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Tanks of the interwar period

Tanks were initially deployed in World War I, engineered to overcome the deadlock of trench warfare. Between the two world wars, tanks were further developed. Although they had demonstrated their battlefield effectiveness, only a few nations had the industrial resources to design and build them. During and after World War I, Britain and France pioneered tank technology, with their models generally serving as a blueprint for other countries. However, this initial advantage would slowly diminish during the 1930s, shifting in favor of the Soviet Union and, to a lesser degree, Nazi Germany.

A Panzerkampfwagen I Ausf. A on display at the Deutsches Panzermuseum Munster, Germany.

General developments edit

 
Mark VIII "Liberty" Tank

The final tank designs of 1918 were influenced by a number of developments and demonstrated several trends in tank design. One such example was the joint US and British Mark VIII tank, which was envisioned as a heavy tank design that could be utilized by both nations as well as the French. The purpose of this tank was to address the limitations of earlier British heavy tanks.

The Mark VIII measured 34 feet (10 meters) in length and weighed 37 tons. It was powered by a 300-horsepower (224-kilowatt) V-12 engine and could reach a top speed of 7 miles per hour (11 kilometers per hour) across difficult terrain. Only 100 of these tanks were built. It was the lighter Renault FT that would set the standard for nearly all tanks that followed it. This tank featured a lower track profile and a more compact hull, as well as a turret-mounted weapon system.

Worldwide, several types of tanks were considered, and much of the development effort went into light tanks that were useful primarily against infantry or for colonial police-type work. The worldwide economic difficulties of the 1920s and 1930s led to an increased emphasis on light tanks as they were much cheaper to produce than medium or heavy tanks. However, the Spanish Civil War showed that tank-versus-tank engagements and tank-versus-towed anti-tank gun engagements would now be a major consideration for the future of tank warfare. It became clear that tanks would need to be heavily armoured and carry larger guns. Tank shape, previously guided purely by considerations of obstacle clearance, now became a trade-off between a low profile, desirable for stealth, and weight savings.

 
The British A13 Cruiser Mk IV tank

In Britain, a great deal of study on the future of tank warfare was carried out, and there were some differences. Whilst both J.F.C. Fuller and Basil Liddell Hart foresaw a war where all arms, infantry, tanks, and artillery, would be mechanised, Fuller's theories looked at all-arms formations with artillery, infantry, and military engineers mounted on similar vehicles to keep pace with the tanks. He foresaw armies using heavy all-arms formations to break through opponents defences, allowing lighter, faster units to make rapid advances, thereby not allowing the enemy to re-establish any defences.

Liddell Hart considered that armoured vehicles would carry their own supporting infantry, in much the same way as modern warships carry their own marine detachments; he also proposed using indirect attack, effectively going around any defences. During the late 1920s the British Army established the Experimental Mechanized Force, to test these theories and look at the basic problems of managing, controlling and commanding all arms formations, including the use of aircraft.

Many of the units involved in this force were posted to North Africa, where their experience played a major part in the British success in the East African Campaign and General Wavell's initial successes in the Western Desert campaign. The British used three classes of tank: the 'Infantry tank', for supporting the infantry; the 'Cruiser tank', for fast moving encounter battles and reconnaissance; and the 'light tank', for reconnaissance, escort and internal security.[1]

In the U.S., J. Walter Christie developed a series of fast tanks, based on his revolutionary Christie suspension system. This was combined with very high power-to-weight ratios achieved by fitting large aircraft engines in his tanks. Although his prototypes were capable of very high speeds, and in some cases designed to be air transportable, disputes with the United States Army Ordnance Corps and a high price (compared with what the US military was willing to pay) meant they were never produced in the USA.

Christie's prototypes were however purchased by the Soviet Union, and were to be developed into the BT tanks and eventually, on the eve of World War II, the famous T-34. The success of the BT series, when observed by Fuller, at Russian Army maneuvers influenced the British to buy a Christie M1931 tank, imported as a "Tractor", which led to Christie's suspension incorporated into British cruiser tank designs such as the A13 Cruiser Mk IV, Crusader, and others.

Today it may be difficult to understand why the tank idea found such resistance from the leadership of several armies. Part of the explanation is that the entire automotive industry was in its infancy. Tanks were rightly considered unreliable, troublesome equipment as late as the early 1930s. Weak engines, poor transmissions, and fragile, short-life tracks contributed to this reputation.

The otherwise-incomprehensible resistance to tanks from 'traditional' military leadership can be partly understood in this light; a tank battalion that loses most of its vehicles due to mechanical failure on a 50-mile movement is not a reliable asset in combat. The international success of the Vickers Six-Ton tank is due more to its high reliability than any brilliance in the design. However, as the decade passed, engines, transmissions and tracks all improved. By the beginning of World War II, reliable engines and transmissions, as well as high-speed suspension designs were all available.

A final trend in the between-the-wars period was changes in manufacturing methods. France pioneered the use of very large castings to form gun mantlets, turrets and eventually, with the SOMUA S35, entire tank hulls. The widespread use of casting was copied by the US and USSR, and to a lesser extent in the UK. Casting enables the fast manufacture of ballistically well-shaped components. Germany never made much use of large cast components, limiting casting to smaller items such as mantlets.

Welding gradually replaced riveting and bolting as a means of fastening rolled armor plate together. Rivets can shear off when struck by enemy fire, resulting in additional crew casualties. Germany and the USSR led the way with welding, although the US followed closely. Riveting and bolting remained in use in some countries such as Hungary, Japan, and Italy, and to a lesser extent, in the United Kingdom right to the end of World War II.

Finally, the US and USSR led the way in rationalizing designs for fast production, eliminating unnecessary components or manufacturing steps that added little value. In contrast, French and German pre-war (and even wartime) tanks often incorporated features that added cost or manufacturing complexity out of proportion to their combat value.[citation needed]

United Kingdom edit

 
Vickers Medium Mark Is on a manoeuvre somewhere in England, 1930

Following World War I, many experiments involving armoured vehicles were conducted in Britain. The most significant advances were made in the areas of suspensions, tracks, communications, and the organization of these vehicles on the battlefield. British designs, particularly those from Vickers-Armstrong, formed the basis for many of the most common tanks of the 1930s and early World War II. For example, the Vickers Six Ton Tank was the basis for the Polish 7TP, the Soviet T-26, and was a major influence on the Italian M-11 and M-13 series and the Czech LT-35. The six-ton Vickers tank was not adopted by the British Army.

 
Vickers Medium Mark II Tank.

Another notable design was the Vickers Medium Mk II, a pivotal design which combined some of the best traits of World War I tanks into a much faster tank. It had a fully rotating turret on top like the FT, but mounted a dual-use 3-pounder gun (that could fire both high-explosive and anti-tank shells) with a coaxial machine gun. It also had a radio, a machine-gunner position in the front of the hull, and some limited use of sloped armour. Some of these tanks would go on to serve in World War II, though most of the significance of the design lies in the number of features that were utilized in later tank designs.

The Vickers Carden-Lloyd machine gun carriers influenced the tankette concept through export and similar designs such as the Soviet T-27, Italian CV-33, German Panzer I and other copies.

A perhaps less significant but also notable design was the Vickers A1E1 'Independent', which was a large heavy tank that was built in 1925. It had a large main turret and four smaller turrets. This design concept was later used by the Soviet T-28 and T-35 tanks as well as the German Neubaufahrzeug.

 
A Carden-Loyd tankette towing a howitzer.

Exponents of the replacement of the cavalry function by armoured vehicles were Liddell Hart and Fuller. Their opponents misinterpreted (either mistakenly or deliberately) them as proponents of an all-tank fighting force, though their views did specify that artillery and infantry should be mechanised to make them as fast and manoeuvrable as the tanks they advocated, and experiments were curtailed.

An outstanding achievement of the British Army was the creation of the Experimental Mechanised Force in the late 1920s. This was a small Brigade-sized unit developed to field-test the use of tanks and other vehicles. The unit pioneered the extensive use of radio to control widely separated small units. The unit was short-lived, however.

 
A Vickers A1E1 "Independent"

Eventually, by the 1930s, British experiments and their strategic situation led to a tank development programme with three main types of tank: light, cruiser, and infantry. The Infantry tanks were tasked with the support of dismounted infantry. The maximum speed requirement matched the walking pace of a rifleman, and the armour on these tanks was expected to be heavy enough to provide immunity to towed anti-tank guns. Armament had to be sufficient to suppress or destroy enemy machine gun positions and bunkers.

Cruiser tanks were tasked with the traditional cavalry roles of pursuit and exploitation, working relatively independently of the infantry. This led to cruiser tank designs having great speed. To achieve this they were lightly armoured, and tended to carry anti-tank armament. The light tanks were tasked with reconnaissance and constabulary-type colonial roles, with cheapness the major design factor. Vickers-Armstrong built a series of light tanks, to be sold either to the British Army who wanted to keep costs down or to foreign militaries.

France edit

The French used a very wide range of tanks, including many unique types. France was the second largest tank producer in the world, behind the Soviet Union (see French armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II). Their cavalry tank class filled the role of what are now called MBTs. They also fielded a heavy tank design, and several lighter types for scouting and infantry support. In addition to these types, they were also working on super-heavy breakthrough tanks (FCM F1). The French didn't have an independent Tank Corps. All tanks belonged to either the Infantry or the Cavalry.

 
The French Renault R35 tank
  • Infantry Tanks (Chars)
    • Light Tanks (Chars Légers), generally similar to other nations' light tanks, though they were intended to be used more for infantry support rather than scouting, and as such were better armoured but slower than many other light tanks. The Renault R35 was the most common type; small numbers of the futuristic FCM 36 were built. The R35 was also exported to several eastern European countries, including Romania and Poland.
    • Medium Tanks (Chars de Bataille), these were in fact meant to be specialised breakthrough tanks (Char D1, Char D2, Char B1).
    • Heavy Tanks (Chars Lourds); only the World War I-vintage Char 2C was ever operational in this class, being the reason why the breakthrough role was delegated to the Chars de Bataille.
  • Cavalry Tanks (Automitrailleuses). These classes focused on speed in addition to the power and protection of other tank designs, and were intended for both anti-tank and anti-personnel work. As by law all tanks (Chars) had to be part of the Infantry, the Cavalry called its tanks Automitrailleuses. These included the Hotchkiss H35.
    • Armoured Combat Tanks (AMCs or Automitrailleuses de Combat), a medium tank that sacrificed some armour for speed, and had similar armament to the infantry tanks (AMC 34, AMC 35, SOMUA S35).
    • Armoured Reconnaissance (AMRs or Automitrailleuses de Reconnaissance), essentially light tanks (AMR 33;AMR 35), but specifically intended for general reconnaissance and maintaining a security screen. Specialised reconnaissance however would be carried out by AMD's or Automitrailleuses de Découverte, typically armoured cars or half-tracks.
 
