Obviously tanks have to be moved to the front and the most usual way of long distance movement is by rail for a variety of reasons.
During some research I have had constant mention of rail gauge being the limiting factor for a tank design and that the British Army in WW2 (certainly early on) were not happy with the concept of moving a vehicle in parts to be assembled after offloading. They literally wanted it ready for action off the train. So in WW1 we have tanks with sponsons which can 'retract' to reduce width and I've seen mention of the idea of transporting a vehicle with the turret removed etc. in 1940 which was rejected. How important really was railgauge in constraining tank design in WW1?
I am particularly concerned in this query with the railbridges and tunnels of Southern England and as I know very little of train related things I need some assistance.
Best as I can find relating to gauge is this (online)
But I know of 10'3" or 10' being an acceptable maximum width by 1940 and the WW1 'Rhomboids' are in the 10' to 12' wide range
My questions therefore are:
1- Is there a survey of bridges/tunnels etc. for the areas between tank factories (and Lincolnshire in particular) and the docks for loading vehicles. A national survey of such width and height restrictions would be perfect anytime up to 1945 would suffice. Is there not something from the RE on this issue?
2 - Tank.net has a quote from Gandy, Paul. "Post War Movement of Military Vehicles by Rail" in MAFVA Tankette vol 46/6, pages 16-19 talking about WW2 era run-flat rail cars. Does anyone have a copy of this to reference? or how do these WW2 cars differ from specialist WW1 tank transport cars (if such a thing even existed)?
3 - I'd be interested in any information about accidents on the railway in England mainly (but elsewhere may help) moving tanks through tunnels or under bridges
(4- Probably some other extremely nerdy train related matter I can't recall at this moment)
-- Edited by vollketten on Wednesday 16th of December 2015 05:30:58 PM
This is the diagram of the WW2 50 ton car which is only 8'6" wide so obviously track width is going to be an issue for anything too much wider. That 8'6" does match with the image in post 1 though.
According to railalbum uk this 50 tonner is a development of the 45 tonner.
Edit: Ignore the second half of Q2 -- seems railalbum uk has answered by question that the WW1 railcars were just strengethen versions of existing flat beds
-- Edited by vollketten on Wednesday 16th of December 2015 05:40:32 PM
-- Edited by vollketten on Wednesday 16th of December 2015 05:47:36 PM
The tanks weren't quite battle ready. Males needed the 6pdr guns removed in order for the sponsons to be retracted and female guns were removed for the sponson halves to be swung inwards. I suspect it was probably more to do with space required on the rail cars. If you fully removed the sponsons you then need to transpirt them and that would require more rail cars. Just a thought.
The width of the Mark IV hull without sponsons, tracks, exteriour rivets, iron profiles and the caps for the drive axes was 8'. For the with with all these things (the complete hull in working condition without the sponsons) my research suggests a width of below 8.9', so it is well inside the gauges given in the drawings you posted.
There must have been some chatter or documentation, referencing etc. relating to tank movements over narrow sections of track or restrictions etc. Some kind of annotatted regional or national map showing maybe wider tunnels etc.
I really wish I knew more about trains.
I thought it would have been easier than it was to find a railmap of southern England with annotations for width and height restrictions than it apparently is.
It wasn't just a matter of width - height, and the width at different heights, were also issues. Remember that rhomboid tanks are rectangular in cross-section (with sponsons removed or in), so simply putting on wide tracks could have been an issue because it increased the width at the worst point. Curves could also be an issue because railway locomotives and wagons stick out at the ends on the outside of curves and on the middle on the inside. Also the maximum weight on each axle, though I'd have thought the locomotives were much more of an issue than a tank on a 4-axle bogie wagon.
The details did indeed vary between companies and within companies - for instance there was a massive foulup over building tunnels for the South Eastern Railway's line to Hastings from London, so that until recently they needed special small trains to run on the line.
The companies would have had handbooks giving such details, at least within each company. If anyone did a centralised handbook it would have been the Railway Clearing House, I should think. That's where I would search for such a book.
