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Armored car (military)

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French armored car: the Charron-Girardot-Voigt 1902.
Simms' 1902 Motor War Car.
1906 Charron Girardon & Voigt.
A 1906 Austro-Daimler Armoured Fighting Vehicle - Prototype

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A Rolls Royce armoured car 1920 pattern

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Railway shop workers built this vehicle for use by the Danish resistance movement near the end of World War II

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Kubuś, a replica of a Polish WWII armored vehicle made by the Home Army

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An armoured car AMZ Dzik used by the Polish military police

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A modern French VBL reconnaissance vehicle

Template:Fixbunching A military armored (or armoured) car (see spelling differences) is a wheeled armored vehicle, lighter than other armored fighting vehicles, primarily being armored and/or armed for self-defense of the occupants. Other multi-axled wheeled military vehicles can be quite large, and actually be superior to some smaller tracked vehicles in terms of armor and armament.

History

At the beginning of the twentieth century a number of military armored vehicles were manufactured by adding armor and weapons to existing vehicles. The first manufactured one was the "Motor War Car" in 1902.[1] The Italians used armored cars during the Italo-Turkish War.[2] A great variety of armored cars appeared on both sides during World War I and these were used in various ways.

Generally, the armored cars were used by more or less independent car commanders. However, sometimes they were used in larger units up to squadron size. The cars were primarily armed with light machine guns. But larger units usually employed a few cars with heavier guns. As air power became a factor, armored cars offered a mobile platform for anti-aircraft guns.[3]

Armoured Rolls-Royces of the Royal Naval Air Service being used in Gallipoli in 1915

In 1914, the Belgians fielded some early examples of armored cars during the Race to the Sea. The British Royal Naval Air Service then began using cars to rescue downed reconnaissance pilots in the battle areas, and as these excursions became increasingly dangerous, they improvised boiler plate armoring on the vehicles. Eventually, customized Rolls-Royce armored cars were ordered, but when they arrived in December 1914, the mobile period on the Western Front was already over.[4]

Military use

A military armored car is a type of armored fighting vehicle having wheels (from four to ten large off-road wheels) instead of tracks, and usually light armor. Armored cars are typically less expensive and have superior speed and range compared to tracked military vehicles. Most are not intended for heavy fighting; their normal use is for reconnaissance, command, control, and communications, or for use against lightly armed insurgents or rioters. Only some are intended to enter close combat, often accompanying convoys to protect soft-skinned vehicles.

They usually mount a machine gun, autocannon, or small tank gun. Other uses include as a way to move (or tow) various long-range rocket, missile, or mortar batteries through dangerous areas while giving some protection to the crew.

Armored cars are popular for peacekeeping or internal security duties. Their appearance is less confrontational and threatening than tanks, and their size and maneuverability is more compatible with tight urban spaces designed for wheeled vehicles. They can also be much more easily air-deployed in cargo planes.

Many modern forces now have their dedicated armored car designs, to exploit the advantages noted above. Examples would be the M1117 Armored Security Vehicle of the USA or Alvis Saladin of the post-World War II era in the United Kingdom.

Alternatively, civilian vehicles may be modified into improvised armored cars in ad-hoc fashion. Many militias and irregular forces adapt civilian vehicles into AFVs (armored fighting vehicles) and troop carriers, and in some regional conflicts these "technicals" are the only combat vehicles present. On occasion, even the soldiers of national militaries are forced to adapt their civilian-type vehicles for combat use, often using improvised armor and scrounged weapons.

See also

Sources

  • Crow, Duncan, and Icks, Robert J., Encyclopedia of Armored Cars, Chatwell Books, Secaucus, NJ, 1976. ISBN 0-89009-058-0.

References

  1. ^ Macksey, Kenneth (1980). The Guinness Book of Tank Facts and Feats. Guinness Superlatives Limited. p. 256. ISBN 0851122043. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Crow, Encyclopedia of Armored Cars, pg. 102
  3. ^ Crow, Encyclopedia of Armored Cars, pg. 25
  4. ^ First World War - Willmott, H.P., Dorling Kindersley, 2003, Pg. 59