French 13.2 mm-armed AMR 35s, belonging to 4e RDP, 1re DLM.

The Renault FT had a long life and saw use in World War II and even later in Indochina. It was utilised as far away as in China, during the Chinese Civil wars, and versions of the tank were used both against and by the Japanese during the invasion of China. A large number found their way into both Republican and Nationalist hands during the Spanish Civil War. They were used in the Russian Revolution by both the Bolsheviks and the White Russians, and later by the Finns against the Soviets. France exported the FT right up to World War II. The design was also developed by the Italians as the Fiat 3000 and the USSR as the T-18.

By the mid-1930s the French Army was replacing the ageing FT fleet with a mixed force of light tanks both in the Infantry and Cavalry branches, as well as medium and heavy tanks. The Infantry light tanks included the Renault R 35, which followed the FT concept quite closely with its very small size, two-man crew, and short 37 mm gun armament. It was, however, heavily armored. The R 35 was mostly used to equip the independent tank battalions, an armoured reserve allocated at army level and intended to reinforce infantry divisions in breakthrough operations. French infantry divisions normally had no organic tank component. The R 35 was exported to Poland and Romania. The cavalry had the similar Hotchkiss H 35, armed with the same 37 mm, as well as light recon tanks such as the AMR 35.

France also produced what may have been the best tank of the 1930s, the SOMUA S35. This tank equipped the armoured divisions of the Cavalry which had to execute the exploitation phase of a battle and was probably the best combination of armour, firepower and mobility prior to the appearance of the German PzKpfw IV Ausf. F2 and Soviet T-34. The S 35 had a long 47 mm gun that could kill any tank then in service, as well as heavy cast armour and good speed.

 
A Char B1 bis at the Musée des Blindés at Saumur

The French char de bataille Char B1 tank was a very formidable tank, with heavy cast and riveted armour, the same long 47 mm gun as in the S 35, and a hull-mounted 75 mm howitzer. All Char B1s were equipped with radio and the tank was nearly invulnerable to most tanks and towed antitank guns. They equipped the armoured divisions of the Infantry, which were specialised breakthrough units.

In general, French tanks of the 1930s were well-armoured, innovative vehicles that owed little to foreign designs. However, the light tanks lacked firepower and almost all French tanks were crippled by their one-man turrets. Even the vaunted Char B1 had a commander who was tasked with commanding the vehicle, aiming the main gun, and loading the main gun. If he were a platoon leader or company commander, he had the additional tasks of controlling his other units.

Such a heavy set of tasks was overwhelming, and greatly reduced the effectiveness of the tanks. The lack of radios with the light tanks was not seen as a major drawback, since French doctrine called for slow-paced, deliberate manoeuvers in close conformance to plans: the "Methodical Battle" concept, adopted because wargaming showed it to be superior. The role of small unit leaders was to execute plans, not to take the initiative in combat.

This was nearly the opposite of German doctrine, which stressed initiative and decision-making at low command levels (Auftragstaktik). In 1939 a belated effort was made to improve flexibility and increase the number of radios.

Despite the views of Estienne and later Charles de Gaulle, the French general staff failed in defining an effective military doctrine regarding their use, due to the division of labour between infantry and cavalry tanks. In the Battle of France, despite an advantage in number and armour against the Germans, the French tanks were not used to good enough effect. The infantry tanks were only effective in executing the breakthrough phase of a battle; and thus useless as a mobile reserve. Ironically, cooperation with the infantry was poor. The Cavalry units alone were too few in number.

After the Fall of France, work on new designs, such as the Char G1, officially halted, although there was some clandestine designing done. After the liberation of France, the next tank to be introduced would be the ARL 44 heavy tank, which came too late to participate in World War II, but was used post-war for a time.

Soviet Union edit

 
T-18 light tank

The Soviet Union's efforts in tank design and production were influenced by the Russian Civil War and the growth of Soviet industry. During the civil war, the use of armored trains and artillery trains were common. This tended to lead to a greater interest in tanks and armored cars compared to some western nations. The rapid growth of heavy industry in the USSR under the Five-Year plans made a large tank fleet possible.

Initially, the tanks and armored cars in Soviet hands were a mix of Renault FT imports and a few British tanks left behind in the civil war. The first Soviet tank, the T-18 (sometimes called MS-1) was a fairly close copy of the FT, but with improved suspension and a larger turret. Stalin's enthusiasm for industrialisation and mechanisation drove an aggressive military development program, resulting in by far the largest and broadest tank inventory of all nations by the late 1930s.

In 1926, under a secret annex to the Treaty of Rapallo, the Soviet Union and Germany set up a joint tank school at Kazan, which was illegal under the Treaty of Versailles. Both countries learned much about tank design and tactics in this co-operative venture. The Germans provided advice on mechanisation of Soviet heavy industry, and helped develop a sense of professionalism in the Red Army. From 1929, an experimental Mechanised Brigade was formed, training and developing combined-arms tactics with foreign tanks, armoured cars, tractors, and lorries.

The Soviets also spent tens of millions of dollars on U.S. equipment and technology to modernize dozens of automotive and tractor factories, which would later produce tanks and armoured vehicles.

 
The multi-turreted T-28 medium tank. The T-28 was designed as an infantry support tank and was used to break through fortifications.

Based on a mixed force of foreign tanks and imported prototypes, the Soviets developed an impressive domestic design and production capability. The T-26 light tank was based on the Vickers E (as were many other tanks of the period), chosen after it beat a Soviet FT derivative in trials. The Soviets purchased some U.S. Christie M1930 tank prototypes, from which they developed the BT series of fast tanks. They also developed the heavier multi-turreted T-28 medium tank and the massive T-35, which followed the design premise of the Vickers A1E1 Independent. Of the tanks produced between 1930 and 1940, 97% were either identical copies of foreign designs, or very closely related improvements. Significantly, the major improvement the Soviet designers made to these foreign designs was an increase in firepower. By 1935, the Red Army ". . . possessed more armoured vehicles, and more tank units than the rest of the world combined." (Zaloga 1984, p. 107)

 
The Soviet T-35 tank. The tank has 5 turrets, 3 with cannons, 2 with machine guns.

But from 1937 to 1941, the Red Army's officer corps, the armour design bureaux, and leadership of the factories were gutted by Stalin's Great Purge. Approximately 54,000 officers were repressed. Military knowledge completely stagnated and armoured vehicle production dropped drastically (though still remaining the world's largest). Training and readiness dropped to very low levels. This repression continued until the eve of the war.

 
The BT-5 Fast Tank; the BT series led to the development of the T-34.

The participation by Soviet 'volunteer' tank units in the Spanish Civil War was decisive in forming Soviet tank designs for World War II. Soviet tanks dominated their foreign rivals in Spain due to their firepower, but their thin armor, in common with most tanks of the period, made them vulnerable to the new towed antitank guns being supplied to Infantry units. This finding led directly to a new generation of Soviet tanks.

By the eve of World War II, the Soviet Union had some of the world's best tanks (including the T-34 and KV-1, which were basically a generation ahead, coming as a shock to the Wehrmacht). However, the poor training and readiness status of most Red Army units led to a catastrophic defeat of the enormous Soviet Mechanised Corps during the opening phases of Operation Barbarossa, Germany's 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union. Despite their generally good equipment, the Red Army's operational capabilities and motorised logistic support were inferior.

Czechoslovakia edit

 
LT vz. 35 tanks in the Škoda Works

The Czechoslovak Army bought three Carden-Loyd tankettes and a production licence for them in 1930, Českomoravská Kolben-Daněk building four copies that same year as prototypes for future orders. The Carden-Loyds were evaluated during the Fall manoeuvres and revealed numerous problems: the crews had very poor vision through the narrow slits, the machine gun had a very narrow field of fire and the crewmen had a difficult time communicating. Furthermore, they were slow, underpowered and often broke down.[2]

One of the P-1 prototypes was rebuilt to address these issues with additional vision ports in all directions, internal ammunition storage and the machine gun's field of fire increased to 60°. It was extensively tested during 1931–32 and a few other changes were made as a result. The armor was increased from 6 to 8 mm (0.24 to 0.31 in) and from 9 to 12 mm (0.35 to 0.47 in) and a fixed machine gun was added for the driver.[2]

Two of the other prototypes were rebuilt to the same standard; all three were officially accepted by the Army on 17 October 1933. The order for seventy was placed on 19 April 1933, all being delivered by October 1934.[2] The Škoda T-21 (original designation was Škoda Š-IIc) was Škoda's contribution to the IIc army category (medium tanks for general use) and a direct competitor to Praga V-8-H.

In the early thirties both Praga and Škoda (main competitors for both Czechoslovak army contracts but also with regard to export) designed some successful light tanks (LT-35, later the LT-38) but both companies produced some unsuccessful infantry support tank designs, notably the Praga P-IIb and Škoda Š-IIb. Subsequently, both companies worked together to design a joint infantry tank project, designated ŠP-IIb. Both companies however also continued to work on their own private attempts to build IIb/IIc category prototypes. These private attempts would later become the Praga V-8-H and Škoda T-21.

The main design work on the T-21 began as early as September 1936. The first prototype was finished in May 1937 and first variant from May 1937 was the original Š-IIc. The engine development was delayed and the prototype was fitted (in order to save time) with a 190 hp 13-liter V6, originally intended for the Š-III breakthrough tank prototype. In September 1937, the V6 engine was removed and the original Škoda engine intended for it was installed. It still failed its tests which were stopped in November, marking the end of the 1st development stage of T-21.

