TOG1 (tank)

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Tank, Heavy, TOG 1
General characteristics
Crew 8 (Commander, gunner, loader, driver, (4x) sponson gunners)
Length 10.1
Width 3.1
Height 3
Weight 80
Armour and armament
Armour 62
Main armament QF 2 pdr
Secondary armament
Mobility
Power plant Paxman diesel generator
600
Suspension unsprung
Road speed 14
Power/weight  ?
Range  ?
External images
Photo of the TOG1[1]

The Tank, Heavy, TOG 1 was a prototype British heavy tank design produced in the early part of the Second World War in the expectation that battlefields might end up like those of the first world war. A single prototype was built but interest faded with the success of the Churchill tank design and the mobile war that was being fought.

[edit] History

In July 1939 the Special Vehicle Development Committee was drawn up for future tank designs suitable for WW1 conditions under Sir Albert Stern who had been on the original Landships Committee and head of the Tank Supply Depot during World War I. The committee included others who had been instrumental in the devleopment of the tank during the Great War: former Director of Naval Construction, Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt, General Swinton, engine designer Harry Ricardo, the gearbox and transmission expert Major W G Wilson. Unsurprisingly they got the nickname "The Old Gang". Together they proposed the development of a heavy tank design, which they entrusted to another of the first tank's developers and builders of the first tank, Sir William Tritton of Foster's of Lincoln.

Designed with trench crossing abilities to the fore and the capability to carry infantry as well, the design was a large hull with side doors supported on broad tracks, with a small turret on top. The prototype TOG I was delivered in October 1940. After problems with the electro-mechanical drive, it was converted to hydraulic drive, a process that took until May 1943 after which it was called TOG 1A. The prototype was sent to Chobham and then seems to have disappeared into history.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also


British and Commonwealth armoured fighting vehicles of World War II
Light tanks
Vickers 6-Ton | Mk II | Mk III | Mk IV | Mk V | Mk VI | Mk VII Tetrarch
Cruiser tanks
Mk I | Mk II | Mk III | Mk IV | Mk V Covenanter | Mk VI Crusader | Mk VII Cavalier
Mk VIII Centaur | Mk VIII Cromwell | Challenger | Comet | Sherman Firefly
Ram (Canada) | Sentinel (Australia)
Infantry tanks
Mk I Matilda | Mk II Matilda | Mk III Valentine | Mk IV Churchill
Self-propelled artillery Armoured personnel carriers
Bishop | Sexton | Deacon | Archer Universal Carrier | Loyd Carrier | Kangaroo | Terrapin
Scout Cars and Armoured cars
Daimler Dingo | Dingo (Australia) | Humber Scout Car | Lynx Scout Car (Canada) | Humber LRC
Morris LRC | Otter LRC (Canada) | AEC Armoured Car | Daimler Armoured Car
Fox Armoured Car (Canada) | Guy Armoured Car | Humber Armoured Car
Lanchester Armoured Car | Marmon-Herrington Armoured Car (South Africa)
Morris CS9 | Rolls-Royce Armoured Car | ACV-IP (India) | AEC ACV | Guy Lizard ACV
Other armoured cars
Experimental vehicles
Avenger | Black Prince | Centurion | Excelsior | TOG 1 | TOG 2
Tortoise | Valiant | Harry Hopkins | Alecto | Thornycroft Bison
Unarmoured vehicles
British armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II