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T17E1 Staghound

The T17E1 Armoured Car was an American armored car design produced during the Second World War. It saw service with British and other Commonwealth forces during the war under the name Staghound, but was never used on the front line by US forces. A number of other countries used the Staghound after the war; some vehicles continued to serve until the 1980s.

T17E1 Staghound Armored Car
TypeArmored car
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1944–1980s
Used bySee Operators
WarsWorld War II
Greek Civil War
1948 Arab-Israeli war
1958 Lebanon crisis
Cuban Revolution
Lebanese Civil War
Rhodesian Bush War
Nicaraguan Revolution
Vietnam War
Production history
DesignerChevrolet
ProducedOctober 1942 – April 1944
No. built3,844
Specifications (Staghound Mark I)
Mass14 t
Length17 ft 10 in (5.49 m)
Width8 ft 10 in (2.69 m)
Height7 ft 9 in (2.36 m)
Crew5

Armor9 to 44 mm
Main
armament
1 × 37 mm M6
Secondary
armament
2–3 × .30 (7.62 mm) M1919 Browning machine guns
Engine2 × GMC 270
2 × 97 hp (72 kW)
Power/weight13.9 hp/tonne
Suspensionwheels, 4 x 4
Operational
range
450 miles (724 km)
Maximum speed 55 mph (89 km/h)

History

In July 1941, the U.S. Army Ordnance issued specifications for a medium armored car alongside a specification for heavy armored car (which resulted in the T18 Boarhound). Ford Motor Company built a six wheels, all driven (6 x 6) prototype which was designated T17 and Chevrolet a four wheels, all driven (4 x 4) model designated T17E1. At the same time, the British Purchasing Commission was also looking for medium and heavy armored cars for use in the war in North Africa. Had the U.S. adopted this, it would have been called the M6.

Both the T17 and T17E used the same turret which was designed by Rock Island Arsenal with British requirements driving some of the design features such as putting at least two crew in the turret and placing the radio in the turret so that it was close to the commander.[1]

T17E1

The British allocated the name Staghound to the T17E series. British liaison officers had had contact with Macpherson, the Chevrolet engineer in charge of the project and felt they had influenced him sufficiently to produce something that met all their requirements. Accordingly, in December the British Purchasing Commission "formally requested" production of 300 vehicles; the US Army authorized production of 2,000 in January 1942. The British order was confirmed in March 1942 when the pilot T17E was delivered to the Aberdeen Proving Ground. Testing showed flaws but these were expected to be correctable and a further 1,500 were contracted for.[2]

Production started in October 1942. The US Army convened a board to examine the state of the multitude of armored car projects and recommended in December 1942 the cancellation of the larger designs and standardization on a smaller vehicle. This lighter vehicle would appear as the M8 Greyhound vehicle. However the British applied for T17E1 production to be continued for the United Kingdom under Lend-Lease. 3,844 Staghounds were produced in total.

The Staghound was an innovative design that incorporated some advanced features. It had two rear-facing 6-cylinder engines with automatic transmissions (with 4 forward and 1 reverse gears) feeding through a transfer case to drive both axles. Either two- or four-wheel drive could be selected. Either engine could be shut down while in motion and taken out of the drive train. Additionally, a power steering pump was incorporated that could be switched on or off manually from the driver's instrument panel depending on steering conditions. Steering and suspension components were directly attached to the hull as the structure was rigid enough to dispense with the need for a separate chassis.

Operational service

The Staghound entered service too late for use in the North African Campaign where its combination of armor, range and main armament would have been an advantage in a light forces reconnaissance role.[citation needed] As a result, it first saw operational service in Italy, where many units found its large physical size too restrictive in the narrow roads, and streets of Europe. It saw most service at squadron and regimental headquarter level;[3] an armoured car regiment having three Staghounds with the Regimental HQ and three with each HQ of the four squadrons in the regiment.[4] Conditions for the Staghound improved when the Italian campaign became more mobile in the middle of 1944, and the Staghound was also used in north-west Europe campaign.[5]

After the war, the Staghounds were distributed among smaller NATO countries in Europe and to the Middle East.[5] For instance, Mk I and Mk III Staghounds were used during the Lebanese Civil War by both Christian and Muslim militias.[6] The last new Staghound variant to be offered for export was probably a Swiss model retrofitted with several modern armament packages, including 30mm and 47mm anti-tank guns. It was marketed unsuccessfully to Syria.[7]

Operators

 
Staghound of the Free Belgian "Brigade Piron" unit.
 
