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The Vickers Light Dragon was a fully-tracked British field artillery tractor made by Vickers-Armstrongs Ltd from 1929 to 1935. Designed to tow small-calibre field guns, it complemented Vickers' Medium Dragon tractor, which pulled medium to heavy artillery.
A single Vickers Light Dragon Mark IIB artillery tractor (which used the chassis and running gear from the Light Tank Mk III) was purchased by Belgium. It was considerably modified to produce the much heavier T-13 B3 tank destroyer armed with a 47 mm Model 1931 anti-tank gun . [ 8 ]
However, the suspension actually dates back to ca. 1930 when Vickers either produced the A4E8 prototype, which was designated Light Tank Mk Ia and became a forerunner of the Mk. II, or converted several prototype tanks to the new suspension. [5] The Vickers Light Dragon Mk. I artillery tractor was another vehicle from that time which used the ...
Vickers .50 machine gun; Vickers 1.57-inch mortar; Vickers 40 mm Class S gun; Vickers A1E1 Independent; Vickers Light Dragon; Vickers machine gun; Vickers MBT; Vickers MBT Mark 3; Vickers MBT Mark 4; Vickers MBT Mark 7; Vickers Medium Dragon; Vickers Model 1931; Vickers Vigilant; Vickers VR180 Vigor; Vickers–Berthier; Vickers-Carden-Loyd ...
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A Vickers-Carden-Loyd Light Tank Mk. II B. In 1936 a new vehicle was imported from Vickers; an export version of the Vickers-Carden-Loyd Light Dragon Mk. IIB artillery tractor, equipped with an 88 hp Meadows 6 cylinder gasoline engine and a "crash" type gearbox.
The VA.D50 had an armoured box at the front for driver and a gunner and bench seating at the back for the gun crew. The War Office considered it as a possible replacement for their Vickers "Light Dragon" artillery tractors and took 69 as the "Light Dragon Mark III".
The Tank, Light, Mk VI was the sixth in the line of light tanks built by Vickers-Armstrongs for the British Army during the interwar period. The company had achieved a degree of standardization with their previous five models, and the Mark VI was identical in all but a few respects.