By that time the Ministry of Defence committee was looking for a suitable Czechoslovak medium tank for the army but the Š-IIc did not to make the June 1938 army tests deadline and as a result this was the end of the T-21 as a potential Czechoslovak army medium tank. In any case, after the German occupation of Czechoslovakia that was no longer possible, not without German consent at least.

During the early months of occupation German delegations visited the Škoda factory and tests were performed with the Š-IIc prototype which, by 22.5.1939, had been renamed, to fit the German nomenclature principles to Škoda T-21 (T = tank, 2 = medium, 1 = 1st variant). The Germans initially wanted to test it at Kummersdorf, but did not show too much interest in the design and instead the Germans decided to produce an improved version, which was named T-22.

The British Carden-Lloyd tankettes that Czechoslovakia had acquired led to the Czechoslovakian designed tank, the Tančík vz. 33 which was assembled from a framework of steel "angle iron" beams, to which armor plates were riveted. The front armor was 12 mm (0.47 in) thick, the sides had a thickness of 8 mm (0.31 in), the top was 6 mm (0.24 in) thick and the bottom plates were 6 mm (0.24 in) in thickness. This was deemed enough to deflect armor-piercing 7.92 mm (0.312 in) bullets fired from distances greater than 125 metres (137 yd) from the front and 185 metres (202 yd) from the sides. Both were supposed to withstand ordinary bullets from over 50 metres (55 yd).[3]

 
A Czech LT vz. 34 in 1935

The 1.95 litres (119 cu in), water-cooled, 30 horsepower (22 kW), inline 4-cylinder Praga engine sat directly in the fighting compartment. It had a top speed on the road of 35 kilometres per hour (22 mph). The suspension was a modified version of that used in the Carden-Loyd tankettes. The Tančík vz. 33 (literal translation "Tankette model 33") was a Czechoslovak-designed tankette used mainly by Slovakia during World War II. Seventy-four were built. The Germans seized forty when they occupied Bohemia-Moravia in March 1939; there is no record of their use. The Slovaks captured thirty at the same time when they declared independence from Czechoslovakia. In Slovak service it only saw combat during the Slovak National Uprising.

The AH-IV was another Czechoslovak-designed tankette which Českomoravská Kolben-Daněk was determined not to repeat the problems of its earlier Tančík vz. 33 tankette and gave the gunner a turret for better observation and all-around fields of fire for its new AH-IV tankette. It was assembled from a framework of steel "angle iron" beams, to which armor plates between 12 and 6 mm (0.47 and 0.24 in) thick were riveted. The 3.468 litres (211.6 cu in), water-cooled, six-cylinder Praga engine produced 55 horsepower (41 kW) at 2500 rpm.

 
A LT vz. 38 Czech LTL exported to Peru and designated as LTP

It sat in the rear of the fighting compartment and drove the transmission via a driveshaft that ran forward between the driver and commander to the gearbox. It had a top speed on the road of 45 kilometres per hour (28 mph) and a range between 150 and 170 kilometres (93 and 106 mi). The semi-automatic Praga-Wilson transmission had five forward gears and one reverse gear to drive the forward-mounted drive sprocket. The suspension was a smaller version of that used in the Panzerkampfwagen 38(t).

The LT vz. 34, formally designated as Lehký Tank vzor 34 ("Light Tank Model 34") Czechoslovak-designed light tank had been based on that of the Carden-Loyd tankette, of which the Czechs had purchased three, plus a manufacturing license, in 1930. Dissatisfied with the prototypes of the Tančík vz. 33 tankette, the Czechoslovak Army decided that it would be easier to design a light tank from scratch rather than modify a tankette chassis to carry a fully rotating armored turret. 50 were built, the last of which was delivered during 1936.

 
A LT vz. 38 designated as LTH the export version to Switzerland

The next major tank developed in Czechoslovak service had the formal designation Lehký (Light) Tank vzor (Model) 35, but was commonly referred to as the LT vz. 35 or LT-35. In German use it was called the Panzerkampfwagen 35(t), commonly shortened to Panzer 35(t) or abbreviated as Pz.Kpfw. 35(t), and this Czechoslovak-designed light tank ended up being used mainly by Nazi Germany during World War II. The letter (t) stood for tschechisch (German: "Czech").

Four hundred and thirty-four were built; of these the Germans seized two hundred and forty-four when they occupied Bohemia-Moravia in March 1939 and the Slovaks acquired fifty-two when they declared independence from Czechoslovakia at the same time. Others were exported to Bulgaria and Romania. In German service it saw combat during the early years of World War II, notably the Invasion of Poland, the Battle of France and the invasion of the Soviet Union before being retired by 1942.

In 1935, the Czechoslovak tank manufacturer ČKD was looking for a replacement for the LT-35 tank they were jointly producing with Škoda Works. The LT-35 was complex and had shortcomings, and ČKD felt there would be orders both from the expanding Czechoslovak army and for export. ČKD decided to use a suspension with four large wheels for their new tank. It resembled the Christie suspension outwardly, but was actually a conventional leaf spring unit.

The resulting vehicle was reliable and came to be known as LT vz. 38 in Czechoslovak service and designated the Panzer 38(t) in German service. On 1 July 1938, Czechoslovakia ordered 150 of the TNHPS model, which came to be known as the LT vz. 38, and although none had entered service by the time of the German occupation those made were taken over and used by Germany. After the German takeover, Germany ordered continued production of the model as it was considered an excellent tank, especially compared to the Panzer I and Panzer II tanks that were the Panzerwaffe's main tanks.

It was first introduced into German service under the name LTM 38; this was changed on 16 January 1940 to Panzerkampfwagen 38(t). Production of tanks for Germany continued into 1942, and amounted to more than 1,400 examples. In German service the 38(t) was used as a substitute for the Panzer III.

Germany edit

Germany, constrained by the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, was not allowed to produce tanks of any kind and only a few armoured cars. In 1926 an unofficial program of tank construction was initiated by Hans von Seeckt, the commander of the Reichswehr. Built by Rheinmetall-Borsig the first Großtraktor ("Large Tractor") was similar to the existing British Mk II Medium Tank, 20 tons with a 75 mm gun. This, and other designs, were tested with Soviet co-operation at Kama tank school in the Russian Urals. In Germany proper dummy tanks were used in training, apparently at the instigation of then-Major Heinz Guderian, a staff tactical instructor. Guderian had read Fuller, Liddell-Hart and other tank warfare theorists and he had the support of his commanders to develop his theories into reality.

 
Panzer I Ausf. A in combat during the German invasion of Norway.

In 1931 the German General Staff accepted a plan for two types of tank, a medium tank with a 75 mm gun and a lighter vehicle with a 37 mm gun. While design and then construction work was carried out, the German army used a variety of light tanks based on the British Carden-Loyd tankette chassis. The early tanks were code-named Landwirtschaftlicher Schlepper (La S, "agricultural hauler"), a designation that lasted until 1938. The first of these light tanks ran in early 1934. It was a five-ton Krupp design which was dubbed the LKA1. The new government approved an initial order for 150 in 1934 as the 1A La S Krupp. Around 1,500 of these light tanks were built.

Later German tanks received a new designation, Panzerkampfwagen (abbreviated to 'PzKpfw' or 'PzKw' in German and 'Panzer' in English), which means "armoured fighting vehicle". The first machine to use this was the two-man Panzer I Ausf A influenced by the Carden Loyd tankette, and was a 5.4 ton machine with a 3.5-litre 60 hp (45 kW) petrol engine. It had 13 mm of armour and was armed with twin 7.92 mm machine guns. The more common Ausf B was a little larger to accommodate a 100 hp (75 kW) Maybach engine. Both models were sent to the Spanish Civil War for testing, along with other new German weapons. From the experiences in Spain it quickly became clear that the next generation of tanks would need better armour, greater range and much heavier weapons.

 
Panzer II tanks cross the desert

The Panzer II was around 50% heavier than the Panzer I. It had a 20 mm Solothurn antitank gun as main armament, as well as improved armour of up to 30 mm. Also sent to Spain from 1937, the Panzer II proved more capable against light infantry, but no better when faced with capable anti-tank guns or other tanks. Despite these weaknesses, production continued until 1941. At the outbreak of war, the German Army had 955 PzKpfw IIs and almost 4,000 were built in total.

 
Panzer 35(t) in France, 1940

A major boost to German armour came with the annexation of Czechoslovakia in 1938, giving Germany access to the entire Czech arms industry. The Czechs had two light tank designs later used by the Germans, the Škoda LT-35 and the Českomoravská Kolben-Daněk (ČKD) TNHP. The Škoda was a 10-ton machine with a 37 mm main gun and excellent cross-country capabilities; the ČKD was 8.5 tons and also fitted with a 37 mm gun—due to extensive tests it was an extremely reliable machine with a top quality chassis. Both were taken into the German panzer forces, as the Panzer 35(t) and the Panzer 38(t), and further production was ordered. ČKD was renamed Boehmisch-Maehrische Maschinenfabrik AG (BMM) in 1940 and continued production until 1942, providing the Wehrmacht with 1,168 PzKpfw 38(t) tanks. In 1940, Czech tanks made up around a quarter of the entire German panzer force.

 
German Panzer III Ausf. D tank, in Poland (1939)

While lighter tanks formed almost the entirety of the German forces, heavier tanks were at least at the prototype stage. In 1934, a number of heavy prototypes were constructed, based around either 75 or 105 mm main guns. Designated Neubaufahrzeug (NbFz) and very similar to contemporary Soviet and British designs, six were built by Rheinmetall and Krupp. Although they were mainly useful for propaganda purposes because only a handful of the tanks were made, three were actually used in combat in Norway. The knowledge of the NbFz and the experiences of the lighter tanks in Spain aided in designing the next generation of tanks, the Panzer III and Panzer IV. The PzIII was the lighter of the two and was intended for use in anti-tank operations, whereas the heavier PzIV was armed with a short-barrel gun and intended for supporting infantry.

 
Panzer IV Ausf. C

The Panzer III's 37 mm gun was considered underpowered, yet it was used in the interests of standardisation with the infantry. Contracts for the Zugführerwagen (ZW, "platoon leader vehicle") were issued late in 1936. Its weight was limited to a maximum of 24 tons, because it was required to be able to cross existing bridges. Development work continued until 1938 when the Ausf D went into limited production. This 19 ton machine was powered by a 12-litre 320 hp (239 kW) engine. It had a top speed of 25 mph (40 km/h) and was fitted with 30 mm armour all round.

