coming out of a General Staff request in 1941 to investigate fitting high velocity large calibre guns on infantry and cruiser tanks specifically for use against German tanks.[14] Of the infantry tanks, neither the Churchill nor Valentine could mount a turret with a high velocity gun larger than the 6-pounder, but it was proposed that a fixed superstructure could carry a larger gun with limited traverse. The QF 3-inch 20 cwt anti-aircraft gun had been replaced by the 3.7-inch gun so these were selected and Vauxhall was provided with 100 guns and given the task of producing the vehicle.

The design used a fixed square thick plate superstructure with the gun in a ball mount low in the front next to the driver. The front was 88 mm (3.5 in), sides 76 mm (3.0 in) with overall weight of 39 tons. Internal stowage included a provision for 12 HE explosive rounds as well as the AP ones.[15]

As an anti-tank gun, the 3-inch gun had a maximum range of 12,000 yards and was a bit more effective than the 57 mm QF 6-pounder at 1,000 yards but less than the 76.2 mm QF 17-pounder under development.[16]

The pilot vehicles were ready for testing in early 1942 and found to be satisfactory. However, in order not to impede production of the Churchill (with the 6-pounder gun) the order was reduced to 24 vehicles. Vauxhall, the main designer and lead manufacturer of the Churchill was already set up for full production of the Gun Carrier with parts and armour ordered and complained with the result that the full order was re-instated before being cut back to 50.[17][14] The 50 were built between July and November 1942 during which they were the subject of debate about whether they were artillery or tanks. The decision came down in favour of tank, and the Department of Tank Design asked for some changes; by that point in production these could not be incorporated.[17] The prototype was built by Vauxhall and had a T-number, the other 49 by Beyer, Peacock & Company in Manchester, got WD numbers with an S prefix, the same as self-propelled guns.[16] Requirements and tactics had in the meanwhile changed again to focus on the general purpose 75mm gun in the Churchill and a smaller proportion of 17-pounder tanks in use, of which work on the Cruiser Mk VIII Challenger was making progress.

None are known to have been used in combat as the 17-pounder anti-tank gun gave the British the necessary firepower. Some had the gun removed and converted to the "Snake" mine-clearing line charge device and used for trials and training of that in 1942–43.[17][14]

One unrestored survivor is held at The Tank Museum, it had been used at Lydd Ranges as a target.[18]

Churchill Flail FV3902 or Toad edit

A 1950s mine-clearing flail tank built on a Churchill chassis using a Rolls-Royce Meteor engine to drive the flails.[19][20]

Goat edit

A chargelayer, like the Double Onion device.

Great Eastern Ramp edit

A much larger longer and higher trackway ramp than the ARK for crossing 60 ft (18 m). The 25-foot-long front ramps were launched into position with rockets.[10] Ten built and two delivered in 1945 but not used in action.[21]

Kangaroo edit

 
A postwar Churchill Kangaroo viewed from the left rear

The Churchill Kangaroo was a turretless Churchill hull converted to an armoured personnel carrier.

Notes edit

  1. ^ with a spigot mortar the round fits over a solid rod, in this case 29mm diameter, rather than inside a mortar barrel

