Howitzer Motor Carriage M8

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75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8 on display at the Musée des Blindés

75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8
General characteristics
Crew 4 (Commander/loader, gunner, driver, co-driver)
Length 4.98 m
Width 2.32 m
Height 2.72 m
Weight 16.33 tonnes
Armour and armament
Armour 9.5 - 44.5 mm
Main armament 75 mm M2/M3 Howitzer
46 rounds
Secondary armament Browning M2HB .50cal MG
400 rounds
Mobility
Power plant Twin Cadillac Series 42, 16 cylinder, gasoline
220 hp
Suspension Vertical volute
Road speed 58 km/h
Power/weight hp/tonne
Range 160 km

The 75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8 was a self-propelled howitzer vehicle of the United States developed during the Second World War. It was also sometimes known as just the M8 Scott.

Contents

[edit] Development

It was developed on the chassis of the then new Light Tank M5 (General Stuart VI). The test vehicle had the standard M5 turret removed, and replaced with an open topped turret, this vehicle was designated the T47.

[edit] Armament

Armament consisted of a new open topped turret armed with a 75 mm M2 howitzer, later an 75 mm M3 howitzer, which were reworks of the M1A1 pack howitzer. It carried 46 rounds of 75 mm ammunition, types of ammunition carried were; Smoke M89, and H.E. (High Explosive) M48. It featured no coaxial or hull mounted Browning M1919A4 .30-06 machine guns as featured on standard Light Tank M5's. The only other armament was Browning M2HB .50cal machine gun for local area, and anti-aircraft defence, 400 rounds of .50 cal were stowed onboard for the M2HB.

[edit] Production

The T47 was ordered into production as the 75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8 in April 1942. Production ran from September 1942, to January 1944. A total of 1,778 vehicles were produced.

[edit] Combat service

It saw action in the Italian Campaign, the Western Front, and in the Pacific Theatre of Operations during the war. It was largely replaced by the adaption of the Medium Tank M4 to use the 105 mm howitzer.

[edit] Variants

  • 75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8

Based on the Light Tank M5 chassis.

  • 75 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M8A1

Based on the Light Tank M5A1 chassis.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


American armored fighting vehicles of World War II
Light tanks
M2 Light Tank | M3/M5 Stuart | M22 Locust | M24 Chaffee | Marmon-Herrington CTLS
Medium and heavy tanks
M2 Medium Tank | M3 Lee | M4 Sherman | M26 Pershing
Self-propelled artillery
M7 Priest | M8 Scott | M12 Gun Motor Carriage | M40 GMC
M3 Gun Motor Carriage | M16 Multiple Gun Motor Carriage | M5 Gun Motor Carriage | T34 Calliope
Tank destroyers
M6 Fargo | M10 Wolverine | M18 Hellcat | M36 Jackson
Armored half-tracks
M2 Half Track Car | M3/M5 Half Track Personnel Carrier
M4 Mortar Carrier | T30 Half Track
Amphibious vehicles
Landing Vehicle Tracked | DUKW
Armored cars
M8 Greyhound | M3 Scout Car 'White' | M20 Armored Utility Car
T17 Deerhound / Staghound | T18 Boarhound
Experimental vehicles
M38 Wolfhound | T1/M6 Heavy Tank | T-28 Tank/T-95 GMC
Assault Tank T14 | Heavy Tank T29 | Heavy Tank T30 | Medium Tank T20 | T7 Combat Car

T-16 | T-3 Half Track | T27 | T54 Gun Motor Carriage | T40/M9 Tank Destroyer
T-19 | 8in Howitzer Motor Carriage T84 | T92 Howitzer Motor Carriage | T55E1 Motor Carriage
Light Tank T7/Medium Tank M7 | T88 Gun Motor Carriage

American armored fighting vehicle production during World War II
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