Showing posts with label Amphibious. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amphibious. Show all posts

Friday, May 7, 2010

DUKW

A DUKW, in use by American troops in France.

The DUKW (popularly pronounced "duck") is a six-wheel-drive amphibious truck that was designed by General Motors Corporation during World War II for transporting goods and troops over land and water and for use approaching and crossing beaches in amphibious attacks.

DUKW amphibious truck.

Description

DUKW at the Eden Camp museum, UK.

The DUKW was designed by Rod Stephens Jr. of Sparkman & Stephens Inc. yacht designers, Dennis Puleston, a British deep water sailor resident in the US, and Frank W. Speir, a Reserve Officers' Training Corps Lieutenant out of MIT. Developed by the National Defense Research Committee and the Office of Scientific Research and Development, it was initially rejected by the armed services.

Two Universal Carriers pictured in front of a DUKW amphibious vehicle, all pertaining to the 43rd (Wessex) Division.

When a United States Coast Guard patrol craft ran aground on a sandbar near Provincetown, Massachusetts, an experimental DUKW happened to be in the area for a demonstration.


Winds up to 60 knots (110 km/h), rain, and heavy surf prevented conventional craft from rescuing the seven stranded Coast Guardsmen, but the DUKW had no trouble, and the military opposition melted. The DUKW would later prove its seaworthiness by crossing the English Channel.

Truck mounted crane and DUKW at POL dump on the beach during April 1944 training exercises at Slapton Sands, Devon, England, in preparation for the D-Day invasion that followed in June.

The DUKW prototype was built around the GMC ACKWX, a cab-over-engine (COE) version of the GMC CCKW six-wheel-drive military truck, with the addition of a watertight hull and a propeller.

Afro-American soldiers serving as DUKW crew.

The final production design was based on the CCKW. The vehicle was built by the GMC division of General Motors (called Yellow Truck and Coach at the beginning of the war).

Fleet of amphibious DUKW "ducks" being loaded with cargo after the landings in Normandy, 1944.

It was powered by a GMC Straight-6 engine of 270 in³ (4.416 L). The DUKW weighed 6.5 tons empty and operated at 50 miles per hour (80 km/h) on road and 5.5 knots (10.2 km/h; 6.3 mph) on water. It was 31 feet (9.4 m) long, 8 feet 2.875 inches (2.51 m) wide, 7 feet 1.375 inches (2.17 m) high with the folding-canvas top down and 8.8 feet (2.6 m) high with the top up.

A DUKW abandoned on the beach at IWO JIMA after being hit by Japanese artillery.

21,137 were manufactured. It was not an armored vehicle, being plated with sheet steel between 1/16 and 1/8 inches (1.6–3.2 mm) thick to minimize weight. A high capacity bilge pump system kept the DUKW afloat if the thin hull was breached by holes up to 2 inches (51 mm) in diameter.


One of every four vehicles were produced with a ring mount for machine gun, which would usually have held a .50-caliber (12.7 mm) Browning heavy machine gun.

Men of the 2nd Engineering Special Brigade lower cargo net into a DUKW at Inchon, Korea, 12th of June 1951.

The DUKW was the first vehicle to allow the driver to vary the tire pressure from inside the cab, an accomplishment of Speir's device.


The tires could be fully inflated for hard surfaces such as roads and less inflated for softer surfaces—especially beach sand. This added to the DUKW's great versatility as an amphibious vehicle. This feature is now standard on many military vehicles.

DUKW amphibious truck.

Nomenclature

DUKW amphibious truck.

The designation of DUKW is not a military pun – the name comes from the model naming terminology used by GMC; the D indicates a vehicle designed in 1942, the U meant "utility (amphibious)", the K indicated all-wheel drive and the W indicated two powered rear axles.

DUKW amphibious truck.

Service history

Polish version BAW amphibious truck.

The DUKW was supplied to the US Army, US Marine Corps and Allied forces. 2,000 were supplied to Britain under the Lend-Lease program and 535 were acquired by Australian forces. 586 were supplied to the Soviet Union, and they would build their own version post war: the BAV 485.