Of course you'd need to go across the lines of what? 3 or 4? different railway companies to get from say Bovington to Richborough Military Port. Even after Grouping of the companies in 1922, the railway lines would still have stayed the same without a lot of very expensive work.
Routes were sometimes lumped together in categories to give a simplified indication for everyday use.
And here's some equivalent modern documentation - though it won't be reliable for 1916-19.
Just realised that Tankette Vol46/6 is still available. Go to www.mafva.net for details. (Note that although the back issue list states they can be ordered from Gary Williams, sadly Gary passed away this year. Suggest you contact another of the Association's officers who'll put you on the right track.)
Just realised that Tankette Vol46/6 is still available. Go to www.mafva.net for details. (Note that although the back issue list states they can be ordered from Gary Williams, sadly Gary passed away this year. Suggest you contact another of the Association's officers who'll put you on the right track.)
I wonder if they had, in fact, Gwyn. The Continental/French loading gauge is usually more generous. The only UK railway built to that loading gauge was IIRC the Great Central Railway, late in the 19th century, with a connection to the Channel Tunnel in mind. Of course, much of it was closed down and demolished in the 1960s.
Perhaps they were worried about fighting a land campaign on British (or Irish!) soil, or using colonial/imperial railways?
Tankette, 46/4 has an article by John Ham (Part 1) on rail transport of tanks. There are some fairly good photos and a drawing in 1/76 scale by Geoff Lacey of a British Railway RectankTransporter Wagon (1916 to 1960) - Plan, side elevation and end view.
Tankette 46/5 continues the series with part 2, also by John Ham, seems to cover the WWII era.
Tankette 46/6 is part 3 by Paul Gandy as you noted.
Its part of general design limitations from the General Staff
Could they maybe be trying to rule out designs like TOG I & TOG II as impractical??? In the UK, even the Churchill tank, which was accepted for service, had to have the side air intakes/filters removed, as it put the width of the tank outside the UK Loading gauge. American supplied M3 Lee/Grant and M4 Sherman tanks were, AFAIK, able to be transported by rail without modification.
The problem seems not to be the width of the tank itself, but once it was placed onto a the rail wagon, the 'overhang' could foul things along the lineside. Platforms, tunnel walls, mail catch nets, etc.
It's TOG related stuff yeah and I'm concious that I think the UK has one of if not thel narrowest clearances in Europe.
That's the British for you...lead the way in design and innovation, only for someone to come along and improve it!!! Now, if Brunel had got his way, and we adopted the seven foot gauge system...
This is the problem with 'out of gauge' loads. The Char FCM 2C was never designed to be moved far under it's own power, so transporting a monster like this was always going to be problematic. I think the French idea of using it's own transport 'dollies', instead of a wagon or road transport, is an ingenuous one. The problem begins when you enemy has cut your rail lines and you can't get it anywhere near to the front.
There is also the problem of having to plan a route where the 'overhang' of the vehicle has to be taken into consideration. i.e. not planning routes that go through stations or close to other line side obstructions. This can lead to problems in it's own right, if you can't get close to the battle front, you can't bring your big tanks to bear!!
Grant
P.S. By the time the Char FCM 2C had come into service, it was too slow, too cumbersome and too outdated....and with the advances in air power, too venerable...but that's another story.
Yes T140, an A7V could be moved by rail, as the above photo shows. The Char FCM 2C was, (as far as I'm aware), designed to not need a rail wagon, thus not need an unloading dock. Wooden sleepers were placed under it, the tank jacked up slightly, then the transport dollies unattached, and the tank drove off to combat.
Also, if you compare the length of the FCM 2C against the A7V, you will notice it is much longer. The FCM 2C was also designed as a 'trench crosser'...a bit like the tadpole attachment added to later British WWI tanks to help them cross wider German trenches
It would be interesting to know if the Continentals planned or modified their railways to allow particularly large loads on key military routes. Tanks seem a bit late for that but there was plenty of large artillery about in, and before, the Great War. And lineside obstructions could be modified if there weren't too many tight bits.
For one thing, the French and Germans had far more state involvement than the British. (The railways were more or less nationalised in the UK in 1939-45, but it was a bit late then ...)
