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Dragon Light Tractor Mk.III

Dragon Light Tractor Mk.III
Box art Dragon Light Tractor Mk.III


  DBTyp  Model  
  Kit manufacturer  SHQ  
  Material  Metall  
  Origin country  GB  Parent category: Europe
  Operator country  GB  Parent category: Europe
  Build era  0 (not yet built)   
  Topics  Armoured Vehicle Tractor  (Ground Equipment:) Vehicles
Parent category: Ground vehicle, Ground Equipment, Working Machine
  Aera of use  Interwar  
  Scale  1/76  
  TextEN  After 1918, with the tank's success in overcoming bad terrain in mind, the British Army looked at tracked towing vehicles for artillery, and in 1922, the Royal Carriage Department at Woolwich Arsenal built the first Dragon. It used a suspension and track unit based on the current Vickers medium tank, could carry 10 men in addition to the driver and towed an 18pdr field gun and limber at 12 mph. This was soon replaced by the MkII with a more powerful engine, and then supplemented by the MkIII with gear ratios changed to permit towing medium guns of 5in and 6in calibre. However, in 1936 a policy decision was made to revert to wheeled vehicles for artillery towing, and so the Dragon was a dead-end development. (110)
A variant of the Vickers 6-ton was the cargo vehicle Dragon Medium Mk. IV. Some were exported, many more converted from std tanks and exported.

The Dragon Mk III derived its name from its purpose. Designed as an artillery tractor the 'Drag-gun' was used by the BEF in France and Belgium in 1940. Looking very like a Universal Carrier, the Dragon was used to tow smaller artillery pieces like the 3.7inch howitzer. Later Dragons such as the MK IV were used for larger guns. Following the retreat to Dunkirk in 1940 much of the BEF's Dragons were abandonded or destroyed in France. The Mk III was used mainly between 1939 and 1941.(111) 
  BaseVehicle  Ground Equipment  

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References

References
(110) http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/30018214
(111) SHQ Miniatures, UK


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