I would be most grateful for any details available on the proposed spaced armour on Mk 1 tanks. This is identified by images of Mk1's with protrusions on the bodies; although no images have yet appeared to indicate that the spaced armour was fitted. I have photos but would appreciate any others you might know of.
__________________
Regards TeeELL
Growing old is compulsory, growing up is optional.
Thanks for the additional photo Helen. It gives more detail on the rear of the tank but where else was the armour planned for? Surely the front would have been considerably more important than the rear upper surface?
__________________
Regards TeeELL
Growing old is compulsory, growing up is optional.
I've decided to post this image of spaced armour bolt positions here instead of the reference section, as this thread is still fresh in peoples minds.
Now the image I have attached is my best guesstimate for the bolt positions... but... because the clearest photos I have of the roof are all of male tanks, I can't be certain of positions on two panels, as males had a habit of not having any bolts for the spaced armour. The two panels I am most unsure of are in blue, the red dots are the bolt positions.
I am hoping that some members out there will have photos that may provide answers.
Thanks for the additional photo Helen. It gives more detail on the rear of the tank but where else was the armour planned for? Surely the front would have been considerably more important than the rear upper surface?
As far as I'm aware, the studs were only on the roof. Normal practice in tank design is to put thicker armour on frontal surfaces and sides, using thinner metal at the back and on the roof to save weight.
If anyone knows better they can correct me, but I suspect the idea behind adding spaced armour to the rhomboids was to protect against "potato mashers" flung onto the roof. Being thinner armoured and horizontal, the roof would need protecting much more than the front, which had a sloping glacis and vertical cab face - so nothing would be likely to lodge there.
TCT, that is as logical an answer as any. So the planned 'spaced armour' was a successor to the grenade canopy but only (as far as we know) reached the fitting support studs stage.
__________________
Regards TeeELL
Growing old is compulsory, growing up is optional.
I believe the spaced armour came first and that for some reason they chose not to use it. The wooden frames were I think an attempt to give them some protection without using the metal spaced armour. Hopefully someone will be able to fill in some detail on this.
I'm sure I have read somewhere that the plates were sent to France, but never used. I have never seen drawings or photos of the plates.
Even the bolts create more questions, as there seem to be a number of male tanks without any. At first I thought it was only the Bovington example, but photos showed more males without bolts. I have often wondered if they were late in the production run, or a quirk of a particular manufacturer. Either way it hints that they may have given up on the idea of spaced armour early on.
Wow, more questions than answers! It seems so silly that not that so many years ago it might have been possible to prise this information from WW1 tank crew members etc. now, we must only ponder in the hope that one day something might be dug up from an archive somewhere.
__________________
Regards TeeELL
Growing old is compulsory, growing up is optional.
I believe the spaced armour came first and that for some reason they chose not to use it...
When I was researching the development of the Flying Elephant, I came across a report (in the Stern Archives) by Swinton which I summarised as follows:
Around Christmas 1915, the imaginative Col Ernest Swinton, in his new capacity as Assistant Secretary to the Committee of Imperial Defence (CID), noted concerns about the danger to the tanks under development from new German tactics using protected quick-firing (Q.F.) guns in a report copied to the Landships Committee. He recommended research into the capacity of light armour to resist small high-explosive (H.E.) shells, noting that Admiral Sir Percy Scott, the great naval gunnery innovator, had performed promising experiments a few years previously at Portsmouth into the effects of H.E. against submarine hulls... at this stage, there was interest in determining whether it would be feasible to make the existing design of tank (Mother) resistant to shells, whether through a thicker single layer or a double-skin of the planned, relatively thin, bullet-proof armour.
Unfortunately, my notes are buried in a box somewhere so I don't know how much more information I gleaned, but it would appear that the spaced armour was devised as a potential response to light shells, but not used when it became apparent that it wouldn't actually defeat them (hence the whole Flying Elephant project).
I had never heard of the tanks having such a system. Also that the bolt seem only to be fitted to the roof which would support the idea of trying to reduce casualties.
How interesting