Another factor is the characteristic British number of road bridges over the line when other countries just expect people to use level crossings. And other overengineering, particularly in something as simple as platforms at stations. Many countries don't use platforms - so that's a big problem never there to begin with. I don't know what they do in NW Europe ...?
Of course they were. But usually the ones which most need to be moved by train are the most unfit for rail transport.
-- Edited by AgaPablo on Tuesday 29th of December 2015 09:17:34 AM
AgaPablo, the above statement doesn't make sense? Have you written it correctly? I can't imagine an A7V not being transported by rail from Germany to France. Even in this modern day, military equipment, especially heavy things like tanks and MLRS systems are either moved by rail of road transport.
Lothianman is correct, the British rail system is restricted by overbridges and platforms that the continental system doesn't have...therefore the width/height constraint put on UK tank design, doesn't apply to the German, French or (later) Russian tank manufacturers.
Even the mighty Maus had it's own rail transport wagon designed just for it...so you could say, weight is also a factor that can be overcome eventually.
Of course they were. But usually the ones which most need to be moved by train are the most unfit for rail transport.
-- Edited by AgaPablo on Tuesday 29th of December 2015 09:17:34 AM
AgaPablo, the above statement doesn't make sense? Have you written it correctly?
Yes, unfortunately for military "movers", as I in fact was for 8 years, cumbersome military equipment is banned to move by road (collapsing civilian traffic, heavy load on highways, having to move through populated areas, etc...). But when it comes to rail, the problems are as severe as when moving by road (the only difference being no civilians being disturbed: in peace time passenger traffic takes precedence): your military train becomes "special transport", that means reduced convoy speed, negating double track movement along railway lines, taking long roundabouts because a single tunnel won't allow for cargo gauges, finding appropriate RO-RO facilities at the RPODs, etc, etc. etc...
-- Edited by AgaPablo on Wednesday 30th of December 2015 09:01:25 AM
AgaPablo, my apologies, I have read your statement again and now understand what you meant. You mean that tanks that need to be moved by rail for quicker transportation, are usually 'out of gauge' or too heavy for the rail wagons.
I read/translated 'unfit' to mean broken down or battle damaged vehicles.
No need to apologize Granty101. In fact rail cargo gauges are enforced into the design of MBTs, the problem comes when these are modified and bridging equipment, recovery cranes, dozer blades, AAA guns, etc... are added to their hulls and cargo gauges are torn to pieces!
No need to apologize Granty101. In fact rail cargo gauges are enforced into the design of MBTs, the problem comes when these are modified and bridging equipment, recovery cranes, dozer blades, AAA guns, etc... are added to their hulls and cargo gauges are torn to pieces!
This is as close as I have got so far:
At an official meeting on the 9th of July 1940 a vehicle of unspecified height with turret (hull is 7') and 10'3" wide, over 33' long and nearly 70 tons was considered transportable from Lincolnshire and Birmingham to 'Western Ports of Great Britain' by rail although there was still question over branch lines in Eastern England which possibly had implications for home defence.
This is as close as I have got so far: At an official meeting on the 9th of July 1940 a vehicle of unspecified height with turret (hull is 7') and 10'3" wide, over 33' long and nearly 70 tons was considered transportable from Lincolnshire and Birmingham to 'Western Ports of Great Britain' by rail although there was still question over branch lines in Eastern England which possibly had implications for home defence.
Those sizes and the 1940 date point to TOG I, although it might not have weighed as much as 70 tons. Height with turret was about 10ft, maybe 10' 3", which would would be somewhat taller than the loading gauge if carried on a flatcar of the height shown in an earlier post (49.5"). However, it depends whether or not the turret had been added by 9th July 1940 - the design did not originally have one, and the prototype was not completed until October that year.
This is as close as I have got so far: At an official meeting on the 9th of July 1940 a vehicle of unspecified height with turret (hull is 7') and 10'3" wide, over 33' long and nearly 70 tons was considered transportable from Lincolnshire and Birmingham to 'Western Ports of Great Britain' by rail although there was still question over branch lines in Eastern England which possibly had implications for home defence.