By the outbreak of war, around fifty had been completed and some saw service in Poland. Full-scale production did not begin until October 1939 as the Ausf E. Around 350 Panzer IIIs Ausf E variant were ready by the invasion of France.

Japan edit

 
Japanese Whippets.

Like the US Army, the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) did not have tanks of its own in World War I, so initially it started out by purchasing foreign tanks for evaluation, and then began developing its own designs. After the war, a few Whippets (six) were exported to Japan,[4] where they remained in service until around 1930.[5]

 
Japanese Type 89 I-Go tanks moving toward Manila, January 1942.

In 1925, in addition to tankettes, the Japanese Army began to design tanks to satisfy its own requirements. Before that year, as with most nations, all tanks in Japanese service had been of foreign design and/or manufacture. The first Japanese design was finished in May 1926 and the prototype Type 87 Chi-I medium tank was completed by February 1927.[6] After trials, the Chi-I was considered too heavy and slow to be used as its main tank.[7] It was decided to create a new design modeled after the Vickers Medium C prototype, which had been bought by the Japanese Army in March 1927. By 1929 the prototype of the Type 89 Chi-Ro (Experimental Tank Number 2) was completed.[8][9]

The Type 89 Chi-Ro tank was lighter (9.8 tonnes) and shorter than the Chi-I. It contained increased armour (6 to 17 mm) and an improved water-cooled engine. After success in initial tests, the Type 89 became the first mass-produced Japanese tank. The Type 89 had a crew of four, and was armed with a 57 mm Type 90 gun and two 6.5 mm type 91 machine guns.[10] The second version of this tank known as the Type89B Otsu used a diesel engine. The Japanese were among the first to use diesel engines in their tank designs.[11]

 
Japanese Type 95 Ha-Go first prototype, 1934

During the 1930s, the Japanese began production of tankettes and light tanks, which were used heavily in Manchuria and China.[12] The Type 94 tankette weighed 3.4 tonnes and was generally used as either a tractor to tow an ammunition trailer, or as a patrol/reconnaissance tank.[13] With a crew of two men and a single 6.5 mm type 91 machine gun, 823 units of the Type 94 were produced[14] and they saw widespread service as late as 1945.

Over twice as large as the Type 94 at (7.4 tonnes), the Type 95 Ha-Go light tank had a complement of three crewmen, a 37 mm gun and the same 6.5 mm type 91 machine gun, and most importantly a diesel engine which would later greatly influence future tank designs in the Soviet Army.[15][16] Over two-thousand Type 95 tanks were built, and production continued until 1943.[17]

By 1936 the Japanese Army started to look for a replacement for the Type 89. The new medium tank, Type 97 Chi-Ha, was introduced in 1937. The Type 97 Chi-Ha at 15 tonnes was armed with a low-velocity Type 97 57 mm tank gun and had armour up to 25 mm thick. Later, an improved version known as the Type 97 Shinhoto Chi-Ha remained in production until 1943.[18]

 
Type 97 Chi-Ha medium tank

The 1930s were the last time that the Japanese military focused on production and design of tanks before World War II. After that period, they were largely preoccupied with establishing naval control and their focus was on production of ships and aircraft. Furthermore, with the emphasis on expansion southward into the Pacific Ocean region, land battles would be largely replaced by naval warfare, and thus, with the exception of small islands, the domain of the Imperial Japanese Navy.[19] With the destruction of the Imperial Navy, the focus on tanks returned when the Japanese military prepared for the defense of the mainland in the last years of World War II.[20]

United States edit

After World War I, and still using British and French designs, the United States Tank Corps was reduced in size. Renaults and the new Mk VIII "Liberty Tank" were retained:[21] The National Defense Act of 1920 restricted tanks to infantry use only; as a result, the Tank Corps was disbanded, with the remaining tanks distributed among the infantry.

In 1928, at the request of Secretary of War Dwight F. Davis, the Army formed the Experimental Mechanized Brigade. It consisted of a heavy tank battalion, a light tank battalion, a motorised infantry battalion, a motorised artillery battalion, an engineer company, and a signals company. Due to the use of obsolete equipment, the experiment failed, and the force was disbanded after three months.

 
A M1 Combat Car.

In 1934–35, at the request of the Cavalry, three prototype tanks, the T2, T2E1, and T2E2 were produced. Under the terms of the National Defense Act of 1920, tanks were restricted to infantry units. To get around the Defense Act, these tanks were called "combat cars". The M1 series entered service in 1937. The T2, inspired by the British Vickers 6-Ton, was standardised as the M1 Combat Car. The T2E1, a single-turret tank armed with three machine guns, was standardised as the Light Tank M2A1. The T2E2, a two-turret tank with two machine guns, was standardised as the M2A2.

 
An M2 Light Tank.

Throughout the interwar period the US produced only a few hundred tanks. From the end of World War I to 1935, only 15 tanks were produced. Most were derivatives or foreign designs or very poor quality private designs. The Christie designs were among the few bright spots, but the US Army acquired only three Christies and did not pursue the idea any further. Budget limitations and the low priority given to the Army meant that there were few resources for building tanks. The US Army instead developed and tested tank components such as suspensions, tracks, and transmissions. This work paid off when production needed to be initiated upon the outbreak of war.

Immediately before and during World War II, U.S. tanks and many other Allied tanks were powered by radial aircraft-type engines. However, the massive production of aircraft caused a shortage of these engines. Because of this, many tanks, particularly the Sherman and the Lee, were powered by as many as five different power-plant arrangements. In addition to Wright and Continental radials, they were powered by Ford GAA, GM truck diesels, and the Chrysler A57 multibank (an arrangement of five 6-cylinder automobile engines that ran as a single unit). After the war, diesel truck-type engines replaced the gasoline-burning radials.

Other Nations edit

 
Polish 7TP tank. These were based on the British Vickers 6-Ton

Many other nations that desired tanks could not design or build their own. The 1920s and 1930s saw a widespread export business as smaller or less-industrialized nations purchased tanks abroad. Sometimes, the import of foreign tanks led to the birth of a tank industry in the importing nation.

Poland imported the British Vickers Six-Ton tank and began production of improved models. The pinnacle of this improvement program was the 7TP, which featured a diesel engine and 37 mm gun. Poland also produced the TKS series of tankettes, similar in concept to the Vickers-Carden-Loyd machinegun carriers of Britain and the UE of France. These vehicles had two-man crews, thin armor, and a single ball-mounted light machine gun.

 
Sweden's Strv m40K – a heavily modified Landsverk L-60
 
A Hungarian Toldi light tank. These were originally based on Sweden's L-60

Sweden's Landsverk firm designed several advanced light tanks, including the 20 mm armed L-60, which also had welded construction and some sloped armor. The L-60 was improved and developed further by Hungary, creating the Toldi light tanks, which the Hungarians used extensively during World War II. With its 20 mm gun, the L-60 was roughly comparable to the German Panzer II or Soviet T-60. The L-60 was also the chassis on which the Landsverk L-62 self-propelled 40 mm anti-aircraft gun was built. Hungary bought L-62s and improved them, developing it into the 40M Nimród. Although the L-62 was designed as a self-propelled anti-aircraft gun (SPAAG), the Hungarian 40M Nimród saw service with Hungarian forces on the Eastern Front as both a tank destroyer and an SPAAG. Six L-62s were used by Finland after 1942.

 
A Hungarian 41M Turán II medium tank in Kubinka Tank Museum

Hungary developed an impressive tank industry for its size before and during World War II. They built the well-armed Straussler V-4 tank during the interwar period, produced several variants of Toldi light tanks, as well as the Turán family of medium tanks, and later in the war they became the first smaller nation to make their own heavy tank – the 44M Tas. The 44M Tas was armed with a powerful 80 mm gun and had thick sloped armour, giving the Tas even better protection than the German Panther tank, which the 44M Tas was inspired by. Of the Turán series, the 40M Turán I was based on an incomplete prototype of the Czech Škoda T-21 (Š-II-c) medium tank, but the Turán I had improved armour, a redesigned turret and hull, and a new 40 mm gun. The later 41M Turán II had a short 75 mm gun, improved armour, and a redesigned turret. The pinnacle of the Turán series was the 43M Turán III, which had a long 75 mm gun, even thicker armour, and had a redesigned turret again. During World War II, these Hungarian tanks were supplemented by several dozen imported German vehicles, including the legendary Tigers and Panthers.

Turkey imported Soviet T-26 and a few T-28 tanks but did not begin series production of any tank.

Latvia and Lithuania imported a few light vehicles such as Vickers-Carden-Loyd tankettes, Renault FTs, and Six-Tonners.

 
Close-up of Italian CV-35-L3/35 in the Balkans.

Romania imported some R-35 light tanks from France, as well as some German/Czech Panzer 35(t)s.

Italy imported the French Renault FT and produced a slightly improved clone, the Fiat 3000. A native Italian design was the L6/40, a very small light tank with a 20 mm Breda cannon and rivetted construction. A medium tank, based on the Vickers Six-Tonner, was the M-11-M13 series. This tank had a very good 47 mm gun, but very thin armor. Italy also produced a large number of CV-33 and CV-35 tankettes based on the Vickers-Carden-Loyd concept.

In Latin America, the first war where the tank was employed was the Chaco War between Bolivia and Paraguay, in which the former used a small number of British-built tanks and tankettes, whereas the latter had no tanks at all.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Britain's Struggle To Build Effective Tanks During The Second World War". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 2022-07-25.
  2. ^ a b c Kliment & Francev 1997, pp. 44–45.
  3. ^ Kliment & Francev 1997, p. 46.
  4. ^ Ellis & Chamberlain 1972, p. 9.
  5. ^ Crow, p. 2.
  6. ^ Tomczyk 2002, pp. 6, 7.
  7. ^ Tomczyk 2002, p. 7.
  8. ^ Tomczyk 2002, pp. 7, 10, 17.
  9. ^ Zaloga 2007, p. 5.
  10. ^ Tomczyk 2002, pp. 19, 25.
  11. ^ Zaloga 2007, pp. 5, 6.
  12. ^ Tomczyk 2002, p. 46.
  13. ^ Tomczyk 2002, pp. 46, 54, 55.
  14. ^ Zaloga 2007, p. 10.
  15. ^ Tomczyk 2002, pp. 67, 74.
  16. ^ Zaloga 2007, p. 15.
  17. ^ Zaloga 2007, pp. 10, 17.
  18. ^ Zaloga 2007, pp. 10, 11, 14.
  19. ^ Zaloga 2007, pp. 15, 17.
  20. ^ Zaloga 2007, pp. 21, 22.
  21. ^ . www.ftmeade.army.mil. Archived from the original on 29 September 2008. Retrieved 12 January 2022.