The DUKW was used in landings in the Mediterranean, Pacific, on the D-Day beaches of Normandy, Operation Husky, Operation Market Garden in Holland, and during Operation Plunder. Its principal use was to ferry supplies from ship to shore, but it was used for other tasks.


After World War II, reduced numbers of DUKWs were kept in service by the United States, Britain, France and Australia with many more stored pending disposal. Australia transferred many to Citizens Military Force units.

Bulldozer hauls a DUKW up onto the beach at Iwo Jima. This was only one of the yeoman services performed along the shore by the invaluable dozers. The DUKW pictured here is equipped with an A-Frame.

The US Army reactivated and deployed several hundred DUKWs at the outbreak of the Korean War with the 1st Transportation Replacement Training Group providing crew training. DUKWs were used extensively to bring supplies ashore during the Battle of Pusan Perimeter and in the amphibious landings at Inchon.

DUKW being swamped in heavy surf, date unknown.

Ex-US Army DUKWs were transferred to the French military after World War II and were used by the Troupes de marine and naval commandos. Many were used for general utility duties in overseas territories. France deployed DUKWs to French Indochina during the First Indochina War. Some French DUKWs were given new hulls in the 1970s with the last being retired in 1982.

US Army DUKW moving through a flooded town, the Netherlands, 1944.

Britain deployed DUKWs to Malaya during the Malayan Emergency of 1948–60. Many were redeployed to Borneo during the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation of 1962–66.

A DUKW headed toward an Iwo Jima landing beach, afternoon of 19 Feb 1945.

The Royal Marines still use a small number of these vehicles for training purposes at 11 Amphibious Trials and Training Unit RM (ATTURM) in Instow North Devon.

American 2 1/2 ton DUKW amphibious vehicle coming ashore during the invasion of Salerno.

Principal military users

USA -

United Kingdom – approximately 2,000

Canada – approximately 800

France -

Soviet Union – 586

Australia – 535

US Army DUKWs landing under fire on the beaches of Anzio, Italy, 22 Jan 1944.

Peacetime use

DUKW burning on the beaches of Noemfoor, New Guinea, Jul-Aug 1944.

Although DUKWs were used predominantly for the military, many were used by civilian organizations such as police departments, fire stations and rescue units.

US Army DUKW landing on a beach in southern France, 1944.

The Australian Army loaned two DUKWs and crew to Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions in 1948 for an expedition to Macquarie Island. Australian DUKWs were used on Antarctic supply voyages until 1970. From 1945 to 1965, the Australian Commonwealth Lighthouse Service supply ship Cape York carried ex-Army DUKWs for supplying lighthouses on remote islands.

Several were used by abalone fishermen of San Luis Obispo County California to take their catch right off the boats and directly to market, neatly combining the two steps of off-loading onto smaller craft, and then transferring to trucks once they reached the beach.

Whenever a natural disaster or an emergency situation occurs, DUKWs are well equipped for the land and water rescue efforts. Australian Army Reserve DUKWs were used extensively for rescue and transport during the 1955 Hunter Valley floods.

One of the last DUKWs manufactured in 1945 was loaned to a fire department during the Great Flood of 1993, and in 2005, Duck Riders of Grapevine, TX deployed the vehicle to help in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The DUKW was well equipped to maneuver its way through flood waters, transporting victims stranded on their rooftops to helicopter pads set up throughout New Orleans.

The Moby Duck.

Some such as the "Moby Duck" have been adapted as props by local groups such as Seattle's Seafair Pirates to be used in parades and events.

DUKW under Lambeth Bridge. Westminster Abey and the Houses of Parliament are partially visible in background in May 2009.

Developments

In the latter 1940s and throughout the 1950s, while Speir, now Project Engineer for the Army's Amphibious Warfare Program, worked on 'bigger and better' amphibious vehicles such as the 'Super Duck,' the 'Drake' and the mammoth BARC (Barge, Amphibious, Resupply, Cargo), a good many DUKWs were made surplus and put to use as amphibious rescue vehicles by fire departments and even, coming full circle, by Coast Guard stations.