Staghound of the Rhodesian Armoured Corps.

Variants

 
The original T17E1 prototype.
 
T17E2 Staghound AA.
 
T17E3.
  • T17E1: 4x4 version built by Chevrolet for Britain. 2,844 units were produced.
Staghound Mk I
The T17E1 was armed with a 37 mm M6 gun, a coaxial .30 cal M1919A4 Browning machine gun and a 2-inch smoke mortar in a rotating turret. In the hull was mounted a second .30 cal M1919A4 Browning.[16] Some T17E1 had an additional .30 cal M1919 machine gun for anti-aircraft defense.
The turret had power traverse and featured a turret basket (which limited the amount of internal crew storage). The 37 mm gun was gyroscopically stabilized.
This variant had a crew of five: commander, loader, gunner, driver, and hull machine gunner.
It saw combat with the British, Free Polish, Canadian, New Zealand, Indian, and Belgian armies in Italy, Greece and Northwest Europe. After the war, it saw further action in Greece, Cuba, Nicaragua, Lebanon and Rhodesia.[17][18]
Staghound Mk II
This was a field conversion that had a 3 inch howitzer Mk 1 for close support mounted in place of the 37 mm gun in the turret. The bow machine gun was removed. It is not known how many were converted. These were issued to the Armoured Car HQ section.
Staghound Mk III
Had a turret taken from an 6-pdr (57 mm) gun armed Crusader tank and 7.92 mm Besa machine gun. Some of these were then re-fitted with the AEC Armoured Car Mk III turret with 75 mm gun.[19] There was no bow machine gun. These had reached the front line by 1945, where it was supplied to heavy troops of armoured car regiments. The total number ordered was around 100–300. Post war this version saw usage with Denmark and combat in Lebanon.[12]
Staghound Command
The turret was removed and extra wireless equipment was installed.
  • T17E2 (Staghound AA)
The T17E2 was an T17E1 fitted with a Frazer-Nash-designed turret mounting two 0.5 inch (12.7 mm) M2 Browning heavy machine guns. The turrets were built in the US for British Motor Torpedo Boats. Redesign of the turret and mounting was carried out. 2,610 rounds were carried. The turret was open-topped and had an electric-hydraulic traverse system with a maximum slew rate of 55 degrees a second.[20] It had a reduced crew of three: commander/gunner, loader and driver.[20]
1,000 units were produced between October 1943 and April 1944, when production stopped.
  • T17E3
T17E1 fitted with the turret of 75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8, carrying the 75mm M2/M3 howitzer. This was trialled in December 1943, but never reached production.[20]
  • Radpanzer Staghound
Swiss variant of the Staghound Mk I. The 37 mm gun was replaced with a Swiss 47 mm Pak 41 gun.
Radpanzer Staghound mit Versuchswaffen ("with trial gun")
A Swiss prototype for up-gunning the Staghound Mk I. The bow machine gun was replaced with a Swiss one and the main 37 mm was replaced with a Hispano-Suiza HS.820 automatic cannon.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Zaloga 2009, p. 11.
  2. ^ Zaloga 2009, p. 12.
  3. ^ Taylor 2007, p. 34.
  4. ^ B.T. White AFV Profile No 21, Armoured Cars Profile Publishing
  5. ^ a b Zaloga 2009, p. 5.
  6. ^ a b Paul A. Jureidini; R.D. McLaurin; James M. Price (June 1979). Military operations in selected Lebanese built-up areas, 1975-1978 (PDF). Technical Memorandum 11-79. Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland: U.S. Army human engineering laboratory. (PDF) from the original on 1 February 2014.
  7. ^ Martin Haudenschild. (PDF). Bulletin Info (in German). Vol. 13, no. 3. Verein Schweizer Armeemuseum. pp. 3–10. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 December 2015.
  8. ^ Handel, Paul D. (26 April 2008). "The Staghound Armoured Car in Australian Service". Anzac Steel. Paul Handel. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  9. ^ Zaloga 2009, p. 43.
  10. ^ "Staghound Mk III". armyvehicles.dk.
  11. ^ Zaloga 2009, p. 42-43.
  12. ^ a b c d Zaloga 2009, p. 42.
  13. ^ Zaloga 2009, p. 44-45.
  14. ^ Touchard 2016, p. 65.
  15. ^ Gervasi, Sean (August 1977). "What arms embargo?" (PDF). Southern Africa. Vol. X, no. 6. Southern Africa Committee. pp. 2–6 – via African Activist Archive.
  16. ^ Taylor 2007, p. 29.
  17. ^ Zaloga 2009, p. 42-45.
  18. ^ Locke & Cooke 1995, p. 100.
  19. ^ Milsom, John; Sandars, John; Scarborough, Gerald (1976). Crusader. Classic Armoured Fighting Vehicles No. 1: Their History and How to Model Them. Airfix Products Ltd. p. 21. ISBN 9780850591941.
  20. ^ a b c Taylor 2007, p. 28.