Those sizes and the 1940 date point to TOG I, although it might not have weighed as much as 70 tons. Height with turret was about 10ft, maybe 10' 3", which would would be somewhat taller than the loading gauge if carried on a flatcar of the height shown in an earlier post (49.5"). However, it depends whether or not the turret had been added by 9th July 1940 - the design did not originally have one, and the prototype was not completed until October that year.
Could this be the reason why 'Warwell' wagons were design? The 'well' of the wagon would reduce the height of the tank being carried?? Just a thought.
This is as close as I have got so far: At an official meeting on the 9th of July 1940 a vehicle of unspecified height with turret (hull is 7') and 10'3" wide, over 33' long and nearly 70 tons was considered transportable from Lincolnshire and Birmingham to 'Western Ports of Great Britain' by rail although there was still question over branch lines in Eastern England which possibly had implications for home defence.
Those sizes and the 1940 date point to TOG I, although it might not have weighed as much as 70 tons. Height with turret was about 10ft, maybe 10' 3", which would would be somewhat taller than the loading gauge if carried on a flatcar of the height shown in an earlier post (49.5"). However, it depends whether or not the turret had been added by 9th July 1940 - the design did not originally have one, and the prototype was not completed until October that year.
Could this be the reason why 'Warwell' wagons were design? The 'well' of the wagon would reduce the height of the tank being carried?? Just a thought.
Grant
I expect so yeah. The French for the massive FCM 2C went even further and dumped the bottom going for a direct coupling using the tank itself assuming the body was stiff enough so as not to be distorted by the motion of the railway. It's a clever solution to allow for a higher than would otherwise be allowable vehicle and centre of gravity of the load and probably other logistical assistance.
Each end connects to the tank by means of large bolts into fittings mounted on the vehicle. Obviously this is an extreme solution although it may have been less hazardous as a method of actually getting the vehicle onto the train than other methods. http://www.weaponsofwwii.com/forumfiles/Tanks/mkV.jpg
The Mark VIII Liberty was substantially larger than other tanks and yet the Mk.V* is already seemingly pushing the limits of the train-ferry http://img.imagesia.com/fichiers/f6/wwi-markv-tank-destined-for-russia-being-loaded-onto-a-train_imagesia-com_f6en_large.jpg and that mockup Mk.VI seems to have been pushing att he height restriction https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/31/MarkVITankWoodenMockup1917.jpg/300px-MarkVITankWoodenMockup1917.jpg
Anyone have any images of the Mk.VIII on a a railcar in the UK?
I should probbaly look for a St.Chamond on a railcar too or have I approached this from the wrong angle? Instead of looking at just tanks to find the absolute maximum permissible sizes perhaps I should have looked at some of those larger railguns - engineers love drawing stuff so perhaps there's more gauge information relating to the movement and carriage of railguns in the UK or France?
Interesting that you mention the Mark VI mock-up, as I tried to estimate its size just a few days ago, using any likely dimensions as a guide. Most of the WW1 British tank designs were approximately 8ft wide wall to wall, and the tracks were supposedly to have been 75cm - 29.5".
Estimating plank width at 6" suggests a hull height of about 6ft, with total height around 9ft. However, other proportions suggest the planks might have been wider, perhaps 7" - which would push the hull height to about 7ft (similar to Mks I-V?) and overall height to 10' 3"!
Either way it would be rather tall for rail.
Edited: forum trying to make a link out of the abbreviation for Mark VI.
-- Edited by TinCanTadpole on Monday 4th of January 2016 05:44:54 PM
There certainly had to be limits on the French railways for, despite photographic "evidence" tanks with fascines could not be carried on civilian railways and were added to the tanks nearer the Front.
See p92 "Rolling into Action" by Hickey:
"By night the tanks crawled on to a train there , each tank bearing its grotesque bundle on its head; but once on its own truck the tank had to deposit the fascine on the floor of the truck, for otherwise it would have fouled bridges over the railway line. This increased enormously the difficulties of entrainment.".
Must have been a bugger getting them back on at the other end, also in the dark, but suspended on top of a railway truck!!!