Vickers VR180 Vigor

The Vickers VR180 Vigor was a British crawler tractor of the 1950s.

During WWII, Vickers-Armstrongs gained substantial experience in the design and construction of tanks and continuous track vehicles. After the war they exploited this to develop a civilian crawler tractor that could be sold for the peacetime reconstruction work. It was notable for the unusual sophistication of its chassis.

The Vigor was built at the Scotswood, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, works of Vickers-Armstrongs.

Design

The tractor's most distinctive feature was its running gear. Four full height roadwheels acted as roadwheels, rear drive sprocket, front idler and track return rollers. This was the same layout as the Tetrarch light tank, which Vickers-Armstrongs had developed in the 1930s.

In common with tanks of this period, but in contrast to crawler tractors, the suspension had considerable articulation and permitted high speeds. The Vigor was capable of nearly 10mph, when the comparable Caterpillar D8 could only reach 5mph.[1] The four roadwheels were linked as two bogies on each side. Pairs of bogies on opposite side were linked by an articulated beam with a centre tilt pivot. This suspension required a flexible track and Vickers developed one with rubber sealing washers between the moving parts.[1] This could be a drawback, as wear to the rubber in service could make the track floppy. Together with the great suspension articulation, if not well-maintained, the Vigor could be prone to throwing tracks when run at speed.

Vehicle chassis was fabricated in two pieces, largely from large iron or steel castings. The nose of early models was distinctively solid and sloped, when others had a vertical radiator grille. Later models, after experience in Australia, also gained a lightweight steel grille for better ventilation. The chassis unbolted relatively quickly, two hours being cited, into front (engine) and rear (transmission) components.

The engine was the Rolls-Royce C6SFL 12.17l six-cylinder supercharged diesel.[2] The transmission was initially three-speed manual and a high-low-reverse splitter gearbox[lower-roman 1] with a relatively small Borg & Beck 18 inch single plate dry clutch. This small clutch plate had a reputation for early failure if worked hard. An improvement from mid-production was the option of a Rolls-Royce hydraulic torque converter, the same converters Rolls-Royce were supplying with the same engines for the new British Rail DMU fleet.

The engine was more powerful than other tractors of this age and weight, with 190 hp at the engine and 150 drawbar hp. However the fuel consumption was also high, at 9.8 gallons per hour at full rate.[3]

A full range of accessories were offered: front dozer blades with cable or hydraulic lifts, rear ripper blades for breaking virgin bush as farmland in Australia, and a rear logging winch of 30,000 to 50,000 lbf pull.[lower-roman 2]

Production began in 1952. Production of the VR150 Vigor ended in 1958, after around 1,500 had been built. It continued until 1961 as the Vickers VR110 Vikon with a smaller 142 hp C4SFL four-cylinder engine. Around 20 Vikon were built, mostly going to New Zealand.

Sales

As for most capital equipment of the early 1950s, the main market was in the Commonwealth: the UK home market could not afford it, particularly with the Austerity Purchase Tax of the time, and the US market preferred their home products, such as the Caterpillar.

Many of the production went to Australia, where the rough ground capability was appreciated but the purchase cost was considerably more than the popular option of war-surplus tanks with their turret and roof armour cut away.

A major UK seller was Jack Olding of Hatfield, who relinquished their pre-war Caterpillar dealership in favour of Vickers.[4]

Vigors were also used by the Royal Engineers. One is on display today in their museum at Gillingham, Kent.

In popular culture

The Vigor chassis became a distinctive feature of the Gerry Anderson Thunderbirds TV series. Many of the pod-carried land vehicles used by Thunderbird 2 such as Firefly and the carrier vehicle for The Mole were based on the Vigor.[5] A 1/16 scale plastic model kit of the period by Victor Models of Guildford represented the Vigor; in typical Gerry Anderson style, a plastic kit that was available and affordable, but rare enough to be different and not obviously recognisable.[6][7]

References

  1. Giving six forward gears and three reverse
  2. Maximum pull was with the winch drum empty, reduced when cable was wound onto the drum.
  1. 1 2 "Rugged reliability: The Vickers VR180 Vigor". Contractor 32 (4). May 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-10-14.
  2. Chapman, C.W. (1956). Modern High-Speed Oil Engines. Vol I (2nd ed.). Caxton. pp. 261–263.
  3. "Vickers VR180, 1951". Power Farming: 5. March 1981.
  4. "Jack Olding of Mayfair and Caterpillar Island, Hatfield".
  5. Malcolm Parker. "The Vickers Vigor tractor".
  6. "Vickers Vigor toy tractor". TV Century 21.
  7. "1960: The Vickers Vigor Tractor". Victory Industries of Guildford.

External links

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