References

  • Doyle, David (2009). The Staghound: A Visual History of the T17E Series Armored Cars in Allied Service, 1940–1945. Delray Beach, FL: Ampersand Publishing. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-9773781-6-6.
  • Laurent Touchard (April–May 2016). "Guerre dans le bush! Les blindés de l'Armée rhodésienne au combat (1964–1979)" [War in the bush! Rhodesian Army tanks in combat (1964–1979)]. Batailles & Blindés Magazine (in French). No. 72. pp. 64–75. ISSN 1765-0828.
  • Lucy, Roger V. (2007). The Staghound in Canadian Service. Ottawa, ON: Service Publications. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-894581-37-0.
  • Taylor, Dick (5 October 2007). "The Stag's Story". Military Modelling.
  • Ludovic Fortin (December 2007 – January 2008). "T17E1 Staghound Armored Car – Le char sur roues". Trucks & Tracks Magazine (in French). pp. 48–67.
  • Locke, Peter Gerard; Cooke, Peter David Farquharson (1995). Fighting Vehicles and Weapons of Rhodesia 1965–80. Wellington: P&P Publishing. ISBN 0-473-02413-6.
  • War Department (1942). TM 9-741 Medium Armored Car T17E1. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  • War Department. TM 9-1741A.
  • War Department (1943). TM 9-1741B.
  • War Department (1943). . Archived from the original on 22 July 2011.
  • War Department (1943). TM 9-2800 Standard Military Motor Vehicles. pp. 18-21.
  • Zaloga, Steven J (2002). M8 Greyhound Light Armored Car 1941–91. New Vanguard. Illustrated by Tony Bryan. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-468-9.
  • Zaloga, Steven J (2009). Staghound Armored Car, 1942–62. New Vanguard 159. Illustrated by Peter Bull. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-392-6 – via Google Books.

External links

  • WWII Vehicles
  • T17E1 Staghound Mark I at WarWheels.net
  • T17E1 Staghound Mark 2 Close Support (C.S.) Armored Car at WarWheels.net
  • Staghound Mark III at WarWheels.net
  • T17E2 Staghound Anti-Aircraft Armored Car at WarWheels.net
  • T17E3 Staghound at WarWheels.net
  • AEC Staghound Armored Car at WarWheels.net

