Throughout its history, the Irish Army has used a number of armoured fighting vehicles.
During the Irish Civil War thirteen Rolls-Royce armoured cars armed with Vickers .303 machine guns [1] were handed over to the Irish National Army by the British government. All were in service with the Irish Defence Forces until after 1945, when following the end of The Emergency they were phased out as the peacetime army shrank. Twelve were scrapped in the mid-1950s with one retained. [2] The Defence Forces has preserved one Rolls-Royce armoured car named 'Sliabh na mBan', as it was believed to be the actual Rolls-Royce that accompanied Michael Collins's convoy when he was killed.
The Irish National Army received seven Peerless armoured cars during the Irish Civil War and these were used by the Irish Defence Forces up until 1932. The Peerless armoured cars were fitted with two turrets each both armed with a single Hotchkiss machine gun. In 1935, 4 Irish Peerless armoured hulls were mounted on modified Leyland Terrier 6x4 chassis. A year later their twin turrets were replaced by a single Landsverk L60 tank turret. This new vehicle was known as the Leyland armoured car and remained in Irish service until the early 1980s. The fourteen old Irish Peerless turrets and its Hotchkiss machine guns were fitted to Irish built vehicles in 1940 called the Ford Mk V armoured car. [3] A single replica has been preserved as part of the Curragh Cavalry Collection.
The Lancia armoured cars were built by the Great Southern and Western Railway workshops, Dublin, in 1921 for the Royal Irish Constabulary. 111 Lancias were received by the Irish National Army and all were disposed of by 1937. As many as fifty Lancias were fitted with railway wheels and used by the Railway Protection, Repair and Maintenance Corps for railway patrols. [4]
The Vickers Mk. D was a one-off design built for the Irish Free State and delivered in 1929. It was developed from the Vickers Medium Mark II tank but had a more powerful, water cooled, rear mounted, 6-cylinder Sunbeam Amazon petrol engine, developing 170 bhp at 2100 rpm and a 6 pdr gun was fitted. As many as four Vickers .303 machine guns could be fitted. [5] When the tank was scrapped in 1940 the 6 pounder gun was removed and used as an anti-tank weapon. [6]
The first Irish Landsverk L60 light tank was delivered in 1935 and joined Ireland's only other tank the Vickers Mk. D in the 2nd Armoured Squadron. The second Landsverk L60 arrived in 1936. They were both armed with a Madsen 20 mm cannon and a Madsen .303 Machine Guns.
In January 1933 the army examined options for a new armoured fighting vehicle capable of countering a tank attack, during the assumed scenario of a resumed war with Britain. The board looked at three new light tanks, considering two models built by Vickers, before deciding in favour of the L-60 built by AB Landsverk. The L-60 was significantly more expensive than the two Vickers models but the army insisted that only the L-60 met the army's requirements; so much so that it was "practically identical with the tank" envisioned by the board. The army hoped to begin domestic manufacturing of the chosen tank believing that "national economic and defence policy demands that tanks should be manufactured in Ireland". To this end the army wanted components and assembly instructions for two further vehicles alongside the first delivered example to develop practical experience of manufacturing tanks ahead of full-scale production. [7] The Department of Finance believed the army's cost estimates had no sound basis and was of the opinion that there was "no future for any Irish firm in the manufacture or even in the assembly of tanks" in Ireland. Minister for Finance Seán MacEntee rejected the parts import idea and only authorised funds for a second L-60 tank. However, Minister for Defence Frank Aiken persisted in trying to persuade MacEntee throughout February and March 1934 of the viability of the plan assuring him that it would be affordable and "pave the way for the possible development of a mechanical industry in this line". McEntee's acting assistant secretary Walter Doolin pointed out that not a single Irish engineering firm had expressed any interest in assembling the tanks and by April the army conceded, with only one further complete tank being purchased from AB Landsverk. This purchase was delayed when the second tank was destroyed in an accidental fire during tests in Sweden and a number of years passed before the free replacement arrived in Ireland. [7] The Landsverks were still in use up until the late 1960s. One L60 is preserved in running order by the Army and the other is in the National Museum of Ireland, Collins Barracks, Dublin. [8]
