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{{short description|Land vehicle with both regular wheels and continuous tracks}}
{{dablink|Halftrack redirects here. For the comic strip character, see [[Beetle Bailey]].}}
{{redirect|Halftrack|the comic strip character|Beetle Bailey}}
{{more citations needed|date=January 2013}}
[[File:1931 Citroën Autochenille P17 Croisière Jaune photo 2.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|Citroën P17 half-track truck of the early 1930s]]


A '''half-track''' is a civilian or military vehicle with regular wheels on the front for steering, and [[caterpillar track]]s on the back to propel the vehicle and carry most of the load. The purpose of this combination is to produce a vehicle with the [[off-roading|cross-country capabilities]] of a [[tank]] and the [[Car handling|handling]] of a [[wheel]]ed vehicle.
A '''half-track''' is a civilian or [[military vehicle]] with regular wheels at the front for steering and [[continuous track]]s at the back to propel the vehicle and carry most of the load. The purpose of this combination is to produce a [[vehicle]] with the [[off-roading|cross-country capabilities]] of a [[tank]] and the [[Car handling|handling]] of a [[wheel]]ed vehicle.

==Performance==

The main advantage of half-tracks over wheeled vehicles is that the tracks reduce the pressure on any given area of the ground by spreading the vehicle's weight over a larger area, which gives it greater mobility over soft terrain like mud and snow, while they do not require the [[Tank steering systems|complex steering mechanisms]] of fully tracked vehicles, relying instead on their front wheels to direct the vehicle, augmented in some cases by track braking controlled by the steering wheel.

It is not difficult for someone who can drive a car to drive a half-track, which is a great advantage over fully tracked vehicles, which require specialized training. Half-tracks thus facilitate moving personnel and equipment successfully across varying terrain.

The main disadvantage is the increased maintenance to maintain track tension, and the reduced life span of tracks (up to 10,000 km) compared to tires (up to 80,000 km).


==History==
==History==

===Kégresse track===
===Kégresse track===
{{Main|Kégresse track}}
[[Image:Kegresse tsar17.jpg|right|thumb|250px|A [[Kégresse track]] from the personal car park of the [[Tsar]] ]]
[[Image:Kegresse tsar17.jpg|left|thumb|A car from Tsar [[Nicholas II of Russia]]'s personal car pool converted with [[Kégresse track]]s]]
In 1911 the French engineer [[Adolphe Kégresse]] converted a number of cars from the personal car park of the [[Tsar]] of [[Russia]] as half-tracks. His system was named after him: the [[Kégresse track]]. From 1916 onward there was a Russian project by the [[Putilov plant]] to produce military half-tracks along the same lines using trucks and French track parts.
[[File:Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Kégresse.jpg|thumb|[[Vladimir Lenin]]'s [[Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost]] with [[Kégresse track]], converted by the [[Kirov Plant|Putilov Plant]]), at [[Gorki Leninskiye]]]]


The French engineer [[Adolphe Kégresse]] converted a number of cars from the personal car pool of Tsar [[Nicholas II of Russia]] to half-tracks in 1911. His system was named after him: the [[Kégresse track]], which used a flexible belt rather than interlocking metal segments. He applied it to several vehicles in the imperial garage, including [[Rolls-Royce Limited|Rolls-Royce]] cars and [[Packard]] trucks. The [[Imperial Russian Army]] also fitted the system to a number of their [[Austin Armoured Car]]s. From 1916 onward, there was a Russian project by the [[Kirov Plant|Putilov Plant]] to produce military half-tracks (the Austin-Putilov model), along the same lines, using trucks and French track parts.
The primary advantage of a half-track over a full caterpillar-type (or 'crawler') vehicle is the idea of being able to carry its own payload where wheeled vehicles could not go, and where full crawler machines could not traverse with trailers needed to carry a load. Often ballast or "dead weight" was added to full crawlers for improved traction, where a halftrack simply increases its payload.


After the [[Russian Revolution]] and the establishment of the [[Soviet Union]], Kégresse returned to his native France, where the system was used on [[Citroën]] cars between 1921 and 1937 for off-road and military vehicles.
===Steam Log Hauler===
[[Image:Halftrack-fort-benning-2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|U.S. WWII half-track in training at Fort Benning]]
[[Image:9th Armored Division, Engers, Germany 03-27-45.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[9th Armored Division (United States)|US 9th Armored Division]] halftracks advance through [[Engers]], Germany 27, 1945]]
The concept originated with the hauling of logs in the Northeastern US with the [[Lombard Steam Log Hauler]] built by [[Alvin Lombard]] of [[Waterville, Maine]], from 1899 through 1917. Resembling a railroad steam locomotive with sled steerage (or wheels) in front, and crawlers driven by chains instead of the driver wheels of a locomotive.