t17e1, staghound, armored, armored, redirect, here, wheeled, alternative, design, developed, ford, deerhound, t17e1, armoured, american, armored, design, produced, during, second, world, service, with, british, other, commonwealth, forces, during, under, name,. T17 Armored Car and T17 armored car redirect here For the six wheeled alternative design developed by Ford see T17 Deerhound The T17E1 Armoured Car was an American armored car design produced during the Second World War It saw service with British and other Commonwealth forces during the war under the name Staghound but was never used on the front line by US forces A number of other countries used the Staghound after the war some vehicles continued to serve until the 1980s T17E1 Staghound Armored CarTypeArmored carPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1944 1980sUsed bySee OperatorsWarsWorld War IIGreek Civil War1948 Arab Israeli war1958 Lebanon crisisCuban RevolutionLebanese Civil WarRhodesian Bush WarNicaraguan RevolutionVietnam WarProduction historyDesignerChevroletProducedOctober 1942 April 1944No built3 844Specifications Staghound Mark I Mass14 tLength17 ft 10 in 5 49 m Width8 ft 10 in 2 69 m Height7 ft 9 in 2 36 m Crew5Armor9 to 44 mmMainarmament1 37 mm M6Secondaryarmament2 3 30 7 62 mm M1919 Browning machine gunsEngine2 GMC 2702 97 hp 72 kW Power weight13 9 hp tonneSuspensionwheels 4 x 4Operationalrange450 miles 724 km Maximum speed55 mph 89 km h Contents 1 History 2 T17E1 3 Operational service 4 Operators 5 Variants 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditIn July 1941 the U S Army Ordnance issued specifications for a medium armored car alongside a specification for heavy armored car which resulted in the T18 Boarhound Ford Motor Company built a six wheels all driven 6 x 6 prototype which was designated T17 and Chevrolet a four wheels all driven 4 x 4 model designated T17E1 At the same time the British Purchasing Commission was also looking for medium and heavy armored cars for use in the war in North Africa Had the U S adopted this it would have been called the M6 Both the T17 and T17E used the same turret which was designed by Rock Island Arsenal with British requirements driving some of the design features such as putting at least two crew in the turret and placing the radio in the turret so that it was close to the commander 1 T17E1 EditThe British allocated the name Staghound to the T17E series British liaison officers had had contact with Macpherson the Chevrolet engineer in charge of the project and felt they had influenced him sufficiently to produce something that met all their requirements Accordingly in December the British Purchasing Commission formally requested production of 300 vehicles the US Army authorized production of 2 000 in January 1942 The British order was confirmed in March 1942 when the pilot T17E was delivered to the Aberdeen Proving Ground Testing showed flaws but these were expected to be correctable and a further 1 500 were contracted for 2 Production started in October 1942 The US Army convened a board to examine the state of the multitude of armored car projects and recommended in December 1942 the cancellation of the larger designs and standardization on a smaller vehicle This lighter vehicle would appear as the M8 Greyhound vehicle However the British applied for T17E1 production to be continued for the United Kingdom under Lend Lease 3 844 Staghounds were produced in total The Staghound was an innovative design that incorporated some advanced features It had two rear facing 6 cylinder engines with automatic transmissions with 4 forward and 1 reverse gears feeding through a transfer case to drive both axles Either two or four wheel drive could be selected Either engine could be shut down while in motion and taken out of the drive train Additionally a power steering pump was incorporated that could be switched on or off manually from the driver s instrument panel depending on steering conditions Steering and suspension components were directly attached to the hull as the structure was rigid enough to dispense with the need for a separate chassis Operational service EditThe Staghound entered service too late for use in the North African Campaign where its combination of armor range and main armament would have been an advantage in a light forces reconnaissance role citation needed As a result it first saw operational service in Italy where many units