References edit

  • Ellis, Chris; Chamberlain, Peter Chamberlain (1972). Medium Tanks Marks A to D. AFV/weapons. Windsor: Profile Publications. OCLC 220833240.
  • Kliment, Charles K.; Francev, Vladimír (1997). Czechoslovak Armored Fighting Vehicles. Atglen, PN: Schiffer. ISBN 0-7643-0141-1.
  • Tomczyk, Andrzej (2002). Japanese Armor Volume 1. AJ Press. ISBN 83-7237-097-4.
  • Zaloga, Steven J. and Grandsen, James (1984). Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two. Arms and Armour Press, London. ISBN 0-85368-606-8.
  • Zaloga, Steven J. (2007). Japanese Tanks 1939–45. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-8460-3091-8.

tanks, interwar, period, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, au. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tanks of the interwar period news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Tanks were initially deployed in World War I engineered to overcome the deadlock of trench warfare Between the two world wars tanks were further developed Although they had demonstrated their battlefield effectiveness only a few nations had the industrial resources to design and build them During and after World War I Britain and France pioneered tank technology with their models generally serving as a blueprint for other countries However this initial advantage would slowly diminish during the 1930s shifting in favor of the Soviet Union and to a lesser degree Nazi Germany A Panzerkampfwagen I Ausf A on display at the Deutsches Panzermuseum Munster Germany Contents 1 General developments 2 United Kingdom 3 France 4 Soviet Union 5 Czechoslovakia 6 Germany 7 Japan 8 United States 9 Other Nations 10 See also 11 Notes 12 ReferencesGeneral developments editThis section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Mark VIII Liberty TankThe final tank designs of 1918 were influenced by a number of developments and demonstrated several trends in tank design One such example was the joint US and British Mark VIII tank which was envisioned as a heavy tank design that could be utilized by both nations as well as the French The purpose of this tank was to address the limitations of earlier British heavy tanks The Mark VIII measured 34 feet 10 meters in length and weighed 37 tons It was powered by a 300 horsepower 224 kilowatt V 12 engine and could reach a top speed of 7 miles per hour 11 kilometers per hour across difficult terrain Only 100 of these tanks were built It was the lighter Renault FT that would set the standard for nearly all tanks that followed it This tank featured a lower track profile and a more compact hull as well as a turret mounted weapon system Worldwide several types of tanks were considered and much of the development effort went into light tanks that were useful primarily against infantry or for colonial police type work The worldwide economic difficulties of the 1920s and 1930s led to an increased emphasis on light tanks as they were much cheaper to produce than medium or heavy tanks However the Spanish Civil War showed that tank versus tank engagements and tank versus towed anti tank gun engagements would now be a major consideration for the future of tank warfare It became clear that tanks would need to be heavily armoured and carry larger guns Tank shape previously guided purely by considerations of obstacle clearance now became a trade off between a low profile desirable for stealth and weight savings nbsp The British A13 Cruiser Mk IV tankIn Britain a great deal of study on the future of tank warfare was carried out and there were some differences Whilst both J F C Fuller and Basil Liddell Hart foresaw a war where all arms infantry tanks and artillery would be mechanised Fuller s theories looked at all arms formations with artillery infantry and military engineers mounted on similar vehicles to keep pace with the tanks He foresaw armies using heavy all arms formations to break through opponents defences allowing lighter faster units to make rapid advances thereby not allowing the enemy to re establish any defences Liddell Hart considered that armoured vehicles would carry their own supporting infantry in much the same way as modern warships carry their own marine detachments he also proposed using indirect attack effectively going around any defences During the late 1920s the British Army established the Experimental Mechanized Force to test these theories and look at the basic problems of managing controlling and commanding all arms formations including the use of aircraft Many of the units involved in this force were posted to North Africa where their experience played a major part in the British success in the East African Campaign and General Wavell s initial successes in the Western Desert campaign The British used three classes of tank the Infantry tank for supporting the infantry the Cruiser tank for fast moving encounter battles and reconnaissance and the light tank for reconnaissance escort and internal security 1 In the U S J Walter Christie developed a series of fast tanks based on his revolutionary Christie suspension system This was combined with very high power to weight ratios achieved by fitting large aircraft engines in his tanks Although his prototypes were capable of very high speeds and in some cases designed to be air transportable disputes with the United States Army Ordnance Corps and a high price compared with what the US military was willing to pay meant they were never produced in the USA Christie s prototypes were however purchased by the Soviet Union and were to be developed into the BT tanks and eventually on the eve of World War II the famous T 34 The success of the BT series when observed by Fuller at Russian Army maneuvers influenced the British to buy a Christie M1931 tank imported as a Tractor which led to Christie s suspension incorporated into British cruiser tank designs such as the A13 Cruiser Mk IV Crusader and others Today it may be difficult to understand why the tank idea found such resistance from the leadership of several armies Part of the explanation is that the entire automotive industry was in its infancy Tanks were rightly considered unreliable troublesome equipment as late as the early 1930s Weak engines poor transmissions and fragile short life tracks contributed to this reputation The otherwise incomprehensible resistance to tanks from traditional military leadership can be partly understood in this light a tank battalion that loses most of its vehicles due to mechanical failure on a 50 mile movement is not a reliable asset in combat The international success of the Vickers Six Ton tank is due more to its high reliability than any brilliance in the design However as the decade passed engines transmissions and tracks all improved By the beginning of World War II reliable engines and transmissions as well as high speed suspension designs were all available A final trend in the between the wars period was changes in manufacturing methods France pioneered the use of very large castings to form gun mantlets turrets and eventually with the SOMUA S35 entire tank hulls The widespread use of casting was copied by the US and USSR and to a lesser extent in the UK Casting enables the fast manufacture of ballistically well shaped components Germany never made much use of large cast components limiting casting to smaller items such as mantlets Welding gradually replaced riveting and bolting as a means of fastening rolled armor plate together Rivets can shear off when struck by enemy fire resulting in additional crew casualties Germany and the USSR led the way with welding although the US followed closely Riveting and bolting remained in use in some countries such as Hungary Japan and Italy and to a lesser extent in the United Kingdom right to the end of World War II Finally the US and USSR led the way in rationalizing designs for fast production eliminating unnecessary components or manufacturing steps that added little value In contrast French and German pre war and even wartime tanks often incorporated features that added cost or manufacturing complexity out of proportion to their combat value citation needed United Kingdom edit nbsp Vickers Medium Mark Is on a manoeuvre somewhere in England 1930Following World War I many experiments involving armoured vehicles were conducted in Britain The most significant advances were made in the areas of suspensions tracks communications and the organization of these vehicles on the battlefield British designs particularly those from Vickers Armstrong formed the basis for many of the most common tanks of the 1930s and early World War II For example the Vickers Six Ton Tank was the basis for the Polish 7TP the Soviet T 26 and was a major influence on the Italian M 11 and M 13 series and the Czech LT 35 The six ton Vickers tank was not adopted by the British Army nbsp Vickers Medium Mark II Tank Another notable design was the Vickers Medium Mk II a pivotal design which combined some of the best traits of World War I tanks into a much faster tank It had a fully rotating turret on top like the FT but mounted a dual use 3 pounder gun that could fire both high explosive and anti tank shells with a coaxial machine gun It also had a radio a machine gunner position in the front of the hull and some limited use of sloped armour Some of these tanks would go on to serve in World War II though most of the significance of the design lies in the number of features that were utilized in later tank designs The Vickers Carden Lloyd machine gun carriers influenced the tankette concept through export and similar designs such as the Soviet T 27 Italian CV 33 German Panzer I and other copies A perhaps less significant but also notable design was the Vickers A1E1 Independent which was a large heavy tank that was built in 1925 It had a large main turret and four smaller turrets This design concept was later used by the Soviet T 28 and T 35 tanks as well as the German Neubaufahrzeug nbsp A Carden Loyd tankette towing a howitzer Exponents of the replacement of the cavalry function by armoured vehicles were Liddell Hart and Fuller Their opponents misinterpreted either mistakenly or deliberately them as proponents of an all tank fighting force though their views did specify that artillery and infantry should be mechanised to make them as fast and manoeuvrable as the tanks they advocated and experiments were curtailed An outstanding achievement of the British Army was the creation of the Experimental Mechanised Force in the late 1920s This was a small Brigade sized unit developed to field test the use of tanks and other vehicles The unit pioneered the extensive use of radio to control widely separated small units The unit was short lived however nbsp A Vickers A1E1 Independent Eventually by the 1930s British experiments and their strategic situation led to a tank development programme with three main types of tank light cruiser and infantry The Infantry tanks were tasked with the support of dismounted infantry The maximum speed requirement matched the walking pace of a rifleman and the armour on these tanks was expected to be heavy enough to provide immunity to towed anti tank guns Armament had to be sufficient to suppress or destroy enemy machine gun positions and bunkers Cruiser tanks were tasked with the traditional cavalry roles of pursuit and exploitation working relatively independently of the infantry This led to cruiser tank designs having great speed To achieve this they were lightly armoured and tended to carry anti tank armament The light tanks were tasked with reconnaissance and constabulary type colonial roles with cheapness the major design factor Vickers Armstrong built a series of light tanks to be sold either to the British Army who wanted to keep costs down or to foreign militaries France editThe French used a very wide range of tanks including many unique types France was the second largest tank producer in the world behind the Soviet Union see French armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II