Talbot armoured car

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PlaceoforiginUnited Kingdom
Inservice1914–15
Talbot armoured car
Modified first Admiralty pattern
TypeArmoured car
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Service history
In service1914–15
Used byRoyal Naval Air Service
WarsFirst World War
Production history
ManufacturerClément-Talbot, Forges et Chantiers de France
Specifications
Mass≈ 4 long tons (4.1 t)
Crew3

Armour0.31 in (8 mm)
Main
armament
1 or 2 .303 Maxim guns
Engine4-cylinder
25 hp (19 kW)
DriveWheeled 4x2
Transmission4F1R
ReferencesBartholomew[1], Foss[2] & White[3]

The Talbot armoured car was a British armoured car built on the chassis of a Clément-Talbot tourer. Built in small numbers to several patterns, the Talbot armoured cars saw service with the Royal Naval Air Service (R.N.A.S.) in the early years of the First World War, serving alongside Rolls-Royce and Delaunay-Belleville armoured cars.

First Admiralty pattern
Admiralty turreted pattern

First Admiralty pattern

The Talbot armoured car came in several different patterns although all were built on the chassis of the Clément-Talbot 25/50 hp tourer.[1][2][3][4] The 25/50 hp tourer had a 4x2 rear-wheel drive chassis, it was driven by a 4-cylinder 25 horsepower (19 kW) engine mated to a four-speed transmission, its original wheels were substituted for Warland dual-rim artillery-type wheels with twin rear wheels.[2][3]

The original first Admiralty pattern Talbots were very similar to the first Admiralty pattern Wolseley and Rolls-Royce armoured cars.[3] Weighing around 4 long tons (4.1 t) these vehicles were fitted with armoured plates 8 mm (0.31 in) thick that covered the sides and top of the engine and extending along the sides at dashboard height; they had an open rear fighting compartment in which crew members remained dangerously exposed to enemy fire unless they chose to lie on the floor, the driver being the only member of the crew completely protected, sitting under a box shaped armoured hood.[2][3][4] The vehicles had shields over the rear wheels and a distinguishing large rectangular armoured radiator shield; designed to provide protection for the radiator, bonnet area and the driver to a degree, in service the shield obscured much of the driver's vision.[2][3] The armament was one or two .303 Maxim guns mounted on pintle mounts on the offside and rear of the fighting compartment.[4]

One of the original cars was up-armed with a QF 1-pounder pom-pom in a hull that was renovated to accommodate it.[2] Some of these Talbots were not fitted with the driver's head cover and radiator shield and they seem to have been used to transport supplies.[3]

Modified first Admiralty pattern

By November 1914 six first Admiralty pattern Talbot armoured cars were modified in France, they were broadly similar to the original except the radiator shield was substituted for superior side-opening doors, the rear wheel protection was removed and the rear armoured bodywork was built up around the open topped fighting compartment to shoulder height of standing occupants.[2][3][4] The armament was either two .303 Maxim guns or a single Maxim gun and a gun shield.[3]

Admiralty turreted pattern

In 1915 three Talbot armoured cars were produced to the new Admiralty turreted pattern, these armoured cars were very similar to the Rolls-Royce Admiralty turreted pattern with an armoured hull, two man turret and a rear cargo area; the Warland artillery-type wheels and slightly different radiator armour being the only distinguishing features.[2][3]

History

See also

References

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