found its large physical size too restrictive in the narrow roads and streets of Europe It saw most service at squadron and regimental headquarter level 3 an armoured car regiment having three Staghounds with the Regimental HQ and three with each HQ of the four squadrons in the regiment 4 Conditions for the Staghound improved when the Italian campaign became more mobile in the middle of 1944 and the Staghound was also used in north west Europe campaign 5 After the war the Staghounds were distributed among smaller NATO countries in Europe and to the Middle East 5 For instance Mk I and Mk III Staghounds were used during the Lebanese Civil War by both Christian and Muslim militias 6 The last new Staghound variant to be offered for export was probably a Swiss model retrofitted with several modern armament packages including 30mm and 47mm anti tank guns It was marketed unsuccessfully to Syria 7 Operators Edit Staghound of the Free Belgian Brigade Piron unit Staghound of the Rhodesian Armoured Corps Australia 279 delivered from late 1943 remaining in service until 1970 8 Belgium Brazil Canada Cuba 28 ex Israeli T 17E1s were purchased from Nicaragua due to US arms embargo on Cuba in 1956 9 Denmark 14 vehicles 1946 1953 10 Egypt 50 in service with the Egyptian Army Greece small number of vehicles left over post WW II after British forces left the country Honduras Hyderabad India Israel 112 in service with the Israel Defense Forces 11 Italy in service after WWII with Carabinieri Italian Army and Polizia di Stato until 1970 Jordan 12 Lebanon 56 in service with the Lebanese Army and Internal Security Forces ISF between 1949 and 1983 Some of these had the US M6 37 mm gun and 0 30 inch M1919 machine guns replaced by a British Ordnance QF 2 pounder and 7 92 mm Besa machine guns Others had the turret replaced with that of a 75 mm gun armed AEC Armoured Car Passed on in 1976 to the Army of Free Lebanon Lebanese Arab Army Tigers Militia Kataeb Regulatory Forces Lebanese Forces Al Mourabitoun 13 Arab Socialist Union People s Liberation Army 6 12 Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua 40 model T 17E1 were purchased from Israel after the Suez war 20 were later resold to Cuba in 1957 18 in service with the Nicaraguan National Guard from 1957 to 1979 Poland Southern Rhodesia Twenty in service with the Rhodesian Army between 1949 and 1976 14 Saudi Arabia South Africa 450 T 17E1 15 Sudan Switzerland Syria 52 in service with the Syrian Army 12 Thailand South Vietnam Army of the Republic of Vietnam During the Vietnam War Republic of South Vietnam During the Vietnam War United Kingdom British Army and Royal NavyVariants Edit The original T17E1 prototype T17E2 Staghound AA T17E3 T17E1 4x4 version built by Chevrolet for Britain 2 844 units were produced Staghound Mk IThe T17E1 was armed with a 37 mm M6 gun a coaxial 30 cal M1919A4 Browning machine gun and a 2 inch smoke mortar in a rotating turret In the hull was mounted a second 30 cal M1919A4 Browning 16 Some T17E1 had an additional 30 cal M1919 machine gun for anti aircraft defense The turret had power traverse and featured a turret basket which limited the amount of internal crew storage The 37 mm gun was gyroscopically stabilized This variant had a crew of five commander loader gunner driver and hull machine gunner It saw combat with the British Free Polish Canadian New Zealand Indian and Belgian armies in Italy Greece and Northwest Europe After the war it saw further action in Greece Cuba Nicaragua Lebanon and Rhodesia 17 18 dd Staghound Mk IIThis was a field conversion that had a 3 inch howitzer Mk 1 for close support mounted in place of the 37 mm gun in the turret The bow machine gun was removed It is not known how many were converted These were issued to the Armoured Car HQ section dd Staghound Mk IIIHad a turret taken from an 6 pdr 57 mm gun armed Crusader tank and 7 92 mm Besa machine gun Some of these were then re fitted with the AEC Armoured Car Mk III turret with 75 mm gun 19 There was no bow machine gun These had reached the front line by 1945 where it was supplied to heavy troops of armoured car regiments The total number ordered was around 100 300 Post war this version saw usage with Denmark and combat in Lebanon 12 dd Staghound CommandThe turret was removed and extra wireless equipment was installed dd T17E2 Staghound AA The T17E2 was an T17E1 fitted with a Frazer Nash designed turret mounting two 0 5 inch 12 7 mm M2 