===Steam log hauler===
By 1907, dog and pony show operator H.H. Linn abandoned his gas and steam powered four and six wheel drive creations and had Lombard build a motor home/traction engine run by a underslung four cylinder gasoline engine to travel the unimproved roads of the day, wheels in front, tracks in rear, the first payload carrying halftrack. By 1909 this was replaced by a smaller machine with two wheels in front and a single track in rear because rural wooden bridges presented problems. Stability issues, coupled with a dispute between Linn and Lombard, resulted in Linn building and putting his own improved civilian halftrack style machines on the market, Lombard attempted to follow but for the most part remained a pulling machine. Linn would later copyright "HAFTRAK" and "CATRUK" as trademarks, the latter for a halftrack meant to convert hydraulically from truck to crawler configuration.
[[Image:Lombard steam log hauler.jpg|thumb|right|A restored Lombard steam log hauler in New Hampshire, US, in 2008]]
[[Image:Holt75pk.jpg|thumb|right|alt=An early bulldozer-like tractor, on crawler tracks, with a leading single wheel for steering - projecting from the front - on an extension to the frame. The large internal combustion engine is in full view, with the cooling radiator prominent at the front. An overall roof is supported by thin rods, and side protection sheeting is rolled up under the edge of the roof.|The Holt 75 model gasoline-powered Caterpillar tractor. Later models were produced without the front "tiller wheel".]]


The concept originated with the hauling of logs in the northeastern US, with the [[Lombard Steam Log Hauler]] built by [[Alvin Lombard]] of [[Waterville, Maine]], from 1899 to 1917. The vehicle resembled a railway steam locomotive, with sled steering (or wheels) in front and at the rear, crawlers driven by chains instead of the driving wheels of a locomotive.<ref>{{Cite web
In the early days of bulldozers, [[Holt]] tractors had tricycle steering, owing to engineering difficulties with the caterpillars. The Holt tractors went on to become the basis for the [[Mark I (tank)|Mark I]] tanks, the [[Schneider CA1]] tank, and the German [[A7V]] tank. The Holt would be renamed the [[Caterpillar 60]], launching an industry.
| url = http://files.asme.org/ASMEORG/Communities/History/Landmarks/5587.pdf
| title = Lombard Steam Log Hauler
| access-date = 6 January 2009
| author = Lore A Rogers and Caleb W Scribner
| publisher = American Society of Mechanical Engineers
| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20061005204934/http://files.asme.org/ASMEORG/Communities/History/Landmarks/5587.pdf
| archive-date =2006-10-05
| url-status = dead
}}</ref>


By 1907, [[circus|dog and pony show]] operator H. H. Linn abandoned his gas-and-steam-powered four- and six-wheel-drive creations and had Lombard build a motor home/traction engine run by an underslung four-cylinder Brennan gasoline engine to travel the unimproved roads of the day, with wheels at the front and tracks at the rear: the first payload-carrying half-track. By 1909 this was replaced by a smaller machine with two wheels at the front and a single track behind, since rural wooden bridges presented problems.
Also of note are the "[[snowmobile]]" attachments for automobiles built by White, Snowbird and others, for converting Fords to halftrack configuration.


Stability issues, together with a dispute between Linn and Lombard, led Linn to create the Linn Manufacturing Company, builder of the [[Linn tractor]], for building and putting onto the market his own improved civilian half-track–style machines. Lombard attempted to follow but, for the most part, remained a pulling machine. Linn would later register "Haftrak" and "Catruk" as trademarks, the latter for a half-track meant to convert hydraulically from truck to crawler configuration.
===Autochenille & Autoneige===
There were many civilian half-track experiments in the 1920s and 1930s. The [[Citroën]] company sponsored several scientific expeditions crossing deserts in North Africa and Central Asia, using their ''autochenilles''. These would be studied by the US Army to design the military [[M2 Half Track Car]].


[[File:Artillery tractor in France Vosges Spring 1915.jpg|thumb|left|Artillery tractors (here a [[Benjamin Holt|Holt]] tractor) used by the French Army in 1914-1915]]
With the snow and ice of [[Canada]] in mind [[Joseph-Armand Bombardier]] developed 7 and 12 passenger half-track ''autoneiges'' in the 1930s, starting what would become the [[Bombardier]] industrial conglomerate. The Bombardier half-tracks had tracks for propulsion in the rear and skis for steering in front. The skis could be replaced by wheels in the summer, but was uncommon.
[[Image:HoltTractorFrontviewAnd8inchHowitzer.jpg|thumb|right|alt=A Holt seventy-five tractor towing a field gun through a war-damaged village in Europe. The tractor is stacked high with supplies, and a number of uniformed soldiers are walking alongside.|A Holt tractor towing artillery through a French village in 1916]]