The Leyland armoured car was based on a 6x4 Leyland Terrier lorry chassis. The first chassis was purchased from Ashenhurst of Dublin in 1934 and an armoured hull from an obsolete Peerless armoured car was modified and fitted. The new vehicle was tested and it was recommended that the twin Peerless turrets be replaced with a single turret. In 1935 3 more Leyland Terrier chassis were bought and the Landsverk L60 tank turret was selected in 1936 to replace the twin Peerless turrets, however it was not until 1940 that all four Leyland armoured cars were finished. The armament of the Leylands was a Madsen 20 mm cannon and a Madsen .303 machine gun. The Leylands entered service with the 1st Armoured Squadron alongside the Landsverk L180 and Irish-built Dodge armoured cars. In the 1958 the Leylands front hull was modified and were re-engined with Ford V-8s and .30 Browning machine guns replaced the Madsens plus another Browning was fitted in the hull next to the driver. [9]
One of the Leyland's was scrapped in the 1960s. In 1972 the 1st Armoured Squadron re-equip with Panhard AML armoured cars and the three surviving Leylands joined the reserve FCA 5th Motor Squadron until they also re-equip with Panhard AMLs in the early 1980s. [9]
Ireland ordered its first 2 Landsverk L180s in 1937 and were delivered the following year. 6 more were then ordered and they were delivered in 1939. A further 5 were ordered but could not be delivered because of the outbreak of the world war. These 5 were used instead by the Swedish army under the designation Pbil m/41. Irish Landsverk L180s were armed with a Madsen 20mm Cannon and 2 Madsen .303 Machine Guns. The Madsen machine guns were replaced with .30 Browning machine guns in the 1950s and the 20mm cannon was replaced in the 1970s with Hispano-Suiza 20 mm cannons take from former Irish Air Corps De Havilland Vampire jets. In 1956-1957 the Landsverks original Büssing-NAG L8V V8-cylinder petrol engines were replaced with 5,195cc Ford V8 type 317 petrol developing 155 hp at 3,200rpm. The refit also saw the installation of a hydraulic clutch, radio mountings and altered machine gun mountings to take .30 Browning machine guns supplied by the Air Corps [10] and All Irish Landsverks belonged to the 1st Armoured Squadron and used alongside the Irish built Leyland and Dodge armoured cars until they re-equip with Panhard AML armoured cars in 1972. The Landsverks were then transferred to the reserve FCA units, five going to the 11th Motor Squadron, until they were retired in the 1980s. [11] A Landsverk formerly of the 11th Motor Squadron was gifted to the Netherlands in a formal ceremony at the Curragh in November 1982. [10]
In 1940 a Defence Forces committee decided to build 8 improvised armoured cars on lorry chassis for the protection of aerodromes. The Army purchased eight second-hand Morris Commercial lorries and one was delivered to Great Southern Railways (GSR) workshops for them to build and fit an armoured body. The GSR Morris Mk IV armoured car had no turret instead the machine gun crew had to fire through loopholes. After the building of the first Morris armoured car it was decided to change the role of the planned new vehicles from aerodrome defence to the same role as a regular armoured car. For this role a better chassis and engine was needed than that of Morris Commercial lorries so the seven remaining improvised armoured cars were built on Ford chassis and were known as the GSR Ford Mk IV, they were transferred to the army's Supply and Transport Corps. The Morris Mk IV was disposed of in 1946. [12]
The seven GSR Ford Mk IV armoured cars were also built by Great Southern Railways (GSR) and were similar to the Morris Mk IV but a turret with Hotchkiss machine gun also built by GSR was fitted. All the Ford Mk IVs were built and delivered in 1940. The army sold all 7 Ford Mk IVs in 1954. [13]