In 1952 the USSR produced a derivative of the DUKW adding a rear loading ramp - the Zavod imeni Stalina factory built the BAV 485 on the structure of their ZiS-151 truck. Production continued until 1962 with over 20,000 units delivered

DUKW converted into a tour bus for the famous Boston Duck Tour. 3rd of September 2006.

Tourist attraction

DUKWs are still in use, as well as purpose-built amphibious tour buses, primarily as tourist transport in harbor and river cities, including but not limited to: Seattle; Philadelphia; Cincinnati; Pittsburgh; Chattanooga; Nashville; Boston; Branson, Missouri; Grapevine, Texas; Saugatuck, Michigan; Liverpool; London; Dublin, Ireland; Rotorua, New Zealand; Belgian coast (Blankenberge, Koksijde) ;The Netherlands; Singapore; Washington, D.C.; Stone Mountain Park, Atlanta, Georgia; and Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin.

The first "duck tour" company was started in 1946 by Mel Flath in Milwaukee, WI. He moved his tour to Wisconsin Dells shortly thereafter. His company has changed ownership since, but is still in operation under the name Original Wisconsin Ducks. His family continues to operate a duck company called the Dells Army Ducks in the Wisconsin Dells Area. One well-established tour operator in the United States is Ride the Ducks. However, the vehicles used are not Army Surplus DUKWs, as used by many other companies, but are rather designed and built from the ground up by Ride The Ducks.

An accidental sinking of a DUKW in Lake Hamilton near Hot Springs, Arkansas killed thirteen passengers on May 1, 1999.

DUKWs in fiction

Two DUKWs, Gert and Daisy, are central to Ron Dawson's novel, The Last Viking: The Untold Story of the World's Greatest Heist. The novel tells the story of a modern day Viking raid by a group of Birmingham gangsters who capture and loot the island of Guernsey on the tenth anniversary of D Day with disastrous consequences. The novel is probably unique in featuring two DUKWs in a post WW2 adventure.

A DUKW is also central to the 2000 AD story Disaster 1990, in which the lead character, London hardman Bill Savage liberates one from a war museum to survive a futuristic flooded Britain.

A WW II vintage DUKW amphibious truck in the covered outdoor display area at the U.S. Army Transportation Museum, Fort Eustis, Virginia.

DUKW

Type amphibious transport

Place of origin United States

Production history

Manufacturer GMC

Number built 21,147

DUKW unoads a Jeep by means of "A" frame, which lifts vehicle from the truck and places it on the ground.

Specifications

Weight 6.5 short tons (5.9 t) empty

Length 31 ft (9.4 m)

Width 8 ft 27/8 in (2.5 m)

Height 7 ft 1.375 in (2.17 m) without ring mount

Crew 1

Primary armament ring mount for machine gun fitted to 25% built

Engine GMC 6-cylinder 269 cid 94 hp

Power/weight 14 hp/tonne

Payload capacity 2.5 short tons (2.3 t) or 12 troops

Suspension wheels, 6×6

Operational range 400 mi (640 km) at 35 mph (56 km/h) on road,

50 nmi (93 km; 58 mi) on water

Speed 50 mph (80 km/h) on road,

5.5 kn (10.2 km/h; 6.3 mph) on water

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Terrapin (amphibious vehicle)

A column of 'Alligator' amphibious vehicles passing Terrepin amphibious vehicles on the Scheldt River near Terneuzen, October 13th, 1944.

The Terrapin "4-ton amphibian" was a British-manufactured, amphibious armoured transport vehicle of the Second World War. It was first used at Antwerp in 1944, and to great effect during the Battle of the Scheldt.

The Terrapin served with the assault teams of Royal Engineers as part of the 79th Armoured Division. They were used to carry infantry units (Canadian and British) over the rivers.


Development

Due to a shortage of US-manufactured DUKWs the British Ministry of Supply commissioned Thornycroft to design an amphibious vehicle capable of ferrying supplies and troops from ship to shore for the D-Day landings.

