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M2 Half Track Car

M2 Half Track
M2-Halftrack.jpg
US
Type Half-track artillery tractor/reconnaissance vehicle
Place of origin United States
Production history
Designer Firestone Defense Division
Specifications
Weight 9 metric tons
Length 5.96 m (19 ft 7 in)
Width 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in)
Height 2.26 m (7 ft 5 in)
Crew 2 + 7 passengers

Armor 6–12 mm
Main
armament
0.5 inch M2 Browning heavy machine gun
Secondary
armament
14 mines, 10 hand grenades
Engine 386 cu in (6.33 l) White 160AX inline six
148 hp (110 kW; 150 PS)
Suspension Wheeled front axle, rear track
Operational
range
220 mi (350 km) (average)
Speed 45 mph (72 km/h)

The M2 Half Track Car was a half-track armored vehicle produced by the United States during World War II. Its design drew upon half-tracks brought in from France in the 1930s, employing standard components supplied by U.S. truck manufacturers to speed production and reduce costs. The concept has been designed and the pilot models have been manufactured by the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company (before the prototype was officially labeled M2.) Production by the White Motor Company began in 1940 and was expanded to include .

The M2 was initially intended for use as an artillery tractor, but also found use with reconnaissance units. International Harvester Company built the M9 half-track, a variant of their M5 half track, to fulfill the same purpose.

The half-track design had been evaluated by the US Ordnance department using Citroën-Kégresse vehicles.

The Cavalry branch of the US Army found that their wheeled armored scout cars had trouble in wet terrain due to their high ground pressure.

In 1938, the White Motor Company took the Timken 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. When a further requirement came down from US Army artillery units in 1939 for a prime mover to be used as an artillery tractor, a vehicle with an uprated engine was developed, which was designated the Half Track Scout Car T14.

By 1940, the vehicle had been standardized as the M2 Half-Track car. The M2 design was recognized as having the potential for general mechanized infantry use, which spawned the larger bodied M3 Half Track. Both the M2 and M3 were ordered into production in late 1940, with M2 contracts let to , White and Diamond T. The first vehicles were received by the Army in 1941.

The M2 was supplied to artillery units as the prime mover and ammunition carrier for the 105mm howitzer, and to armored infantry units for carrying machine gun squads. It was also issued to armored reconnaissance units as an interim solution until more specialized vehicles could be fielded.


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