===WWII half-track===
===World War I===
[[Tractor]]s used to tow [[artillery]] and designs with front wheels and tracks at the rear began to appear prior to the outbreak of war, often based on agricultural machines such as the [[Holt tractor]]. The basic half-track concept was originally showcased by the British during the war.
[[image:SdKfz11-2.jpg|thumb|250px|German [[SdKfz 11]] half-track]]
Half-tracks were used extensively in [[World War II]] by all sides, especially the Germans ([[SdKfz 11]], [[SdKfz 250]], [[SdKfz 251]]) and Americans (M2 and [[M3 Half-track]]), but soon fell out of favor, replaced with fully-tracked or fully-wheeled vehicles. Half-tracks were used primarily as [[armored personnel carrier]]s, but also saw duty as [[mortar (weapon)|mortar carriers]], self-propelled [[anti-aircraft|anti-aircraft gun]]s, self-propelled [[anti-tank|anti-tank gun]]s, [[artillery]] tractors, [[armored fighting vehicle]]s and many other tasks.


With such tractors, the tactical use of heavier guns to supplement the light horse-drawn [[field gun]]s became feasible. For example, in the British Army it allowed the heavy guns of the [[Royal Garrison Artillery]] to be used flexibly on the battlefield. In England, starting in 1905, [[David Roberts (engineer)|David Roberts]] of [[Richard Hornsby & Sons]] had attempted to interest British military officials in a tracked vehicle, but failed.
During the Cold War half-tracks were used by the NATO members and saw combat service in the [[First Indochina War]] and the [[Algeria War]]. Half-tracks were still in use by the [[Israeli Army]] until recently, where they were deemed to outperform fully-tracked and fully-wheeled vehicles for non-combat payload tasks such as carrying telecommunication equipment.


Holt bought the patents related to the "chain track" [[track-type tractor]] from Richard Hornsby & Sons in 1914<ref>{{cite web | url = http://hornsbycrawler.org/ | title = Hornsby Steam Crawler | first = George | last = Hoffman | date = 2007-02-21 | location = [[British Columbia]] }}</ref> for £4,000. Unlike the Holt tractor, which had a steerable tiller wheel in front of the tracks, the Hornsby crawler was steered by controlling power to each track.<ref name="about">{{cite web|url=http://inventors.about.com/od/bstartinventions/a/bulldozer.htm |archive-url=https://archive.today/20121208161805/http://inventors.about.com/od/bstartinventions/a/bulldozer.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=December 8, 2012 |title=History of Bulldozers| first= Mary |last=Bellis|publisher= About.com |access-date=2010-02-28 }}</ref>
One of their main advantages is that they were drivable by anyone able to drive a car or truck, with additional steering provided by track braking applied from the steering wheel, although not a feature in the American halftrack.


When World War I broke out, with the problem of [[trench warfare]] and the difficulty of transporting supplies to the front, the pulling power of [[Continuous track|crawling-type]] tractors drew the attention of the military. With tanks coming onto the scene, however, the combination of tracks and wheels seemed impractical when fully tracked or six-wheel, four-wheel drive vehicles were available.
[[Category:Armoured fighting vehicles by type]]
[[Category:Tracked vehicles]]


The half-track saw a comeback in the 1930s, with development occurring in several countries that would use them in World War II. The White Motor Company, which had designed armored cars for the [[United States Army]] and [[United States Marines]], continued after the First World War to develop armored cars and added tracks for the [[M2 half-track car]] and [[M3 half-track]].
[[de:Halbkettenfahrzeug]]

[[fr:Autochenille]]
===''Autochenille'' and ''autoneige''===
[[he:זחל"ם]]
There were many civilian half-track experiments in the 1920s and 1930s. The [[Citroën]] company sponsored several scientific expeditions crossing deserts in North Africa and Central Asia, using their ''autochenilles''. After World War I, the US military wanted to develop a semi-tracked personnel carrier vehicle, so it looked at these civilian half-tracks. In the late 1920s the US Army purchased several Citroën-Kégresse vehicles for evaluation followed by a licence to produce them. This resulted in the Army Ordnance Department building a prototype in 1939. In September 1940 it went into production with the military M2 and M3 half-track versions.
[[nl:Half-track]]

[[ja:半装軌車]]
[[File:Bombardier (PSF).jpg|thumb|left|Bombardier]]
[[no:Halvbeltekjøretøy]]

[[pl:Pojazd półgąsienicowy]]
With the snow and ice of [[Canada]] in mind, [[Joseph-Armand Bombardier]] developed 7- and 12-passenger half-track ''autoneiges'' in the 1930s, starting what would become the [[Bombardier Inc.|Bombardier]] industrial conglomerate. The Bombardier vehicle had tracks for propulsion in the rear and skis for steering in front. The skis could be replaced with wheels in the summer, but this was uncommon.
[[sv:Halvbandvagn]]

[[it:Veicolo semicingolato]]
[[File:BA-30 armored car.jpg|thumb|left|BA-30 armored car]]

The Red Army also experimented with half-tracks, such as the [[BA-30]], but found them expensive and unreliable. Although not a feature on American World War II vehicles, steering could be assisted by track braking, controlled by the steering wheel.