Some 500 Terrapin Mark 1 were built by Morris Commercial, the commercial vehicle side of the Morris Motor Company.

A Mark 2 Terrapin with a number of improvements reached the prototype stage but the war ended before it entered production.

The British Morris-Commercial Terrapin MkI.

Design of the Mark 1

Despite success in its first military action, the Terrapin was not an overall successful design, and had many significant defects which were never overcome in service.

Because of the size of the tyres, the Terrapin was a relatively high vehicle, and though open-topped, it was difficult to enter and exit. Any soldier attempting to exit over the side faced both prolonged exposure to enemy fire as well as possible injury from the fall.
More important, like the Medium Mark A Whippet tank of WWI, the Terrapin had drive to all eight wheels powered by two separate engines (both Ford V8), mounted side-by-side with each motor driving the wheels on one side, controlled by lever steering. This arrangement did not work on the Whippet, and failed on the Terrapin as well. If one engine broke down the Terrapin tended to swing around violently.
The two centrally located engines also split the cargo compartment in two, and though rated as a 4-ton vehicle, this prevented large loads such as heavy artillery or vehicles from being carried.
In use the vehicle was found to be rather slow, and was easily swamped in rough seas.
In addition, the driver had poor visibility as he was centrally located inside the middle of the vehicle. This was compounded by the installation of a canvas cover over the forward hold. As a result another crew member typically had to stand behind the driver and provide directions.
One interesting feature was that when being driven on a level surface the vehicle was supported on the four middle wheels, the front and rear wheels remaining clear of the surface (the front pair being raised significantly, the rear pair only slightly). The front and rear wheels provided support and traction on soft surfaces and when climbing slopes such as riverbanks. When driven in the water it was propelled by two rear-mounted propellers.

These failings quickly led to the abandonment of the design in favor of the development of the Mark 2, but the growing availability of large numbers of the much more successful American DUKW made further development unnecessary.


Design of the Mark 2

This was similar to the Mark 1 but had a forward driving position. It was a much longer vehicle, being 31 feet (9.4 m) long compared with the 23 feet (7.0 m) length of the Mark 1.

Survivors

Kevin Wheatcroft, a collector in Great Britain, is known as being the owner of an unrestored Terrapin Mk1. John Belfield, a collector in Australia, also owns a Terrapin wreck, which still carries the original Australian Registration Number (ARN) 149391.

Terrapin

Type Armoured personnel carrier
Place of origin United Kingdom
Production history
Manufacturer Morris Commercial
Number built 200


Specifications

Weight 7 tonnes
Length 7.01 m
Width 2.67 m
Height 2.92 m
Crew 2
Armour mm
Primary armament none
Secondary armament none
Engine 2 x Ford V8 190 hp ( kW) in total
Power/weight hp/tonne
Operational range 240 km
Speed 24 km/h, 5 mph in water

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

M29 Weasel

M-29 Weasel, being used as an Ambulance, negotiating ice and snow-covered roads, Bulge area, Belgium, January 1945.

The M29 Weasel was a World War II tracked vehicle, built by Studebaker, designed specifically for operation in snow.

M-29 Weasel pulling a jeep out of the mud near Vossenack. Vehicles such as this were used for evacuation of litter patients as well as for supply operations during the battle for Schmidt.

Design and development

The idea for the Weasel came from the work of British inventor Geoffrey Pyke in support of his proposals to attack Axis forces and industrial installations in Norway. Pyke's plan to hamper the German atomic weapons development became Project Plough for which he proposed a fast light mechanised device that would transport small groups of commando troops of the 1st Special Service Force across snow. In active service in Europe, Weasels were used to supply frontline troops over difficult ground when wheeled vehicles were immobilised.

Camouflaged M-29 Weasel transporting wounded soldiers, Belgium 1944.

The first 2103 had 15-inch (380 mm) tracks, later version had 20-inch (510 mm). The M29C Water Weasel was the amphibious version. This had buoyancy cells in the bow and stern as well as twin rudders.

Machinato inlet, seen shortly after the action of 19 April. Three Weasels on the road (left) were knocked out. In background (left) Buzz Bomb Bowl slopes up to Urasoe-Mura Escarpment.

