Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

M2 Half Track Car

Encyclopedia : M : M2 : M2H : M2 Half Track Car



 

M2 Half Track Car
General characteristics
Length m
Width 2.2 m
Height 2.26 m
Weight t
Suspension Wheeled front axle, rear track
Speed 40 mph, km/h road
? km/h off-road
Range 200 miles, 320 km
Primary armament 0.5 inch M2 machine gun
Secondary armament
Armour 6 - 12 mm
Power plant 147 horsepower>hp (110 kW)
Crew 2 + 7 passengers
The M2 Half Track Car was an armoured vehicle used by the United States during World War II.

History

The half-track design had been evaluated by the US Ordance department using Citroën-Kegresse vehicles. The White Motor Company produced a prototype half track using their own chassis and the body of the M3 Scout Car.

In 1938, the White Motor Company took the Timpken rear bogie assembly from a T9 half-track truck and added it to an M3 Scout Car, creating the T7 Half-Track Car. This vehicle was woefully underpowered, and when a further requirement came down from US Army artillery units for a prime mover (artillery tractor), a vehicle with an uprated engine was devised, then designated the T14. By 1940, the vehicle had been standardized as the M2 Half-Track car, and was being supplied to army units as both a prime mover and a reconnaissance vehicle. The latter was to serve in the interim, until more specialized vehicles could be fielded.

Between 1942 and 1943, these vehicles, just as with the M3 half tracks, would receive a number of modifications to the drive train, engine, and stowage, among other things.

Total production of M2 and derivatives was about 13,500 units. Later, to meet the needs of the Lend-Lease program, the International Harvester Company was brought into manufacture vehicles similar to the M2, as the M9 adding another 3,500 units.

Usage

The first M2s were fielded in 1941, and would be used in the Philippines, North Africa, and in Europe by the US Army, and around the Pacific by the USMC. About 800 M2 and M9 halftracks were sent to the Soviet Union.

Variants

Prime Mover/Scout Vehicle

Self-Propelled Guns

Anti-aircraft variants

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
[Special]

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: