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Rover light armoured car

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(Redirected from Rover Light Armoured Car) Australian armoured car

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Rover light armoured car
Rover Mk 2 Light Armoured Car in Royal Australian Armoured Corps Tank Museum, Puckapunyal, Victoria, Australia.
TypeArmoured car
Place of originAustralia
Specifications
MassMk1 5.2 tonnes, Mk2 5 tonnes
LengthMk1 6.1 m (20 ft 0 in)
Mk2 5.6 m (18 ft 4 in)
Width2.3 m (7 ft 7 in)
Height2.1 m (6 ft 11 in)
Crew5 (Commander, Driver, 2 Gunners, Wireless operator)

Armour16 mm
Main
armament
0.303 Vickers machine gun
Secondary
armament
0.303 Bren LMG
EngineFord V8
95 hp (71 kW)
Power/weight19 hp/tonne (14.2 kW/tonne)
Suspension4×4, leaf spring

The Rover light armoured car, designated Light Armoured Car (Aust), was an armoured car produced in Australia during the Second World War.

History and description

A Mark 1 light armoured car in 1942

At the outbreak of the Second World War, the United Kingdom was unable to meet the needs of the Commonwealth for armoured fighting vehicles. This led many Commonwealth countries to develop their own AFVs.

The Rover was designed in 1941. It used Ford 3-ton Canadian Military Pattern truck chassis, either F60L or the shorter F60S. The armoured bodies were produced by Ruskin Motor Bodies of Melbourne. The production was stopped in 1943, a total of 238 cars were built.

The Rover entered service with the Australian Army in April 1942. It never saw combat and was used mostly for crew training. A long narrow opening at the top of the hull earned the vehicle a nickname: "mobile slit trench". Late in 1943 Australia started to receive US-made armoured cars and the Rover was soon declared obsolete.

There are three restored Rover Mk II cars on display in Australian museums: at the National Military Vehicle Museum in Edinburgh Parks in South Australia; at the Royal Australian Armoured Corps Tank Museum in Puckapunyal, Victoria; and at the Australian Armour and Artillery Museum in Cairns, Queensland.

Variants

  • Mk I – F60L chassis (40 units).
  • Mk II – F60S chassis (198 units).

References

  • Cecil, Michael K. (1993). Australian Scout and Armoured Cars 1933 to 1945, Australian Military Equipment Profiles, Vol. 3, ISBN 0-646-14611-4.

External links

British Commonwealth armoured fighting vehicles of the Second World War
Tanks
Light tanks
Cruiser tanks
Infantry tanks
Medium tanks
Self-propelled
artillery
Field
Anti-tank
Armoured personnel
carriers
Scout cars and
armoured cars
Scout cars
Armoured cars
Reconnaissance cars
Armoured command
vehicles
Armoured trucks
Experimental vehicles

Background: British armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II, Tanks in the British Army

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