Variants

T-15 prototype
M28 (G154)
M29 (T24) without float tanks (G179)
M29C with float tanks.
M29C Type A: Center mounted M20 recoilless rifle 75 mm on Weasel
M29C Type B: (T106) Rear mounted 75 mm recoilless rifle on Weasel
M29C Type C: Center mounted 37 mm Gun M3 on Weasel

M29 Weasel in arctic trim, a diorama display at the U.S. Army Transportation Museum, Fort Eustis, Virginia.

Specification

General

Crew: 4
Weight (fighting): 4,451 lb (2,019 kg)

Medical personnel of the 307th Airborne Medical Company use an M29 Weasel to evacuate wounded comrades from the Bulge.

Shipping dimensions:

Uncrated; 340 cu ft; 57.7 sq ft
Ground clearance: 11 inches
Ground pressure: 1.9 pounds per square inch (13 kPa)
Pintle height (loaded): 27 1/8 inches
Electrical system: (volts) 12

One of the M29 Weasels attached to the 33rd SCB

Capacities:

Fuel: 72, octane gasoline
Fuel capacity: 35 gallons
Cooling system: 12 3/4 quarts
Crankcase (refill): 5 quarts
Brakes: Mechanical - external contracting in differential
Transmission: Speeds: 3
Transfer case: Speeds: 2
Communication: radio


Performance

Maximum gradability: 100 %
Turning radius: 12 ft
Fording depth: Will Float (M29C)
Maximum width of ditch vehicle will cross: 36 in
Maximum vertical obstacle vehicle will climb: 24 in
Fuel consumption, average conditions: 5 miles per gal
Cruising range, average conditions: 165 miles
Maximum allowable speed: 36 mph
Maximum allowable towed load: 3,800 lb


Engine

Manufacturer: Studebaker Model 6-170 Champion
Type: L-head, 4 cycle Number of cylinders: 6
Displacement: (cu in.) 169.6
Brake horsepower: at (rpm) 3600 70
Ignition type: Distributor

M29, photo taken at a Studebaker convention in Omaha,NE.

M29 Weasel

Place of origin United States


Specifications

Weight 3,800 pounds dry
Length 10 feet 6 inches
Width 5 feet (later 5 feet 6 inches)
Height 4 feet 3 inches (5 feet 11 inches to top of windscreen)
Crew 4
Armor none
Primary armament none as built
Engine Studebaker Model 6-170 Champion 70 hp (48 kW)
Suspension Tracked
Operational range 265
Speed 36 MPH

Weasel of First Marine Division communication section laying telephone wire across rice paddies in Hungnam area, 8th of November 1950.

Ford GPA


The Ford GPA 'Seep' (from Seagoing Jeep), was an amphibious version of the WWII Ford GPW Jeep. Unlike the jeep, the seep was not a successful design being too slow and heavy on land and lacking sufficient seagoing abilities in open water. Similar design features were used in the larger and more successful DUKW amphibious truck.


History and development

After having commissioned Willys, Ford and Bantam to build the first 4,500 jeeps (1500 each) in March 1941, the US Motor Transport Board set up a project under the direction of the National Defense Research Committee (NDRC) to be designated "QMC-4 1/4 Ton Truck Light Amphibian".


The War was on at full tilt, and with bridges over Europe's rivers being taken out one after another, it seemed practical if the jeep could swim as well as drive. And so it came to Roderick Stephens Jr. of Sparkman & Stephens Inc. yacht designers, to design a shape for a 2700 lb (1,200 kg) amphibious jeep, in the same vein as his earlier design for the DUKW six-wheel-drive amphibious truck. Not surprisingly Stephens' hull design looked like a miniature version of that of the DUKW, and just like it, the 'Seep' was going to have a screw propellor, driven by a power take-off, operating in a dedicated tunnel spared into the rear end bodywork, as well as a proper rudder.

