Carden Loyd tankette

The Carden Loyd tankettes were a series of British pre-World War II tankettes, the most successful of which was the Mark VI, the only version built in significant numbers. It became a classic tankette design worldwide, was licence-built by several countries and became the basis of several designs produced in several different countries.

Development
The Carden Loyd tankette came about from an idea started, as a private project, by the British military engineer and tank strategist Major Giffard LeQuesne Martel. He built a one-man tank in his garage from various parts and showed it to the War Office in the mid-1920s. With the publication of the idea, other companies produced their own interpretations of the idea. One of these was Carden-Loyd Tractors Ltd, a firm founded by Sir John Carden and Vivian Loyd and later purchased by Vickers-Armstrongs. Besides one-man vehicles they also proposed two-man vehicles which turned out to be a more effective and popular idea. Vickers-Armstrongs manufactured and marketed vehicles of the latter type worldwide.

Considered a reconnaissance vehicle and a mobile machine gun position, the Mark VI was the final stage of development of the Carden- Loyd series of tankettes.

The Carden Loyd tankette was the prototype for the Universal Carrier.

Production
Production started in 1927 and lasted until 1935. From 1933 to 1935 production was by the Royal Ordnance Factories. Some 450 were made in all. The British Army used at least 325 Mark VI tankettes (a value of 348 is also given in several variants, mostly as machine gun carriers, but also as light gun tractors, mortar carriers or smoke projector vehicles.

Service history
In 1929, Poland bought 10 or 11 Mark VI tankettes with a licence and used them for development of their own TK tankette series, which was followed by the Polish TKS tankette.

Czechoslovakia also bought three Mark VI tankettes in 1930 with a licence, and then improved the design, producing 74 Tančík vz. 33 tankettes in the ČKD (Praga) works: the original British construction was evaluated as unusable in modern warfare.

The Soviet Union bought 20 Mark VI tankettes, which they designated K-25, as well as a licence. However, the final project was significantly modernised and the license was dropped. Instead, the Bolshevik Factory in Leningrad started the production of the T-27 tankette, a modernised and enlarged variant of the British design. A total of 3,228 T-27 tankettes were built between 1931 and 1933.

Bolivia purchased between two to five tankettes in 1931. They saw action in the Chaco War, where they proved to be ill-suited for the bushy environment.

Japan also bought six Mark VIb tankettes, and later developed its own Type 94 Te Ke design based on them. Italy bought a number of Carden Loyd Mark VIs, built a few licence copies designated CV-29, and then developed this design further into the L3/35 tankette. Carden Loyd tankettes operated by the Imperial Japanese Navy Land Forces were designated Type 88.

The Canadian Army acquired 12 in two batches of six in 1930-31. After being evaluated by Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry and the Royal Canadian Regiment, the Canadian Army used them in a training role at Canadian Armoured Fighting Vehicle School pending the arrival of newer, larger tanks. Eventually, they were supplemented with the Vickers VI B light tank in 1938. Until then, they had been the only armoured equipment in the Canadian Army apart from some armoured cars. At no time were they used in a combat role by Canada.

In addition, the Carden Loyd tankettes were also supplied in small numbers to France, India, Italy, the Netherlands (5), and Siam. The five Dutch tankettes were involved in fighting German parachute troops during the May 1940 invasion of the Netherlands. The French unarmed Renault UE carrier was based on the Carden Loyd design. A small number were acquired by Greece prior to 1935. Thailand had about 60 in the French-Thai War. Carden Loyd tankettes were also used by Chile, the Republic of China, Finland (Mk. IVs and Model 33s) and Portugal

The design of the German Panzer I light tank was influenced by the Carden Loyd tankette, due to the German military cooperation with the Soviet Union.

SA F.R.C. 47mm
Since the Belgian Armed Forces were looking to upgrade their anti-tank capability in the early 1930s, and due to the popularity of the tankette concept, the Carden-Loyd Mk VI tankette was chosen as the basis for a first attempt to developing a fully mechanized anti-tank capability. After experimenting with a rather straightforward tractor concept for the Belgian 47 mm Model 1931 anti-tank gun in 1931, a more integrated approach was chosen, resulting in what has probably been the heaviest armed version of the Carden-Loyd Mk VI tankette. In 1931, after acquiring six Carden-Loyd Mk VI tankettes, two prototype vehicles were modified. One to carry the F.R.C. Herstal 47 mm Model 1931 anti-tank gun and one the Canon de 76 FRC, a low velocity 76 mm infantry gun, in a fixed, forward-facing structure. The results of the pre-production tests were not convincing: the 76 mm equipped version experienced a tremendous amount of recoil when firing the gun, resulting in a high pitch movement after firing and a completely unstable gun-laying platform. As a result, the 76 mm prototype was rebuilt into the 47 mm equipped tank destroyer version. However, the tank destroyer tankette was not deemed satisfactory either: recoil forces from firing the 47 mm anti-tank gun were - albeit less than with the 76 mm version - still too heavy for the 3-ton vehicle, manning the gun with a two man team was considered too labor-intensive, the ammo storage was too small and apart from the thin armoured frontal shield, the crew was completely exposed. The added weight of the gun also overtaxed the small engine, and wear and tear on the whole vehicle were deemed too high. Nevertheless, the experiment provided some valuable experience for the Belgian army, culminating in the successful T-13 tank destroyer production starting in 1935. The six prototype tank destroyer vehicles were also used operationally.

After being fielded by the elite Chasseurs Ardennais mountain division, the vehicles were deemed next to useless in a mountainous area and quickly passed on to the Cyclistes Frontière/Grenswielrijders a border guard regiment. They were still in use when the Battle of Belgium started in May 1940, albeit from fixed, ambushed positions on the west-bank of the river Meuse (Maas) between Vivegnis and Lixhe. They are known to have fired some rounds on the morning of 10 May 1940, the day of the German invasion.