In 1940, Thompson & Son of Carlow built 14 Ford Mk V armoured cars . The Ford Mk V was cheaper and had better performance than the GSR Ford Mk IV armoured cars. The old Peerless armoured car turrets and their Hotchkiss machine guns were fitted. All Ford Mk Vs were sold in 1954. [14]
In 1941, Thompson & Son of Carlow built 28 more Ford armoured cars. 21 of the armoured cars were built on new chassis, and the other seven built on Ford lorries which had been withdrawn from service. These 28 armoured cars were similar to the Ford Mk V but had a Thompsons-built turret and the new vehicle was named the Ford Mk VI armoured car. The turret was armed with a Vickers .303 machine gun. [15]
The first major overseas deployment of Irish troops was to the Congo in 1960, as part of the UN force ONUC. In 1961, an armoured car group with eight Ford Mk VI armoured cars was flown to the Congo. [16] [17] Three more Ford Mk VIs were sent out later that year to the Congo, two of which had their turrets removed and a pintle-mounted Bren light machine gun fitted in its place. The Brens on the two Ford Mk VIs were replaced in the Congo with Browning .30 machine gun. In 1962, the UN provided the Irish with twelve new Ferret armoured cars to replace the Ford Mk VIs. In 1964, six of the Ford Mk VIs were handed over to the Congolese Army. [15]
The 17 Ford Mk VIs in Ireland were retired in the early 1970s. [15]
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Universal (Bren) carrier images from Defence Forces archives |
26 Universal Carriers Mk I were purchased in 1940. 100 Universal Carriers Mk II were delivered in 1943 and another 100 Mk IIs in 1945. The vehicles were referred to as 'Bren Carriers' by Irish troops. The first 26 Bren Carriers were grouped together to form the Carrier Squadron of the Cavalry Corps. The Carrier Squadron was disbanded in 1943 and its carriers distributed amongst the army's infantry battalions. All 200 of the Bren Carriers Mk IIs were used by the infantry battalions mainly for transporting its 3-inch and Brandt 81 mm mortars, ammo and crew. Later 2 Mk IIs were fitted with flamethrowers for use by the Corps of Engineers. A number were used in the late 1940s to tow 6 pdr anti-tank guns and 4 were used by the Cavalry School. The Bren Carriers were retired from service in the early 1960s. [18] [19] With 113,000 Universal Carriers being built worldwide it was the most numerous armoured fighting vehicle in history and with 226 in Irish service it is the most numerous armoured vehicle ever used by the Irish Army.
The first Dodge armoured car was built in 1942, four more were completed by 1943 and remained in service until 1962. These armoured cars were built on a Dodge TF-37 shortened truck chassis. All five trucks were withdrawn from the army's Supply and Transport Corps. Two of the armoured cars were each armed with a Madsen 20 mm Cannon that were formerly used on Irish Marine Service Motor Torpedo Boats and a Madsen .303 Machine Gun. The other three armoured cars were armed with a Vickers .50 Machine Gun and Vickers .303 Machine Gun each. The Madsen-armed Dodges were called the Mark VII armoured car and the Vickers-armed Dodges the Mark VIII armoured car. [20] The Dodges were used alongside the Landsverk L180 and Irish-built Leyland armoured cars in the 1st Armoured Squadron until they were all disposed of in 1962. [21]
The army acquired several Beaverette armoured cars at the time of The Emergency (World War II). In the 1950s the army converted several Beaverettes into open scout cars – with one such conversion preserved at the Curragh Camp in County Kildare. [22]
The Irish Army took delivery of three Churchill Mk VI tanks in 1948 and a fourth in 1949. They were rented from the British War Office until 1954, when they were purchased outright. This purchase was despite the fact that the supply and transport corps workshops, who maintained them, had reported that spares had all but run out. Experiments were carried out involving replacing the existing Bedford engine with a Rolls-Royce Merlin engine salvaged from an Irish Air Corps Seafire aircraft. The experiment was a success but not repeated although the reasons why are not recorded. By 1967 only one Churchill remained serviceable, and by 1969 all were retired. The Churchill Mk VI was armed with an Ordnance QF 75 mm gun and 2 Besa 7.92mm machine guns. [23]