Ford GPA Sea jeep. The Army's most flexible new machine of the war, a Ford-built amphibian reconnaissance car, carrying soldiers equipped for combat duty takes to the water in special tests staged recently in the Detroit area. This picture shows how the new transportation arm propelling itself as a boat to the opposite shore. The boat steers in the water the same as on land.

The construction of the vehicle was developed in competition by Marmon-Herrington and Ford Motor Company. The Marmon-Herrington prototype's hull formed an integral unibody structure, created by cutting shapes out of steel plate and welding those together, much like the hull or chassis of an armoured vehicle. The Ford entry however used a sturdy chassis and internal frame, to which more or less regular automobile type sheet-steel was welded. This construction made the GPA some 400 lb (180 kg) lighter than its competitor. Also The GPA's design was based on the Willys MB and Ford GPW standard Jeeps as much as possible. When designing and building the GPA, Ford utilized many of the exact same parts that the Ford GPW did. The GPA had an interior similar to that of the MB/GPW jeeps, although the driver's compartment had almost twice as many control levers: 2WD/4WD, hi-range/lo-range, capstan winch (on the bows), propeller deployment and rudder control. After a direct comparison of the two company's prototypes, Ford received a contract for production starting in 1942.

Ford GPA amphibian jeeps at factory in Detroit, Michigan, awaiting truck transport, April 1943.

Service

In contrast to the DUKW the GPA (G=Government, P=80" wheelbase, A=Amphibious) did not perform well in the field. At some 1,600 kg the production craft had become much heavier than the original 1,200 kg specified in the design brief, but its volume had not been increased accordingly. As a consequence a low freeboard in the water meant that the Seep couldn't handle more than a light chop, and certainly couldn't take much cargo. The Seep's intended objective: to ferry soldiers to and from ships off-shore, to trundle up the beach and continue inland, was therefore not met. It is reported that many of the Jeeps that were used in battle sank if there were any significant waves at all.

War time US Army photo of a an early Ford GPA made in 1942.

On land the vehicle was too heavy and its body too unwieldy to be popular with the soldiers. Adding insult to injury, the GPA would frequently get stuck in shallow waters, where the regular Willys MB's water fording abilities allowed it to drive straight through (Pohl, 1998). Production was already halted in March 1943 after production of only 12,778 vehicles, due to financial quibbles between Ford and the US government, as well as bad reception of the vehicle in theatre. Although some sources state that less than half of that number were ever completed, serial numbers of surviving specimens suggest that the 12,7XX figure is actually correct.


In spite of participating successfully in the Sicily landings of September 1943, and performing reasonably well in inland river crossings, most GPA’s were routed to Russia under the Lend-Lease program.


Postwar

The Russians were sufficiently pleased with the GPA's ability to cross rivers and inland waters, to keep developing it after the war. Starting out with the chassis of the GAZ-67B, prototypes were created that largely copied the Seep's layout and design, eventually leading to the GAZ 46 MAV, based on the chassis and mechanicals of the GAZ 69 4x4 jeep, to go into production as of 1952. Both the GAZ 69 and the amphibious GAZ 46 were exported to many communist countries.

Half Safe leaving New York in August 1948.

Half-Safe

During the 1950s Australian Ben Carlin (1912–1981) sailed and drove a modified Seep, that he called "Half-Safe" on a journey around the world.

Ford GPA at the South African National Museum for Military History.

Ford GPA 'Seep' (Sea Jeep)

Manufacturer Ford
Production 12,778 (1942–1943)
Assembly United States
Class Amphibious military utility vehicle
Layout front-engine RWD / 4x4
Platform Ford GP
Engine(s) 4-cyl. side valves, 134 cu.in (2,199 cc), 60 hp
Transmission(s) 3-speed + 2-speed transfer case;
low range engages FWD;
PTO propellor drive
Wheelbase 84 inch / 213 cm
Length 182 inch / 462 cm
Width 64 inch / 163 cm
Height 69 inch / 175 cm; 45 inch reducible
Curb weight 3,665 lb / 1,630 kg; (GWV 4,565 lb / 2,030 kg)
Related GAZ 46 (MAV)

Interior of the Ford GPA at the South African National Museum for Military History.