References edit

  1. ^ Perrett p16
  2. ^ a b c d "Tank Infantry A22B Churchill Mark III AVRE (E1988.88)". tankmuseum.org. The Tank Museum. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  3. ^ Armoured Archives. "AVRE 230MM - Fact Checking". YouTube. Archived from the original on 7 July 2022.[user-generated source]
  4. ^ a b "Churchill AVRE - Spigot Mortar". armourinfocus.co.uk. Armour in Focus. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  5. ^ Chamberlain and Ellis p 205
  6. ^ "Churchill AVRE". armourinfocus.co.uk. Armour in Focus. Retrieved 8 May 2016.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ a b c d Chamberlain & Ellis (1969) p70
  8. ^ . Royal Engineers Museum. Archived from the original on 25 June 2010.
  9. ^ Chamberlain & Ellis (1969) p70-71
  10. ^ a b Chamberlain & Ellis (1969) p73
  11. ^ a b c AFV Profile 20
  12. ^ Chamberlain & Ellis (1969) p72-73
  13. ^ Delaforce p. 71
  14. ^ a b c Chamberlain & Ellis, 1969. p68-69
  15. ^ Fletcher 2019 p32-33
  16. ^ a b Fletcher 2019 p32
  17. ^ a b c White, 1983
  18. ^ Chris Copson (17 February 2024). Evolution of The Churchill Tank | "No Damn Good"?. The Tank Museum. Event occurs at 21:47-22:00, 22:12-22:18. Retrieved 23 February 2024 – via Youtube.
  19. ^ Flails for minefield clearance and specifications and acceptance of Churchill Flail (FV 3902), War Office, 1955, WO 32/17394
  20. ^ "The Churchill Toad arrives – to say goodbye". Milweb.
  21. ^ Chris Shillito. "Churchill Great Eastern Ramp". Armourinfocus.co.uk. Retrieved 6 March 2010.

