Guy Armoured Car

Guy Armoured Car

Guy Mk I
Place of origin UK
Specifications
Weight 5.2 t
Length 4.12 m
Width 2.06 m
Height 2.29 m
Crew 3

Armour up to 15 mm
Main
armament
.5 inch Vickers machine gun
Secondary
armament
.303 inch Vickers machine gun
Engine Meadows 4ELA 4-cyl petrol engine
55 hp (41 kW)
Power/weight 10.6 hp/tonne
Suspension 4 x 4 wheel
Operational
range
340 km
Speed 40mph

The Guy Armoured Car was a British armoured car produced in limited numbers during World War II. The car saw limited action during the Battle of France.

Contents

Production history and description

In 1938 Guy Motors built five Guy Quad armoured car prototypes based on the Quad-Ant artillery tractor chassis. The vehicle successfully completed field trials and in 1939-1940 101 Guy Armoured Cars (initially designated Guy Wheeled Light Tank) were produced.

The vehicle had a welded hull (making it the first British armoured car with an all-welded construction) with a sloped glacis plate. Above the center of the hull was mounted a turret with two Vickers or Besa machine guns. The engine was located at the rear. The vehicle carried a No. 19 radio set.

The body of the Guy vehicle formed the basis of the later Humber Armoured Car, which employed a new chassis.

Deployment history

Six cars were sent to France with the British Expeditionary Force (BEF). Four were used by the mobile guard of the British Royal Family (a troop from 12th Lancers) and two by cabinet ministers. The rest served with different British, Belgian, Danish and Dutch units stationed in Britain. By 1943 they were replaced by more modern vehicles.

Variants


References

British Commonwealth armoured fighting vehicles of World War II
British armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II