Four ex British Army Comet tanks were delivered to the Irish Army in 1959 and a further four in 1960. The Comet was armed with a 77 mm HV gun and 2 Besa 7.92mm machine guns. Severe budget cutbacks were to severely harm the service lives of the Comets, as not enough spares were purchased. The Comet appealed to the Irish Army as it was cheap to buy and run, had low ground pressure, and good anti-tank capability. In retrospect, it was an excellent buy, and would have stood the army in good stead had vital spares been supplied initially. However, faulty fuzes meant the withdrawal of the HE ammunition, limiting the tank's role to an anti-tank vehicle. As spare parts became scarce less mobile tanks were cannibalised to keep one Comet running, and by the mid-1970s the Comet was used as a training vehicle for mechanics. [24]
With stocks of 77 mm ammunition, particularly High Explosive (which were found to be faulty and were withdrawn entirely), dwindling in 1969, the army began an experiment to prolong the life of the vehicle. [25] A fire-damaged vehicle with no turret, the 'Headless Coachman', had been used as a range target tug. This was then given an open mounting consisting of a length of steel girder welded to the turret ring with a 90 mm Bofors Pv-1110 recoilless rifle. Metal plates were also welded to the rear of the turret ring to prevent backblast from entering the fighting compartment. [25] As well as traversing on the existing turret ring, the recoilless rifle could also be aimed using the original gun mounting allowing finer adjustment. [25] The prototype was successfully tested at the Glen of Imaal on 27 January 1969. The positive results from these tests led to further development of the prototype being greenlit, including ammo racks and a sloped steel shield protecting the exposed crew. The army also considered mounting a second 90mm recoilless rifle to allow for rapid follow-up fire. Transforming another Comet tank into a self-propelled mortar carrier with two 81mm mortars or one 120mm was also discussed. Lack of funds saw a cancellation of the project. [25]
The last 77 mm Comet shoot occurred in 1973, and the tanks were withdrawn soon afterwards. One is preserved in the Curragh Camp in running condition, and two more are on static display, also in the Curragh, and one in Athlone barracks. [26]
In 1975, an Irish Army officer writing in An Cosantóir suggested that, similar to the Israeli Super Sherman, the Comet tanks (then in storage) could have a new engine installed and be upgunned with the British 105 mm gun. The proposals were not implemented. [27]
Six M113 armoured personnel carriers were loaned to Irish troops in the Congo operating as part of the UN force ONUC. The M113s were United States Army vehicles donated to the UN for the Congo peacekeeping force mission. [28] Following the withdrawal of Indian Army soldiers due to the Sino-Indian War, Irish from the armoured car group took over responsibility for their position in Jadotville assuming control of six M113s and several Swedish APCs. [29] The M113 APC was a significant improvement over the Ford armoured cars and Swedish APCs used by the Irish forces up to then; easy to handle, tracked, amphibious and armed with a pintle-mount M2 Browning .50 machine gun. The vehicles were withdrawn early from the armoured car group in the Congo and returned to US Army inventory. [29]
A small number of Swedish Tgb m/42 KP APCs were loaned from UN stocks during operations in the Congo and returned in early 1963. [29] One is preserved in a driving condition in the Curragh Camp having been obtained in the early 2000s.[ citation needed ]
Twelve Ferret armoured cars were loaned to Irish troops in the Congo in 1962, equipping the newly-assembly 2nd Armoured Car Squadron for independent reconnaissance missions. The twelve Ferrets were shipped by sea from England and reached the unit by November 1962. The Ferrets were transferred to the replacement 3rd Armoured Car Squadron who in June faced a revolt of the Congo Civilian Police, and in September was placed on red alert during a general strike. After a year of training and patrolling the Ferrets were returned to UN stores. [29]
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Panhard AML 60 with M242 Bushmaster autocannon image from Defence Forces archives |