list, specialist, churchill, tank, variants, this, list, specialist, variants, churchill, tank, contents, churchill, assault, vehicle, royal, engineers, armoured, recovery, vehicle, armoured, ramp, carrier, bridgelayers, churchill, crocodile, carrier, inch, ch. This is a list of specialist variants of the Churchill tank Contents 1 Churchill Oke 2 Assault Vehicle Royal Engineers 3 Armoured Recovery Vehicle 4 Armoured Ramp Carrier 5 Bridgelayers 6 Churchill Crocodile 7 Gun Carrier 3 inch Mk I Churchill A22D 8 Churchill Flail FV3902 or Toad 9 Goat 10 Great Eastern Ramp 11 Kangaroo 12 Notes 13 ReferencesChurchill Oke editA Churchill Mark II or Mark III with a flamethrower Developed for the amphibious raid on Dieppe in 1942 the Oke flamethrowing tank was named after its designer Major J M Oke The design was basically a Churchill tank fitted with the Ronson flamethrower equipment A tank containing the flame fuel was fitted at the rear with a pipe from it leading to the fixed angle mounting on the front hull to the left leaving the hull machine gun unobstructed Three named Boar Beetle and Bull were present in the first wave at Dieppe they were quickly lost 1 and abandoned Assault Vehicle Royal Engineers editMain article Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineers nbsp Churchill AVRE with fascine on tilt forward cradle This particular example is a post WW2 AVRE on the MK VII chassis Proposed by a Canadian engineer as a result of experience from the Dieppe Raid 2 the Assault Vehicle Royal Engineers AVRE was a Churchill Mark III or IV equipped with the Mortar Recoiling Spigot Mark II or Petard a spigot mortar a that throws the 230 mm 9 1 in 3 40 lb 18 kg Bomb Demolition Number 1 Flying dustbin with a 28 pound high explosive warhead The Petard developed by MD1 was designed for the quick levelling of fortifications The Petard was reloaded by traversing the turret to point front slightly to the left with the barrel directly over the co driver s sliding hatch The regular two piece co driver s hatch was plated over and a small sliding hatch was installed to allow access to the Petard 4 The Petard barrel would then be broken vertically and the co driver would slide open his hatch The co driver would then push the projectile into the barrel 5 The barrel would then be closed the Petard traversed back down and the turret rotated back to its original position 4 The co driver s hands were briefly exposed during the process nbsp AVRE 230mm Petard Mortar and its ammunition projectile standing on its flat nose with tail facing up at right The AVRE could also be equipped with numerous other attachments such as the Small Box Girder bridge which was carried at the front of the tank and laid across ditches or narrow rivers up to 30 feet wide and the Canadian Indestructible Roller Device CIRD 6 which was used to protect the tracks of a tank from mines It could also carry fascines which are large bundles of wood carried on the front of the tank and dropped into trenches to help the Churchill cross over them devices to place explosive charges against obstacles and bobbins massive reels of canvas on drums that were unrolled in front of the Churchill to help it over soft terrain They were used during the invasion of Normandy to help the Churchill over soft sand 2 and also served to leave a trackway for following vehicles By the time of the invasion of France in June 1944 180 AVREs had been converted They were first deployed in Normandy by the 79th Armoured Division on D Day 2 They were extremely successful and served until the end of the war A further 574 followed 7 While the driver came from the Royal Armoured Corps the five other crew were drawn from the Royal Engineers One of the RE crew was a demolitions NCO sapper responsible for priming the Flying dustbin and who led the crew when they dismounted from the tank to place demolition charges Wade charges Other versions that did not see active service were equipped with anti mine ploughs mine rollers or special demolition charges to destroy reinforced concrete walls 2 Post war new Churchill AVREs were developed on the basis of a modified Churchill Mk VII armed with a breech loading low velocity 165mm Royal Ordnance L9 demolition gun that fired a HESH round with about 40 lb 18 kg of C4 explosive The name of the AVRE was later changed to Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineers Armoured Recovery Vehicle edit nbsp Churchill ARV Mk II with front jib erectedTwo marks of armoured recovery vehicle were built from the ChurchillMk I A turretless Mk I with a jib that could be fitted at front or rear Production began in early 1942 7 Mk II A Churchill Mark III or Mark IV with a fixed turret superstructure with a dummy gun It was equipped for recovering other tanks from the battlefield It mounted a front jib with a 7 5 ton capacity a rear jib rated for 15 ton and a winch that could pull 25 tons 7 With just a three man crew there was enough room to carry the crew of the tank being recovered Armament was a single Besa machine gun Armoured Ramp Carrier edit nbsp A Churchill tank of the North Irish Horse crossing the Senio in Italy on two stacked Churchill ARKs April 1945 nbsp Churchill Ark Mk II UK