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Under OCM 18526, the CTLS-4TAC was labeled Light Tank T16. All vehicles were scrapped in 1943. [4] CTLS-4TAY – A CTLS-4TAC with the driver and the turret sitting on the left side of the hull. 420 were produced. [8] CTL-6 – The CTL-6 was an improved version of the CTL-3. The only differences were better tracks and suspension. Only 20 were ...
Marmon-Herrington CTLS tanks (a CTLS-4TAC in the foreground and a CTLS-4TAY in the background) in Alaska, summer of 1942. The Marmon-Herrington combat tank light (CTL) was a US light tank produced for the export market at the start of the Second World War. The CTL-3 had a crew of two and was armed with three M1919 Browning machine guns. [13]
Marmon-Herrington tanks that could not be delivered because of the fall of the Dutch East Indies were taken over by the US. The CTLS-4TAC and -4TAY tanks were redesignated light tank T14 and T16 respectively. They were used for training, some were used in Alaska and by the US Marines.
Marmon-Herrington was founded in 1931 by Walter C. Marmon and Arthur W. Herrington as a successor to the Marmon Motor Car Company, a maker of high-quality, costly automobiles from 1902 to 1933. [3] By the early 1930s, the U.S. economy had taken a severe downturn, and with the onset of the Great Depression , the market for prestigious luxury ...
40 Marmon Herrington Mk.IVF Armoured Cars (equipped with 2-pdr guns (40mm)) 32 BTR-152V1 Armoured Personnel Carriers (wheeled 6X6) 10 ATS-712 locally modified APCs (originally artillery tractors, tracked) 5 FV1611 Humber APCs (wheeled 4X4) Field Artillery: 54 25-pdr field guns/howitzers (87.6mm calibre) 20 M-1944 field guns (100mm calibre)
Instead, soldiers would be learning healthy coping strategies, texting etiquette and the signs of a toxic relationship. At the Army base in Columbia, South Carolina, where about half of new U.S ...
Marmon–Herrington CTLS; M. M425 and 426 tractor truck This page was last edited on 17 May 2020, at 15:37 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
New research suggests that drinking sparkling water can help support weight loss through satiety and energy production. Researcher Akira Takanashi of Japan and nutrition experts shared thoughts.