In 1964 the first 2 Panhard AML 60-7 CS armoured cars were delivered to Ireland. These 2 Panhards were then shipped to the Irish battalion that was part of the UN force UNFICYP in Cyprus. Six more Panhard AML 60-7 CS armoured cars were shipped directly from France to the Irish troops in Cyprus. Later in the same year another eight Panhard AML 60-7 CS armoured cars were delivered. The army ordered in 1970 20 AML 90 and 16 Panhard AML 60-7 HB armoured cars, all of which were delivered by 1975. [30]
The AML 60-7 CS variant was armed with a DTAT Cloche Special (CS) 60mm mortar and twin AA-52 7.62mm machine guns. The AML 60-7 HB was armed with a Hotchkiss-Brandt (HB) 60mm mortar and twin FN MAG 7.62mm machine guns. The AML 90 was fitted with a H-90 turret armed with a D 921 F1 90mm gun and co-axial FN MAG 7.62mm machine gun. In the late 1970s the mortars fitted to all 16 AML 60-7 CS armoured cars could not be fired due to a fault, and as a result its twin 7.62mm machine guns became its main armament. In 1986 a single vehicle had installed a Creusot-Loire T25 turret armed with a M242 Bushmaster 25 mm (25×137mm) autocannon and was tested in the Glen of Imaal. [31] A further vehicle was modified with the same turret as the FV107 Scimitar mounting a 30 mm RARDEN autocannon. [31] In 1989 the 16 AML 60-7 CS armoured cars' twin 7.62 mm machine guns were replaced with a single M2 Browning .5 machine gun each. In 1999 the 16 AML 60-7 CS armoured cars turrets were rearmed with a G12 20 mm cannon and a co-axial FN MAG 7.62mm machine gun. It was known as the AML 20. [30] [32]
The AML 60s were used on peacekeeping missions in Cyprus, the AML 90s in Lebanon and both the AML 20s and AML 90s in Liberia. AML 90s were also deployed in an internal security role following the kidnapping of supermarket executive Don Tidey by the Provisional IRA in 1983. [33] The remaining AML fleet was retired from service in 2013, [34] and sold to a French buyer in 2015. [35]
The Landsverk Unimog scout car was based on the Unimog S404 truck and built were in the late 1950s. The Irish Army purchased 15 of the vehicles at a bargain price in 1971 which were originally intended for the police force in the Belgian Congo. They were intended as a stop-gap vehicle for use until the first Panhard M3 APCs entered service in 1972. The Cavalry Workshops modified the Unimog scout cars by fitting a shield that could mount a FN MAG 7.62mm machine gun to it on the roof opening. The type had excellent off-road capability but poor on-road handling due to a high centre of gravity and several accidents occurred as a result. Equipped with a four-man dismountable squad arrangement was carried, but space was cramped, and in any case a four-man detachment was far too small for any sort of realistic military purpose. Other criticisms were that the FN MAG gunner's position was too exposed. By mid-1978 all had been transferred to the Reserve FCA Motor Squadrons. As the FCA did not use the FN MAG it armed its Unimog scout cars with Browning .30 or Bren .303 machine guns. All Unimog scout cars were withdrawn by 1984. [36]
Production of the Panhard M3 VTT armoured personnel carrier started in 1971 and the Irish Army ordered 60. The first 17 were of the Panhard M3 APCs were delivered in 1972. The Panhard M3 APC used 95% of the components of the Panhard AML armoured cars. A Creusot-Loire TL.21.80 turret was fitted to all 60 Irish Panhard APCs armed with twin FN MAG 7.62mm machine guns. 14 Panhard APCs were sent to Lebanon in 1978 with the Irish battalion serving with UNIFIL. At home the Panhard APCs were distributed among the army's 9 infantry battalions and 4 cavalry squadrons. The UN supplied the Irish troops in Lebanon in 1989 with 10 SISU XA-180 6x6 APCs to replace its Panhard APCs and the 14 Panhards were sent back to Ireland and later scrapped. [37]
Timoney, a County Meath based company, designed and built three one-off prototype 4x4 wheeled APCs designated Marks I, II, III for tests by the Irish army between 1972 and 1974. In 1977 the army ordered five APCs based on the Mk III design known as the Timoney Mk IV APC . These were delivered in 1978, fitted with a Timoney built turret armed with twin FN MAG 7.62mm machine guns. The vehicles suffered from a number of mechanical problems and all were out of service by the late 1980s. In 1981 the army ordered five improved Timoney Mk VI APCs which were delivered in 1983, fitted with a Creusot-Loire TLi 127 turret armed with a M2 Browning .5 machine gun and a FN MAG 7.62mm machine guns each. The Timoney Mk VI APCs were used by the army until 1999. [38]