Their cavalry tank class filled the role of what are now called MBTs They also fielded a heavy tank design and several lighter types for scouting and infantry support In addition to these types they were also working on super heavy breakthrough tanks FCM F1 The French didn t have an independent Tank Corps All tanks belonged to either the Infantry or the Cavalry nbsp The French Renault R35 tankInfantry Tanks Chars Light Tanks Chars Legers generally similar to other nations light tanks though they were intended to be used more for infantry support rather than scouting and as such were better armoured but slower than many other light tanks The Renault R35 was the most common type small numbers of the futuristic FCM 36 were built The R35 was also exported to several eastern European countries including Romania and Poland Medium Tanks Chars de Bataille these were in fact meant to be specialised breakthrough tanks Char D1 Char D2 Char B1 Heavy Tanks Chars Lourds only the World War I vintage Char 2C was ever operational in this class being the reason why the breakthrough role was delegated to the Chars de Bataille Cavalry Tanks Automitrailleuses These classes focused on speed in addition to the power and protection of other tank designs and were intended for both anti tank and anti personnel work As by law all tanks Chars had to be part of the Infantry the Cavalry called its tanks Automitrailleuses These included the Hotchkiss H35 Armoured Combat Tanks AMCs or Automitrailleuses de Combat a medium tank that sacrificed some armour for speed and had similar armament to the infantry tanks AMC 34 AMC 35 SOMUA S35 Armoured Reconnaissance AMRs or Automitrailleuses de Reconnaissance essentially light tanks AMR 33 AMR 35 but specifically intended for general reconnaissance and maintaining a security screen Specialised reconnaissance however would be carried out by AMD s or Automitrailleuses de Decouverte typically armoured cars or half tracks nbsp French 13 2 mm armed AMR 35s belonging to 4e RDP 1re DLM The Renault FT had a long life and saw use in World War II and even later in Indochina It was utilised as far away as in China during the Chinese Civil wars and versions of the tank were used both against and by the Japanese during the invasion of China A large number found their way into both Republican and Nationalist hands during the Spanish Civil War They were used in the Russian Revolution by both the Bolsheviks and the White Russians and later by the Finns against the Soviets France exported the FT right up to World War II The design was also developed by the Italians as the Fiat 3000 and the USSR as the T 18 By the mid 1930s the French Army was replacing the ageing FT fleet with a mixed force of light tanks both in the Infantry and Cavalry branches as well as medium and heavy tanks The Infantry light tanks included the Renault R 35 which followed the FT concept quite closely with its very small size two man crew and short 37 mm gun armament It was however heavily armored The R 35 was mostly used to equip the independent tank battalions an armoured reserve allocated at army level and intended to reinforce infantry divisions in breakthrough operations French infantry divisions normally had no organic tank component The R 35 was exported to Poland and Romania The cavalry had the similar Hotchkiss H 35 armed with the same 37 mm as well as light recon tanks such as the AMR 35 France also produced what may have been the best tank of the 1930s the SOMUA S35 This tank equipped the armoured divisions of the Cavalry which had to execute the exploitation phase of a battle and was probably the best combination of armour firepower and mobility prior to the appearance of the German PzKpfw IV Ausf F2 and Soviet T 34 The S 35 had a long 47 mm gun that could kill any tank then in service as well as heavy cast armour and good speed nbsp A Char B1 bis at the Musee des Blindes at SaumurThe French char de bataille Char B1 tank was a very formidable tank with heavy cast and riveted armour the same long 47 mm gun as in the S 35 and a hull mounted 75 mm howitzer All Char B1s were equipped with radio and the tank was nearly invulnerable to most tanks and towed antitank guns They equipped the armoured divisions of the Infantry which were specialised breakthrough units In general French tanks of the 1930s were well armoured innovative vehicles that owed little to foreign designs However the light tanks lacked firepower and almost all French tanks were crippled by their one man turrets Even the vaunted Char B1 had a commander who was tasked with commanding the vehicle aiming the main gun and loading the main gun If he were a platoon leader or company commander he had the additional tasks of controlling his other units Such a heavy set of tasks was overwhelming and greatly reduced the effectiveness of the tanks The lack of radios with the light tanks was not seen as a major drawback since French doctrine called for slow paced deliberate manoeuvers in close conformance to plans the Methodical Battle concept adopted because wargaming showed it to be superior The role of small unit leaders was to execute plans not to take the initiative in combat This was nearly the opposite of German doctrine which stressed initiative and decision making at low command levels Auftragstaktik In 1939 a belated effort was made to improve flexibility and increase the number of radios Despite the views of Estienne and later Charles de Gaulle the French general staff failed in defining an effective military doctrine regarding their use due to the division of labour between infantry and cavalry tanks In the Battle of France despite an advantage in number and armour against the Germans the French tanks were not used to good enough effect The infantry tanks were only effective in executing the breakthrough phase of a battle and thus useless as a mobile reserve Ironically cooperation with the infantry was poor The Cavalry units alone were too few in number After the Fall of France work on new designs such as the Char G1 officially halted although there was some clandestine designing done After the liberation of France the next tank to be introduced would be the ARL 44 heavy tank which came too late to participate in World War II but was used post war for a time Soviet Union edit nbsp T 18 light tankThe Soviet Union s efforts in tank design and production were influenced by the Russian Civil War and the growth of Soviet industry During the civil war the use of armored trains and artillery trains were common This tended to lead to a greater interest in tanks and armored cars compared to some western nations The rapid growth of heavy industry in the USSR under the Five Year plans made a large tank fleet possible Initially the tanks and armored cars in Soviet hands were a mix of Renault FT imports and a few British tanks left behind in the civil war The first Soviet tank the T 18 sometimes called MS 1 was a fairly close copy of the FT but with improved suspension and a larger turret Stalin s enthusiasm for industrialisation and mechanisation drove an aggressive military development program resulting in by far the largest and broadest tank inventory of all nations by the late 1930s In 1926 under a secret annex to the Treaty of Rapallo the Soviet Union and Germany set up a joint tank school at Kazan which was illegal under the Treaty of Versailles Both countries learned much about tank design and tactics in this co operative venture The Germans provided advice on mechanisation of Soviet heavy industry and helped develop a sense of professionalism in the Red Army From 1929 an experimental Mechanised Brigade was formed training and developing combined arms tactics with foreign tanks armoured cars tractors and lorries The Soviets also spent tens of millions of dollars on U S equipment and technology to modernize dozens of automotive and tractor factories which would later produce tanks and armoured vehicles nbsp The multi turreted T 28 medium tank The T 28 was designed as an infantry support tank and was used to break through fortifications Based on a mixed force of foreign tanks and imported prototypes the Soviets developed an impressive domestic design and production capability The T 26 light tank was based on the Vickers E as were many other tanks of the period chosen after it beat a Soviet FT derivative in trials The Soviets purchased some U S Christie M1930 tank prototypes from which they developed the BT series of fast tanks They also developed the heavier multi turreted T 28 medium tank and the massive T 35 which followed the design premise of the Vickers A1E1 Independent Of the tanks produced between 1930 and 1940 97 were either identical copies of foreign designs or very closely related improvements Significantly the major improvement the Soviet designers made to these foreign designs was an increase in firepower By 1935 the Red Army possessed more armoured vehicles and more tank units than the rest of the world combined Zaloga 1984 p 107 nbsp The Soviet T 35 tank The tank has 5 turrets 3 with cannons 2 with machine guns But from 1937 to 1941 the Red Army s officer corps the armour design bureaux and leadership of the factories were gutted by Stalin s Great Purge Approximately 54 000 officers were repressed Military knowledge completely stagnated and armoured vehicle production dropped drastically though still remaining the world s largest Training and readiness dropped to very low levels This repression continued until the eve of the war nbsp The BT 5 Fast Tank the BT series led to the development of the T 34 The participation by Soviet volunteer tank units in the Spanish Civil War was decisive in forming Soviet tank designs for World War II Soviet tanks dominated their foreign rivals in Spain due to their firepower but their thin armor in common with most tanks of the period made them vulnerable to the new towed antitank guns being supplied to Infantry units This finding led directly to a new generation of Soviet tanks By the eve of World War II the Soviet Union had some of the world s best tanks including the T 34 and KV 1 which were basically a generation ahead coming as a shock to the Wehrmacht However the poor training and readiness status of most Red Army units led to a catastrophic defeat of the enormous Soviet Mechanised Corps during the opening phases of Operation Barbarossa Germany s 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union Despite their generally good equipment the Red Army s operational capabilities and motorised logistic support were inferior Czechoslovakia edit nbsp LT vz 35 tanks in the Skoda WorksSee also Tanks of Czechoslovakia Pre World War II The Czechoslovak Army bought three Carden Loyd tankettes and a production licence for them in 1930 Ceskomoravska Kolben Danek building four copies that same year as prototypes for future orders The Carden Loyds were evaluated during the Fall manoeuvres and revealed numerous problems the crews had very poor vision through the narrow slits the machine gun had a very narrow field of fire and the crewmen had a difficult time communicating Furthermore they were slow underpowered and often broke down 2 One of the P 1 prototypes was rebuilt to address these issues with additional vision ports in all directions internal ammunition storage and the machine gun s field of fire increased to 60 It was extensively tested during 1931 32 and a few other changes were made as a result The armor was increased from 6 to 8 mm 0 24 to 0 31 in and from 9 to 12 mm 0 35 to 0 47 in and a fixed machine gun was added for the driver 2 Two of the other prototypes were rebuilt to the same standard all three were officially accepted by the Army on 17 October 1933 The order for seventy was placed on 19 April 1933 all being delivered by October 1934 2 The Skoda T 21 original designation was Skoda S IIc was Skoda s contribution to the IIc army category medium tanks for general use and a direct competitor to Praga V 8 H In the early thirties both Praga and Skoda main competitors