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Daimler Armoured Car
Daimler Armoured Car Mark 2
Daimler Armoured Car Mk II
Type Armoured car
Place of origin Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Production history
Manufacturer Daimler
No. built 2,694
Specifications
Mass 7.6 t
Length 13 feet 1 inch (4 m)
Width 8 feet 1 inch (2.46 m)
Height 7 feet 5 inches (2.26 m)
Crew 3

Armour 7-16 mm
Main
armament
2 pounder QF
52 rounds carried
Secondary
armament
1 x coaxial 7.92 mm Besa machine gun
2,700 rounds carried
1 x 0.303 (7.7 mm) Bren light machine gun AA
Engine Daimler 27 4.1 litre 6-cylinder petrol
95 hp (71 kW)
Power/weight 12.5 hp/tonne
Transmission 5 speed (both directions) with fluid flywheel
Suspension 4x4 wheel, independent coil spring
Operational
range
200 miles (320 km)
Maximum speed 50 miles per hour (80 km/h)

The Daimler Armoured Car was a successful British armoured car design of the Second World War which continued in service into the 1950s. It was designed for scouting and liaison work but could prove useful in 'police actions' as a wheeled tank.

History[]

The Daimler Armoured Car was a parallel development to the Daimler Dingo "Scout car", a small armoured vehicle for scouting and liaison roles. It was another Birmingham Small Arms design. A larger version designed upon the same layout as the Dingo fitted with the turret similar to that of the Mark VII Light Tank and a more powerful engine.[1] Like the scout car, it incorporated some of the most advanced design concepts of the time and is considered one of the best British AFVs of the Second World War. The 95 hp engine was at the rear linked through a fluid flywheel to a Wilson preselector gearbox and then by propshafts to each wheel. Four wheel steering similar to early models of the Scout car was considered but not implemented following experience with the Dingo.

The prototypes had been produced in 1939, but problems with the transmission caused by the weight of the vehicle delayed service entry until mid-1941. 2,694 armoured cars were built by Daimler.

The Daimler had full independent suspension and four wheel drive. Epicyclic gearing in the wheel hubs enabled a very low ratio in bottom gear - it was credited with managing 1:2 inclines. The rugged nature combined with reliability made it ideal for reconnaissance and escort work.

Combat history[]

The Daimler saw action in North Africa with the 11th Hussars and the Derbyshire Yeomanry. It was also used in Europe and a few vehicles reached the South-East Asia theatre. A typical late war recce troop in North West Europe would have two Daimler Armoured Cars and two Daimler Dingo scout cars.

To improve the gun performance, some Daimlers in the European Theatre had their 2-pounders fitted with the Littlejohn adaptor which worked on the squeezebore principle. This increased the gun's theoretical armour penetration and would allow it to penetrate the side or rear armour of some German tanks.

Daimlers were used by the territorial units of the British Army until 1960s, outlasting their planned replacement, the Coventry Armoured Car. It was still being used by 11th Hussars in Northern Ireland as late as January 1960. It was operated with B Squadron of the Hussars which also had Daimler Dingoes.

Conflicts[]

Variants[]

  • Mark I.
  • Mark I CS - close support version with 76 mm gun.
  • Mark II - improved turret, modified gun mount, better radiator, driver escape hatch incorporated into roof, WP Grenade container fitted in turret and smoke generator container modified.[2]
  • A turretless regimental command version, known as SOD ("Sawn-Off Daimler").

Operators[]

  • Flag of Australia Australia
  • Flag of Belgium (civil) Belgium
  • Flag of Canada Canada
  • Flag of India India
  • Flag of Israel Israel
  • Flag of Malaysia Malaysia
  • Flag of New Zealand New Zealand
  • Flag of Qatar Qatar[3]
  • Flag of Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
  • Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom

Notes[]

References[]

External links[]

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The original article can be found at Daimler Armoured Car and the edit history here.