Pattern The Armoured Ramp Carrier ARK was a turretless Churchill with ramps at either end and trackways along the body to form a mobile bridge Fifty of these were built on Mark II and Mark IV Churchills 7 The Link Ark or Twin Ark was two ARKs used side by side to give a wide crossing The ramps on these were folding types giving a longer 65 ft 20 m crossing 8 The Twin ARK was used for the post war Conqueror heavy tank Ark Mk II had a wider 4 ft 1 2 m instead of the usual 2 ft 0 61 m trackway on the left side so narrower vehicles could also use the ARK These were conversions of the Ark Mark I in mid 1944 The Italian Pattern Ark Mk II initially called Octopus was produced in Italy using US ramps on Churchill Mk III chassis and did not have trackways on the tank itself vehicles drove on the tank s tracks 9 Lakeman Ark was an experimental design for attacking very high obstacles It was a turreted Churchill with the trackways built above the height of the turret and long ramps at the rear 10 Bridgelayers edit nbsp A Churchill bridgelayer of 51st Royal Tank Regiment in action during a demonstration in the Mezzano area 30 March 1945 The British already had experience of bridge laying tanks with the Valentine tank and the Covenanter tank and began work on a Churchill based bridge layer in 1942 The bridge Bridge Tank 30 ft No 2 which could support a tank of 60 tons or be used by Class 40 wheeled traffic was carried on top of a turretless Mk III or Mk VI chassis When the obstacle was reached an arm driven by hydraulics in the tank pivoted at the front of the tank and placed the bridge in position The Churchill Mk VII was used with the No 3 bridge from 1945 to 1946 11 Bridges could also be deployed by the Churchill Skid Bailey was a bridge formed from Bailey bridge parts on skids that was moved into position by one or two Churchill AVREs Usual use was to bridge cratered roads while under fire The Mobile Bailey Bridge was a complete bridge suitable for class 40 traffic spanning a 70 80 ft 21 24 m gap The bridge itself was 150 ft 46 m long with 10 ft 3 0 m ramps at either end This would be assembled at a safe distance from the gap and then pushed to the site by a Churchill AVRE with another aiding by towing from the front the middle of the bridge was supported by Orolo unpowered tracked roller units At the site the AVRE pushed the bridge out over the gap and then disconnected itself 12 11 The Mobile Brown Bridge was an improvement on the Mobile Bailey Named after a Canadian Royal Engineer in Italy the Bailey bridge was carried on a Churchill which had its turret removed while an AVRE carried and pushed the rear of the bridge With the first Churchill in position the AVRE would push the bridge out over the gap an extra 20 ft tail on the bridge acted as a counterweight while the bridge was put in position The Mobile Dalton Bridge named after an RE officer was a 140 ft 43 m long Bailey bridge that was carried on an ARK while a second AVRE pushed The process was the similar to the Brown Bridge When the ARK reached the near side of the gap it stopped and the AVRE pushed the bridge riding on rollers on the top of the ARK out over the gap Once the far end of the bridge was on solid ground the AVRE disengaged and the ARK backed out under the bridge 11 Churchill Crocodile edit nbsp The flame projector on the Churchill Crocodile was in the hull machine gun ball mount in the hull front plate leaving the main gun unaffectedMain article Churchill Crocodile The Churchill Crocodile was a Churchill VII that was converted by replacing the hull machine gun with a flamethrower projector The fuel and the compressed gas to drive it was in an armoured wheeled trailer towed behind It could fire several one second bursts out to a distance of over 150 yards The Crocodile was one of Hobart s Funnies another vehicle used by the 79th Armoured Division A working example can still be seen at the Cobbaton Combat Collection in North Devon citation needed The combination of projector and trailer was produced as a kit that could be fitted to a Churchill no more than 800 kits were produced 13 Gun Carrier 3 inch Mk I Churchill A22D edit nbsp Churchill Gun Carrier in Dorset 25 March 1943Coming out of a General Staff request in 1941 to investigate fitting high velocity large calibre guns on infantry and cruiser tanks specifically for use against German tanks 14 Of the infantry tanks neither the Churchill nor Valentine could mount a turret with a high velocity gun larger than the 6 pounder but it was proposed that a fixed superstructure could carry a larger gun with limited traverse The QF 3 inch 20 cwt anti aircraft gun had been replaced by the 3 7 inch gun so these were selected and Vauxhall was provided with 100 guns and given the task of producing the vehicle The design used a fixed square thick plate superstructure with the gun in a ball mount low in the front next to the driver The front was 88 mm 3 5 in sides 76 mm 3 0 in with overall weight of 39 tons Internal stowage included a provision for 12 HE explosive rounds as well as the AP ones 15 As an anti tank gun the 3 inch gun had a maximum range of 12 000 yards and was a bit more effective than the 57 mm QF 6 pounder at 1 000 yards but