Browning heavy machine guns The turrets were built in the US for British Motor Torpedo Boats Redesign of the turret and mounting was carried out 2 610 rounds were carried The turret was open topped and had an electric hydraulic traverse system with a maximum slew rate of 55 degrees a second 20 It had a reduced crew of three commander gunner loader and driver 20 1 000 units were produced between October 1943 and April 1944 when production stopped dd T17E3T17E1 fitted with the turret of 75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8 carrying the 75mm M2 M3 howitzer This was trialled in December 1943 but never reached production 20 dd Radpanzer StaghoundSwiss variant of the Staghound Mk I The 37 mm gun was replaced with a Swiss 47 mm Pak 41 gun Radpanzer Staghound mit Versuchswaffen with trial gun A Swiss prototype for up gunning the Staghound Mk I The bow machine gun was replaced with a Swiss one and the main 37 mm was replaced with a Hispano Suiza HS 820 automatic cannon dd See also EditList of the United States military vehicles by supply catalog designationNotes Edit Zaloga 2009 p 11 Zaloga 2009 p 12 Taylor 2007 p 34 B T White AFV Profile No 21 Armoured Cars Profile Publishing a b Zaloga 2009 p 5 a b Paul A Jureidini R D McLaurin James M Price June 1979 Military operations in selected Lebanese built up areas 1975 1978 PDF Technical Memorandum 11 79 Aberdeen Proving Ground Maryland U S Army human engineering laboratory Archived PDF from the original on 1 February 2014 Martin Haudenschild Die Beschaffung der Staghound T17 ein teurer Schnellschuss PDF Bulletin Info in German Vol 13 no 3 Verein Schweizer Armeemuseum pp 3 10 Archived from the original PDF on 14 December 2015 Handel Paul D 26 April 2008 The Staghound Armoured Car in Australian Service Anzac Steel Paul Handel Retrieved 8 February 2020 Zaloga 2009 p 43 Staghound Mk III armyvehicles dk Zaloga 2009 p 42 43 a b c d Zaloga 2009 p 42 Zaloga 2009 p 44 45 Touchard 2016 p 65 Gervasi Sean August 1977 What arms embargo PDF Southern Africa Vol X no 6 Southern Africa Committee pp 2 6 via African Activist Archive Taylor 2007 p 29 Zaloga 2009 p 42 45 Locke amp Cooke 1995 p 100 Milsom John Sandars John Scarborough Gerald 1976 Crusader Classic Armoured Fighting Vehicles No 1 Their History and How to Model Them Airfix Products Ltd p 21 ISBN 9780850591941 a b c Taylor 2007 p 28 References EditDoyle David 2009 The Staghound A Visual History of the T17E Series Armored Cars in Allied Service 1940 1945 Delray Beach FL Ampersand Publishing p 128 ISBN 978 0 9773781 6 6 Laurent Touchard April May 2016 Guerre dans le bush Les blindes de l Armee rhodesienne au combat 1964 1979 War in the bush Rhodesian Army tanks in combat 1964 1979 Batailles amp Blindes Magazine in French No 72 pp 64 75 ISSN 1765 0828 Lucy Roger V 2007 The Staghound in Canadian Service Ottawa ON Service Publications p 24 ISBN 978 1 894581 37 0 Taylor Dick 5 October 2007 The Stag s Story Military Modelling Ludovic Fortin December 2007 January 2008 T17E1 Staghound Armored Car Le char sur roues Trucks amp Tracks Magazine in French pp 48 67 Locke Peter Gerard Cooke Peter David Farquharson 1995 Fighting Vehicles and Weapons of Rhodesia 1965 80 Wellington P amp P Publishing ISBN 0 473 02413 6 War Department 1942 TM 9 741 Medium Armored Car T17E1 Retrieved 28 August 2010 War Department TM 9 1741A War Department 1943 TM 9 1741B War Department 1943 TM 9 1741C Ordnance Maintenance Chassis Hull and Turret for Medium Armored Car T17E1 Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 War Department 1943 TM 9 2800 Standard Military Motor Vehicles pp 18 21 Zaloga Steven J 2002 M8 Greyhound Light Armored Car 1941 91 New Vanguard Illustrated by Tony Bryan Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 468 9 Zaloga Steven J 2009 Staghound Armored Car 1942 62 New Vanguard 159 Illustrated by Peter Bull Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 392 6 via Google Books External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to T17 Armored Car WWII Vehicles T17E1 Staghound Mark I at WarWheels net T17E1 Staghound Mark 2 Close Support C S Armored Car at WarWheels net Staghound Mark III at WarWheels net T17E2 Staghound Anti Aircraft Armored Car at WarWheels net T17E3 Staghound at WarWheels net AEC Staghound Armored Car at WarWheels net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title T17E1 Staghound amp oldid 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