Originally designed for the British Army, the Scorpion armoured reconnaissance vehicle began production in the early 1970s, and was in use with the Irish Army from 1980 until 2017. [39] The army bought 4 Scorpions each year from 1980 to 1982 plus 2 more in 1985 bringing the total in Irish service to 14. The Scorpion had three crew members and a maximum speed of 70 kilometres per hour. In Irish service, it was primarily armed with a 76mm rifled gun and a 7.62mm coaxial mounted machine gun. [40] [39] [41]
The UN supplied the Irish troops serving with UNIFIL in Lebanon in 1989 with 10 SISU XA-180 6x6 APCs to replace its 14 Panhard APCs. The Irish Army purchased 2 SISU APCs in 1990 as training vehicles for soldiers preparing for service with UNIFIL. The 2 Irish SISU APCs were sent to Somalia in 1993 for use by Irish troops serving with UNOSOM II and returned to Ireland in 1994. Both Irish SISUs and the 10 UN SISUs in Irish use were fitted with the same Creusot-Loire TL.21.80 turret with twin FN MAG 7.62mm machine guns as the Panhard APC. [42]
The Mowag Piranha IIIH 8x8 armoured personnel carrier (APC) has been used by the Irish Army since 2001. There are 80 Mowags in service with the army, in 6 different variant types. Forty-five are armoured personnel carriers, eight are command vehicles, two are armoured ambulances, one is a recovery vehicle, eighteen are cavalry Recce vehicles (CRV) and six are medium Recce vehicles (MRV). [43] [44]
The APC variant of the Mowag has a crew of two and can carry a nine-man infantry section. It has a maximum speed of 100 kilometres per hour, and is fitted with a one-man turret armed with one .50 (12.7mm) Browning HMG, one 7.62mm FN MAG machine gun and eight 66mm smoke grenade launchers. [43] The eighteen Mowag CRVs are fitted with a Kongsberg Remote Weapon Station (RWS) and can be armed with either a 12.7mm/.5 Browning HMG or a Heckler & Koch 40mm automatic grenade launcher. The six MRVs are fitted with a 2-man turret armed with an Oto Melara 30mm cannon and 7.62mm coaxial machine gun. [45]
The Irish Mowags have been used on peacekeeping missions in Eritrea, Liberia, Kosovo, Lebanon, Chad and Syria. As of 2016, a 6-year €55m maintenance and upgrade contract was agreed with the original Mowag manufacturer. [35]
The Irish Army has 27 RG Outrider light tactical vehicles from BAE Systems with the first 2 delivered in April 2010. One of the first two delivered is armed with a FN MAG 7.62mm machine gun fitted to the roof opening and the other is fitted with a Kongsberg Remote Weapon Station (RWS) armed with a Heckler & Koch 40mm automatic grenade launcher. [46]
The Panhard ERC is a French six-wheeled armoured car which is highly mobile and amphibious with an option of being NBC-proof. Two versions of the ERC entered production in large numbers: the ERC-90 Lynx and the ERC-90 Sagaie. The main difference between the two versions is the type of turret and 90 mm gun fitted. Sagaie is French for assegai, a type of African spear.
The Panhard AML is an armoured car with reconnaissance capability. Designed by Panhard on a lightly armoured 4×4 chassis, it weighs an estimated 5.5 tonnes, and is thus suitable for airborne deployment. Since 1959, AMLs have been marketed on up to five continents; several variants remained in continuous production for half a century. These have been operated by fifty-four national governments and other entities worldwide, seeing regular combat.
The EE-9 Cascavel is a six-wheeled Brazilian armoured car developed primarily for reconnaissance. It was engineered by Engesa in 1970 as a replacement for Brazil's aging fleet of M8 Greyhounds. The vehicle was first fitted with the Greyhound's 37mm main gun, and subsequently, a French turret adopted from the Panhard AML-90. Later models carry unique Engesa turrets with a Belgian 90mm Cockerill Mk.3 cannon produced under licence as the EC-90.
The Ferret armoured car, also commonly called the Ferret scout car, is a British armoured fighting vehicle designed and built for reconnaissance purposes. The Ferret was produced between 1952 and 1971 by the UK company Daimler. It was widely used by regiments in the British Army, as well as the RAF Regiment and Commonwealth countries throughout the period.