for both Czechoslovak army contracts but also with regard to export designed some successful light tanks LT 35 later the LT 38 but both companies produced some unsuccessful infantry support tank designs notably the Praga P IIb and Skoda S IIb Subsequently both companies worked together to design a joint infantry tank project designated SP IIb Both companies however also continued to work on their own private attempts to build IIb IIc category prototypes These private attempts would later become the Praga V 8 H and Skoda T 21 The main design work on the T 21 began as early as September 1936 The first prototype was finished in May 1937 and first variant from May 1937 was the original S IIc The engine development was delayed and the prototype was fitted in order to save time with a 190 hp 13 liter V6 originally intended for the S III breakthrough tank prototype In September 1937 the V6 engine was removed and the original Skoda engine intended for it was installed It still failed its tests which were stopped in November marking the end of the 1st development stage of T 21 By that time the Ministry of Defence committee was looking for a suitable Czechoslovak medium tank for the army but the S IIc did not to make the June 1938 army tests deadline and as a result this was the end of the T 21 as a potential Czechoslovak army medium tank In any case after the German occupation of Czechoslovakia that was no longer possible not without German consent at least During the early months of occupation German delegations visited the Skoda factory and tests were performed with the S IIc prototype which by 22 5 1939 had been renamed to fit the German nomenclature principles to Skoda T 21 T tank 2 medium 1 1st variant The Germans initially wanted to test it at Kummersdorf but did not show too much interest in the design and instead the Germans decided to produce an improved version which was named T 22 The British Carden Lloyd tankettes that Czechoslovakia had acquired led to the Czechoslovakian designed tank the Tancik vz 33 which was assembled from a framework of steel angle iron beams to which armor plates were riveted The front armor was 12 mm 0 47 in thick the sides had a thickness of 8 mm 0 31 in the top was 6 mm 0 24 in thick and the bottom plates were 6 mm 0 24 in in thickness This was deemed enough to deflect armor piercing 7 92 mm 0 312 in bullets fired from distances greater than 125 metres 137 yd from the front and 185 metres 202 yd from the sides Both were supposed to withstand ordinary bullets from over 50 metres 55 yd 3 nbsp A Czech LT vz 34 in 1935The 1 95 litres 119 cu in water cooled 30 horsepower 22 kW inline 4 cylinder Praga engine sat directly in the fighting compartment It had a top speed on the road of 35 kilometres per hour 22 mph The suspension was a modified version of that used in the Carden Loyd tankettes The Tancik vz 33 literal translation Tankette model 33 was a Czechoslovak designed tankette used mainly by Slovakia during World War II Seventy four were built The Germans seized forty when they occupied Bohemia Moravia in March 1939 there is no record of their use The Slovaks captured thirty at the same time when they declared independence from Czechoslovakia In Slovak service it only saw combat during the Slovak National Uprising The AH IV was another Czechoslovak designed tankette which Ceskomoravska Kolben Danek was determined not to repeat the problems of its earlier Tancik vz 33 tankette and gave the gunner a turret for better observation and all around fields of fire for its new AH IV tankette It was assembled from a framework of steel angle iron beams to which armor plates between 12 and 6 mm 0 47 and 0 24 in thick were riveted The 3 468 litres 211 6 cu in water cooled six cylinder Praga engine produced 55 horsepower 41 kW at 2500 rpm nbsp A LT vz 38 Czech LTL exported to Peru and designated as LTPIt sat in the rear of the fighting compartment and drove the transmission via a driveshaft that ran forward between the driver and commander to the gearbox It had a top speed on the road of 45 kilometres per hour 28 mph and a range between 150 and 170 kilometres 93 and 106 mi The semi automatic Praga Wilson transmission had five forward gears and one reverse gear to drive the forward mounted drive sprocket The suspension was a smaller version of that used in the Panzerkampfwagen 38 t The LT vz 34 formally designated as Lehky Tank vzor 34 Light Tank Model 34 Czechoslovak designed light tank had been based on that of the Carden Loyd tankette of which the Czechs had purchased three plus a manufacturing license in 1930 Dissatisfied with the prototypes of the Tancik vz 33 tankette the Czechoslovak Army decided that it would be easier to design a light tank from scratch rather than modify a tankette chassis to carry a fully rotating armored turret 50 were built the last of which was delivered during 1936 nbsp A LT vz 38 designated as LTH the export version to SwitzerlandThe next major tank developed in Czechoslovak service had the formal designation Lehky Light Tank vzor Model 35 but was commonly referred to as the LT vz 35 or LT 35 In German use it was called the Panzerkampfwagen 35 t commonly shortened to Panzer 35 t or abbreviated as Pz Kpfw 35 t and this Czechoslovak designed light tank ended up being used mainly by Nazi Germany during World War II The letter t stood for tschechisch German Czech Four hundred and thirty four were built of these the Germans seized two hundred and forty four when they occupied Bohemia Moravia in March 1939 and the Slovaks acquired fifty two when they declared independence from Czechoslovakia at the same time Others were exported to Bulgaria and Romania In German service it saw combat during the early years of World War II notably the Invasion of Poland the Battle of France and the invasion of the Soviet Union before being retired by 1942 In 1935 the Czechoslovak tank manufacturer CKD was looking for a replacement for the LT 35 tank they were jointly producing with Skoda Works The LT 35 was complex and had shortcomings and CKD felt there would be orders both from the expanding Czechoslovak army and for export CKD decided to use a suspension with four large wheels for their new tank It resembled the Christie suspension outwardly but was actually a conventional leaf spring unit The resulting vehicle was reliable and came to be known as LT vz 38 in Czechoslovak service and designated the Panzer 38 t in German service On 1 July 1938 Czechoslovakia ordered 150 of the TNHPS model which came to be known as the LT vz 38 and although none had entered service by the time of the German occupation those made were taken over and used by Germany After the German takeover Germany ordered continued production of the model as it was considered an excellent tank especially compared to the Panzer I and Panzer II tanks that were the Panzerwaffe s main tanks It was first introduced into German service under the name LTM 38 this was changed on 16 January 1940 to Panzerkampfwagen 38 t Production of tanks for Germany continued into 1942 and amounted to more than 1 400 examples In German service the 38 t was used as a substitute for the Panzer III Germany editGermany constrained by the terms of the Treaty of Versailles was not allowed to produce tanks of any kind and only a few armoured cars In 1926 an unofficial program of tank construction was initiated by Hans von Seeckt the commander of the Reichswehr Built by Rheinmetall Borsig the first Grosstraktor Large Tractor was similar to the existing British Mk II Medium Tank 20 tons with a 75 mm gun This and other designs were tested with Soviet co operation at Kama tank school in the Russian Urals In Germany proper dummy tanks were used in training apparently at the instigation of then Major Heinz Guderian a staff tactical instructor Guderian had read Fuller Liddell Hart and other tank warfare theorists and he had the support of his commanders to develop his theories into reality nbsp Panzer I Ausf A in combat during the German invasion of Norway In 1931 the German General Staff accepted a plan for two types of tank a medium tank with a 75 mm gun and a lighter vehicle with a 37 mm gun While design and then construction work was carried out the German army used a variety of light tanks based on the British Carden Loyd tankette chassis The early tanks were code named Landwirtschaftlicher Schlepper La S agricultural hauler a designation that lasted until 1938 The first of these light tanks ran in early 1934 It was a five ton Krupp design which was dubbed the LKA1 The new government approved an initial order for 150 in 1934 as the 1A La S Krupp Around 1 500 of these light tanks were built Later German tanks received a new designation Panzerkampfwagen abbreviated to PzKpfw or PzKw in German and Panzer in English which means armoured fighting vehicle The first machine to use this was the two man Panzer I Ausf A influenced by the Carden Loyd tankette and was a 5 4 ton machine with a 3 5 litre 60 hp 45 kW petrol engine It had 13 mm of armour and was armed with twin 7 92 mm machine guns The more common Ausf B was a little larger to accommodate a 100 hp 75 kW Maybach engine Both models were sent to the Spanish Civil War for testing along with other new German weapons From the experiences in Spain it quickly became clear that the next generation of tanks would need better armour greater range and much heavier weapons nbsp Panzer II tanks cross the desertThe Panzer II was around 50 heavier than the Panzer I It had a 20 mm Solothurn antitank gun as main armament as well as improved armour of up to 30 mm Also sent to Spain from 1937 the Panzer II proved more capable against light infantry but no better when faced with capable anti tank guns or other tanks Despite these weaknesses production continued until 1941 At the outbreak of war the German Army had 955 PzKpfw IIs and almost 4 000 were built in total nbsp Panzer 35 t in France 1940A major boost to German armour came with the annexation of Czechoslovakia in 1938 giving Germany access to the entire Czech arms industry The Czechs had two light tank designs later used by the Germans the Skoda LT 35 and the Ceskomoravska Kolben Danek CKD TNHP The Skoda was a 10 ton machine with a 37 mm main gun and excellent cross country capabilities the CKD was 8 5 tons and also fitted with a 37 mm gun due to extensive tests it was an extremely reliable machine with a top quality chassis Both were taken into the German panzer forces as the Panzer 35 t and the Panzer 38 t and further production was ordered CKD was renamed Boehmisch Maehrische Maschinenfabrik AG BMM in 1940 and continued production until 1942 providing the Wehrmacht with 1 168 PzKpfw 38 t tanks In 1940 Czech tanks made up around a quarter of the entire German panzer force nbsp German Panzer III Ausf D tank in Poland 1939 While lighter tanks formed almost the entirety of the German forces heavier tanks were at least at the prototype stage In 1934 a number of heavy prototypes were constructed based around either 75 or 105 mm main guns Designated Neubaufahrzeug NbFz and very similar to contemporary Soviet and British designs six were built by Rheinmetall and Krupp Although they were mainly useful for propaganda purposes because only a handful of the tanks were made three were actually used in combat in Norway The knowledge of the NbFz and the experiences of the lighter tanks in Spain aided in designing the next generation of tanks the Panzer III and Panzer IV The PzIII was the lighter of the two and was intended for use in anti tank operations whereas the heavier PzIV was armed with a short barrel gun and intended for supporting infantry nbsp Panzer IV Ausf CThe Panzer III s 37 mm gun was considered underpowered yet it was used in the interests of standardisation with the infantry Contracts for the Zugfuhrerwagen ZW platoon leader vehicle were issued late in 1936 Its weight was limited to a maximum of 24 tons because it was required to be able to cross existing bridges Development work continued until 1938 when