less than the 76 2 mm QF 17 pounder under development 16 The pilot vehicles were ready for testing in early 1942 and found to be satisfactory However in order not to impede production of the Churchill with the 6 pounder gun the order was reduced to 24 vehicles Vauxhall the main designer and lead manufacturer of the Churchill was already set up for full production of the Gun Carrier with parts and armour ordered and complained with the result that the full order was re instated before being cut back to 50 17 14 The 50 were built between July and November 1942 during which they were the subject of debate about whether they were artillery or tanks The decision came down in favour of tank and the Department of Tank Design asked for some changes by that point in production these could not be incorporated 17 The prototype was built by Vauxhall and had a T number the other 49 by Beyer Peacock amp Company in Manchester got WD numbers with an S prefix the same as self propelled guns 16 Requirements and tactics had in the meanwhile changed again to focus on the general purpose 75mm gun in the Churchill and a smaller proportion of 17 pounder tanks in use of which work on the Cruiser Mk VIII Challenger was making progress None are known to have been used in combat as the 17 pounder anti tank gun gave the British the necessary firepower Some had the gun removed and converted to the Snake mine clearing line charge device and used for trials and training of that in 1942 43 17 14 One unrestored survivor is held at The Tank Museum it had been used at Lydd Ranges as a target 18 Churchill Flail FV3902 or Toad editA 1950s mine clearing flail tank built on a Churchill chassis using a Rolls Royce Meteor engine to drive the flails 19 20 Goat editA chargelayer like the Double Onion device Great Eastern Ramp editSee also Cecil Vandepeer Clarke The Great Eastern A much larger longer and higher trackway ramp than the ARK for crossing 60 ft 18 m The 25 foot long front ramps were launched into position with rockets 10 Ten built and two delivered in 1945 but not used in action 21 Kangaroo edit nbsp A postwar Churchill Kangaroo viewed from the left rearThe Churchill Kangaroo was a turretless Churchill hull converted to an armoured personnel carrier Notes edit with a spigot mortar the round fits over a solid rod in this case 29mm diameter rather than inside a mortar barrelReferences edit Perrett p16 a b c d Tank Infantry A22B Churchill Mark III AVRE E1988 88 tankmuseum org The Tank Museum Retrieved 5 May 2016 Armoured Archives AVRE 230MM Fact Checking YouTube Archived from the original on 7 July 2022 user generated source a b Churchill AVRE Spigot Mortar armourinfocus co uk Armour in Focus Retrieved 8 May 2016 Chamberlain and Ellis p 205 Churchill AVRE armourinfocus co uk Armour in Focus Retrieved 8 May 2016 permanent dead link a b c d Chamberlain amp Ellis 1969 p70 Assault bridging and equipment Royal Engineers Museum Archived from the original on 25 June 2010 Chamberlain amp Ellis 1969 p70 71 a b Chamberlain amp Ellis 1969 p73 a b c AFV Profile 20 Chamberlain amp Ellis 1969 p72 73 Delaforce p 71 a b c Chamberlain amp Ellis 1969 p68 69 Fletcher 2019 p32 33 a b Fletcher 2019 p32 a b c White 1983 Chris Copson 17 February 2024 Evolution of The Churchill Tank No Damn Good The Tank Museum Event occurs at 21 47 22 00 22 12 22 18 Retrieved 23 February 2024 via Youtube Flails for minefield clearance and specifications and acceptance of Churchill Flail FV 3902 War Office 1955 WO 32 17394 The Churchill Toad arrives to say goodbye Milweb Chris Shillito Churchill Great Eastern Ramp Armourinfocus co uk Retrieved 6 March 2010 Chamberlain Peter Ellis Chris 1969 British and American Tanks of World War II Arco Publishing Chamberlain Peter Ellis Chris 1971 The Churchill Tank Arms amp Armour Press Chant Christopher 1997 An Illustrated Data Guide to Battle Tanks of World War II London Chelsea House Publications ISBN 978 1 85501 856 3 Delaforce Patrick 2006 Churchill s Secret Weapons the story of Hobart s Funnies Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 464 7 Fletcher David 1989 The Great Tank Scandal British Armour in the Second World War Part 1 HMSO ISBN 978 0 11 290460 1 Fletcher David 1993 The Universal Tank British Armour in the Second World War Part 2 London Her Majesty s Stationery Office for Royal Electrical amp Mechanical Engineers Museum ISBN 978 0 11 290534 9 Perrett Bryan 1993 Churchill Infantry Tank 1941 1945 New Vanguard No 4 illustrated by Peter Sarson and Mike Chappell Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 297 4 Robotham William Arthur 1970 Silver Ghosts and Silver Dawn London Constable amp Robinson White B T 1983 Churchill B I T Mk IV AFV Profile No 1 Profile Publishing ISBN 978 0671060091 Chamberlain Peter Ellis Chris Churchill and Sherman Specials AFV Profile No 20 Profile Publishing Fletcher David 2019 Churchill Infantry Tank New Vanguard 272 illustrated by Henry Morshead Osprey Publishing ISBN 9781472837349 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of specialist Churchill tank variants amp oldid 1209754267 Armoured Ramp Carrier, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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