A huge number of M113 armored personnel carrier variants have been created, ranging from infantry carriers to nuclear missile carriers. The M113 armored personnel carrier has become one of the most prolific armored vehicles of the second half of the 20th century, and continues to serve with armies around the world in many roles.
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The Panhard EBR is an armoured car designed by Panhard for the French Army and later used across the globe, notably by the French Army during the Algerian War and by the Portuguese Army during the Portuguese Colonial War.
The Landsverk L-180, L-181 and L-182 are a family of armored cars developed by the Swedish company AB Landsverk during the interwar years. They had a good international reputation for being fast, robust and reliable and were acquired in small numbers by Denmark, Estonia, Ireland and the Netherlands, among others. Their Swedish military designation was Pbil m/41.
The Panhard M3 VTT is an amphibious armoured personnel carrier. Developed as a private venture for the export market, the M3 was built with the same mechanical and chassis components as the Panhard AML range of light armoured cars. The two vehicle types share a 95% interchangeability of automotive parts. The M3 is an extremely versatile design which can be configured for a wide variety of auxiliary battlefield roles. The most popular variants of the base personnel carrier included an armoured ambulance, a mobile command post, and an internal security vehicle. It could also be fitted with a wide variety of turrets and armament, ranging from a single general-purpose machine gun to medium calibre autocannon.
An armoured personnel carrier (APC) is a broad type of armoured military vehicle designed to transport personnel and equipment in combat zones. Since World War I, APCs have become a very common piece of military equipment around the world.
The Mine Protected Combat Vehicle – MPCV was a Rhodesian 4×4 Infantry fighting vehicle (IFV), first introduced in 1979 and based on the body of the Mercedes-Benz Unimog light truck. It remains in use with the Zimbabwe National Army.
Leyland Armoured Car refers to four armoured cars, built between 1934 and 1940, which were used by the Irish Army. The first Leyland Armoured Car was built in 1934, and three more were built by 1940. The Leylands served with the Irish Army until 1972, and with the reserve An Fórsa Cosanta Áitiúil (FCA) until the early 1980s.
The Ford Mk V Armoured Car was a light armored car, built in Ireland by Thompson & Son of Hanover Works, County Carlow.
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The Easter Rising centenary parade took place in Dublin city on Easter Sunday, 27 March 2016 to commemorate the centenary of the Easter Rising. It involved all branches of the Defence Forces, including the Army, Air Corps, Naval Service and Reserve Defence Forces, as well as the Garda Síochána, Dublin Fire Brigade, the HSE National Ambulance Service, the Irish Coast Guard, the Irish Prison Service and Customs, the Red Cross, the RNLI, Civil Defence Ireland and St John Ambulance Ireland. The parade was one of the largest of its kind ever held in the state, involving over 3,700 military personnel, 78 vehicles and 17 aircraft. The events were broadcast on RTÉ television and it is estimated that around 1 million people viewed the parade across the streets of Dublin. The parade commenced at 10.30am from St. Stephen's Green and made its way along Dublin before stopping at O'Connell Bridge for the main Easter Sunday Commemoration at the GPO. Following the ceremony, the troops marched past the GPO in O'Connell Street before finishing at Bolton Street around 3pm.
The Brandt Mle CM60A1, also known as the Brandt HB 60LP, MCB-60 HB, or simply as the Brandt 60mm LP gun-mortar, is a 60 mm gun-mortar. Unlike conventional infantry mortars, it was not designed to be mounted on a bipod and a baseplate, but rather in the turrets of armoured fighting vehicles. The CM60A1 could be fired at a very low angle of elevation, giving it a dual purpose as direct fire artillery. Its hydraulic recoil mechanism reduces peak loads, allowing it to be mounted in very light armoured cars, such as the Panhard AML-60, or wheeled armoured personnel carriers, like the Panhard M3.
The Timoney armoured personnel carrier refers to a series of armored personnel carriers developed by Timoney Technology Limited of Ireland in the 1970s and 1980s.
in January 1961, eight of these armoured cars, followed later by three more, were flown to the Congo