the Ausf D went into limited production This 19 ton machine was powered by a 12 litre 320 hp 239 kW engine It had a top speed of 25 mph 40 km h and was fitted with 30 mm armour all round By the outbreak of war around fifty had been completed and some saw service in Poland Full scale production did not begin until October 1939 as the Ausf E Around 350 Panzer IIIs Ausf E variant were ready by the invasion of France Japan edit nbsp Japanese Whippets Like the US Army the Imperial Japanese Army IJA did not have tanks of its own in World War I so initially it started out by purchasing foreign tanks for evaluation and then began developing its own designs After the war a few Whippets six were exported to Japan 4 where they remained in service until around 1930 5 nbsp Japanese Type 89 I Go tanks moving toward Manila January 1942 In 1925 in addition to tankettes the Japanese Army began to design tanks to satisfy its own requirements Before that year as with most nations all tanks in Japanese service had been of foreign design and or manufacture The first Japanese design was finished in May 1926 and the prototype Type 87 Chi I medium tank was completed by February 1927 6 After trials the Chi I was considered too heavy and slow to be used as its main tank 7 It was decided to create a new design modeled after the Vickers Medium C prototype which had been bought by the Japanese Army in March 1927 By 1929 the prototype of the Type 89 Chi Ro Experimental Tank Number 2 was completed 8 9 The Type 89 Chi Ro tank was lighter 9 8 tonnes and shorter than the Chi I It contained increased armour 6 to 17 mm and an improved water cooled engine After success in initial tests the Type 89 became the first mass produced Japanese tank The Type 89 had a crew of four and was armed with a 57 mm Type 90 gun and two 6 5 mm type 91 machine guns 10 The second version of this tank known as the Type89B Otsu used a diesel engine The Japanese were among the first to use diesel engines in their tank designs 11 nbsp Japanese Type 95 Ha Go first prototype 1934During the 1930s the Japanese began production of tankettes and light tanks which were used heavily in Manchuria and China 12 The Type 94 tankette weighed 3 4 tonnes and was generally used as either a tractor to tow an ammunition trailer or as a patrol reconnaissance tank 13 With a crew of two men and a single 6 5 mm type 91 machine gun 823 units of the Type 94 were produced 14 and they saw widespread service as late as 1945 Over twice as large as the Type 94 at 7 4 tonnes the Type 95 Ha Go light tank had a complement of three crewmen a 37 mm gun and the same 6 5 mm type 91 machine gun and most importantly a diesel engine which would later greatly influence future tank designs in the Soviet Army 15 16 Over two thousand Type 95 tanks were built and production continued until 1943 17 By 1936 the Japanese Army started to look for a replacement for the Type 89 The new medium tank Type 97 Chi Ha was introduced in 1937 The Type 97 Chi Ha at 15 tonnes was armed with a low velocity Type 97 57 mm tank gun and had armour up to 25 mm thick Later an improved version known as the Type 97 Shinhoto Chi Ha remained in production until 1943 18 nbsp Type 97 Chi Ha medium tankThe 1930s were the last time that the Japanese military focused on production and design of tanks before World War II After that period they were largely preoccupied with establishing naval control and their focus was on production of ships and aircraft Furthermore with the emphasis on expansion southward into the Pacific Ocean region land battles would be largely replaced by naval warfare and thus with the exception of small islands the domain of the Imperial Japanese Navy 19 With the destruction of the Imperial Navy the focus on tanks returned when the Japanese military prepared for the defense of the mainland in the last years of World War II 20 United States editAfter World War I and still using British and French designs the United States Tank Corps was reduced in size Renaults and the new Mk VIII Liberty Tank were retained 21 The National Defense Act of 1920 restricted tanks to infantry use only as a result the Tank Corps was disbanded with the remaining tanks distributed among the infantry In 1928 at the request of Secretary of War Dwight F Davis the Army formed the Experimental Mechanized Brigade It consisted of a heavy tank battalion a light tank battalion a motorised infantry battalion a motorised artillery battalion an engineer company and a signals company Due to the use of obsolete equipment the experiment failed and the force was disbanded after three months nbsp A M1 Combat Car In 1934 35 at the request of the Cavalry three prototype tanks the T2 T2E1 and T2E2 were produced Under the terms of the National Defense Act of 1920 tanks were restricted to infantry units To get around the Defense Act these tanks were called combat cars The M1 series entered service in 1937 The T2 inspired by the British Vickers 6 Ton was standardised as the M1 Combat Car The T2E1 a single turret tank armed with three machine guns was standardised as the Light Tank M2A1 The T2E2 a two turret tank with two machine guns was standardised as the M2A2 nbsp An M2 Light Tank Throughout the interwar period the US produced only a few hundred tanks From the end of World War I to 1935 only 15 tanks were produced Most were derivatives or foreign designs or very poor quality private designs The Christie designs were among the few bright spots but the US Army acquired only three Christies and did not pursue the idea any further Budget limitations and the low priority given to the Army meant that there were few resources for building tanks The US Army instead developed and tested tank components such as suspensions tracks and transmissions This work paid off when production needed to be initiated upon the outbreak of war Immediately before and during World War II U S tanks and many other Allied tanks were powered by radial aircraft type engines However the massive production of aircraft caused a shortage of these engines Because of this many tanks particularly the Sherman and the Lee were powered by as many as five different power plant arrangements In addition to Wright and Continental radials they were powered by Ford GAA GM truck diesels and the Chrysler A57 multibank an arrangement of five 6 cylinder automobile engines that ran as a single unit After the war diesel truck type engines replaced the gasoline burning radials Other Nations edit nbsp Polish 7TP tank These were based on the British Vickers 6 TonMany other nations that desired tanks could not design or build their own The 1920s and 1930s saw a widespread export business as smaller or less industrialized nations purchased tanks abroad Sometimes the import of foreign tanks led to the birth of a tank industry in the importing nation Poland imported the British Vickers Six Ton tank and began production of improved models The pinnacle of this improvement program was the 7TP which featured a diesel engine and 37 mm gun Poland also produced the TKS series of tankettes similar in concept to the Vickers Carden Loyd machinegun carriers of Britain and the UE of France These vehicles had two man crews thin armor and a single ball mounted light machine gun nbsp Sweden s Strv m40K a heavily modified Landsverk L 60 nbsp A Hungarian Toldi light tank These were originally based on Sweden s L 60Sweden s Landsverk firm designed several advanced light tanks including the 20 mm armed L 60 which also had welded construction and some sloped armor The L 60 was improved and developed further by Hungary creating the Toldi light tanks which the Hungarians used extensively during World War II With its 20 mm gun the L 60 was roughly comparable to the German Panzer II or Soviet T 60 The L 60 was also the chassis on which the Landsverk L 62 self propelled 40 mm anti aircraft gun was built Hungary bought L 62s and improved them developing it into the 40M Nimrod Although the L 62 was designed as a self propelled anti aircraft gun SPAAG the Hungarian 40M Nimrod saw service with Hungarian forces on the Eastern Front as both a tank destroyer and an SPAAG Six L 62s were used by Finland after 1942 nbsp A Hungarian 41M Turan II medium tank in Kubinka Tank MuseumHungary developed an impressive tank industry for its size before and during World War II They built the well armed Straussler V 4 tank during the interwar period produced several variants of Toldi light tanks as well as the Turan family of medium tanks and later in the war they became the first smaller nation to make their own heavy tank the 44M Tas The 44M Tas was armed with a powerful 80 mm gun and had thick sloped armour giving the Tas even better protection than the German Panther tank which the 44M Tas was inspired by Of the Turan series the 40M Turan I was based on an incomplete prototype of the Czech Skoda T 21 S II c medium tank but the Turan I had improved armour a redesigned turret and hull and a new 40 mm gun The later 41M Turan II had a short 75 mm gun improved armour and a redesigned turret The pinnacle of the Turan series was the 43M Turan III which had a long 75 mm gun even thicker armour and had a redesigned turret again During World War II these Hungarian tanks were supplemented by several dozen imported German vehicles including the legendary Tigers and Panthers Turkey imported Soviet T 26 and a few T 28 tanks but did not begin series production of any tank Latvia and Lithuania imported a few light vehicles such as Vickers Carden Loyd tankettes Renault FTs and Six Tonners nbsp Close up of Italian CV 35 L3 35 in the Balkans Romania imported some R 35 light tanks from France as well as some German Czech Panzer 35 t s Italy imported the French Renault FT and produced a slightly improved clone the Fiat 3000 A native Italian design was the L6 40 a very small light tank with a 20 mm Breda cannon and rivetted construction A medium tank based on the Vickers Six Tonner was the M 11 M13 series This tank had a very good 47 mm gun but very thin armor Italy also produced a large number of CV 33 and CV 35 tankettes based on the Vickers Carden Loyd concept In Latin America the first war where the tank was employed was the Chaco War between Bolivia and Paraguay in which the former used a small number of British built tanks and tankettes whereas the latter had no tanks at all See also editHistory of the tank Tanks in World War I Comparison of World War I tanks Light tanks of the United Kingdom Tanks in World War II Comparison of early World War II tanks Cold War Tanks Post Cold War Tanks Cultivator No 6Notes edit Britain s Struggle To Build Effective Tanks During The Second World War Imperial War Museums Retrieved 2022 07 25 a b c Kliment amp Francev 1997 pp 44 45 Kliment amp Francev 1997 p 46 Ellis amp Chamberlain 1972 p 9 Crow p 2 Tomczyk 2002 pp 6 7 Tomczyk 2002 p 7 Tomczyk 2002 pp 7 10 17 Zaloga 2007 p 5 Tomczyk 2002 pp 19 25 Zaloga 2007 pp 5 6 Tomczyk 2002 p 46 Tomczyk 2002 pp 46 54 55 Zaloga 2007 p 10 Tomczyk 2002 pp 67 74 Zaloga 2007 p 15 Zaloga 2007 pp 10 17 Zaloga 2007 pp 10 11 14 Zaloga 2007 pp 15 17 Zaloga 2007 pp 21 22 Indoor Exhibits Mark VIII Tank www ftmeade army mil Archived from the original on 29 September 2008 Retrieved 12 January 2022 References editEllis Chris Chamberlain Peter Chamberlain 1972 Medium Tanks Marks A to D AFV weapons Windsor Profile Publications OCLC 220833240 Kliment Charles K Francev Vladimir 1997 Czechoslovak Armored Fighting Vehicles Atglen PN Schiffer ISBN 0 7643 0141 1 Tomczyk Andrzej 2002 Japanese Armor Volume 1 AJ Press ISBN 83 7237 097 4 Zaloga Steven J and Grandsen James 1984 Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two Arms and Armour Press London ISBN 0 85368 606 8 Zaloga Steven J 2007 Japanese Tanks 1939 45 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 8460 3091 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tanks of the interwar period amp oldid 1187670316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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