===World War II half-track use===
[[File:9th Armored Division, Engers, Germany 03-27-45.jpg|thumb|right|[[9th Armored Division (United States)|US 9th Armored Division]] halftracks advance through [[Engers]], Germany, March 27, 1945]]

In the US, 43,000 halftracks were produced by three primary manufacturers, the largest being the [[White Motor Company]], the original designer, with a total of 15,414 accepted by the War Department. The other manufacturers, [[Autocar Company|Autocar]] and [[Diamond T]], built 12,168 and 12,421, respectively. These designs were produced under license in Canada, and were widely supplied under the [[Lend Lease]] program, with 5,000 supplied to the USSR alone.<ref>Dunn, Walter Scott, ''Stalin's keys to victory: the rebirth of the Red Army'', p.156</ref>

[[File:Multiple Gun Motor Carriage.jpg|thumb|left|M16 .50 AA Quad on an [[M3 half-track]]]]

The fourth manufacturer of American-made half-tracks was the International Motor Truck Corporation division of [[International Harvester]]. IH built approximately 12,853 half-tracks, which were shipped to Europe for use by British and French troops. In 1942, they produced 152 M5 units and 5 M14 units at the Springfield Works; in 1943 they produced 2,026 M9 units, 1,407 M0A1 units, 4,473 M5 units, 1,600 M14 units, and 400 M17 units, all at the Springfield Works; in 1944 they produced 1,100 M5A1 units and 1,100 M17 units also at the Springfield Works; and in 1945 they built 589 M5A1 and 1 M5A3 units at Springfield Works. The IHC half-tracks differed visibly from the White, Diamond T, and AutoCar units in several ways. The IHC units had flat front fenders instead of fenders with compound curves; used the International Red Diamond 450 engines instead of the Hercules 160AX engines used by the other manufacturers; used IHC Model 1856 4-speed transmissions instead of the Spicer 4-speed transmissions used by the other manufacturers; had IHC Model FOK-1370 front drive axles instead of the Timken front axles used by their competitors; used IHC Model RHT-1590 axles in the rear instead of the Timken axles used by their competitors; and were constructed with fully welded armor with rounded rear corners instead of the bolted armor with square corners used by the other three manufacturers.<ref>Crismon, Fredrerick W., "International Trucks" 1995; pp 173-174, 179, 181, 185, 186-188, 192</ref>

[[File:Crowds of French patriots line the Champs Elysees.jpg|thumb|Allied victory parade August 23, 1944, with IH Half-Tracks]]

In August 1944, Allied forces [[Liberation of Paris|liberated Paris]]. The first vehicle to enter the city was an M3 named "España Cañí" and driven by Spanish soldiers fighting under the French tricolor. There followed several days of parades in late August. One parade of 25 August 1944 was down the [[Champs-Élysées]], with [[Charles de Gaulle]] leading throngs of Parisians, and French soldiers driving IH half-tracks.

[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-801-0664-37, Berlin, Unter den Linden, Schützenpanzer.jpg|left|thumb|A German ''Schützenpanzer'' [[Sd.Kfz. 251]] half-track. Photograph taken in 1942 in Berlin]]

====Infantry transporters====
Half-tracks were used extensively in World War II, especially by the Germans with their armored [[Demag]]-designed [[Sd.Kfz. 250]]s and [[Hanomag]]-designed [[Sd.Kfz. 251]]s; and by the Americans with their [[M2 Half Track Car|M2]]s and [[M3 Half-track|M3]]s.

====Support weapon platforms====
Half-tracks were widely used as [[mortar carrier]]s, self-propelled [[anti-aircraft|anti-aircraft gun]]s, self-propelled [[anti-tank|anti-tank gun]]s, [[armored fighting vehicle]]s and in other tasks.

[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-665-6823-11, Russland, Flak auf Halbkettenfahrzeug im Erdeinsatz.jpg|thumb|right|A German [[Sd.Kfz. 10#Sd.Kfz. 10.2F4 and 10.2F5|Sd.Kfz. 10/4 or 10/5]]
with ''Behelfspanzerung'']]

====Utility and tractor half-tracks====
[[File:NSU Kettenkrad 36PS 1944 1.JPG|thumb|right|A small [[Kettenkrad|Sd.Kfz. 2]], with the characteristic ''Schachtellaufwerk'' overlapped/interleaved roadwheels]]

The Germans used a small 2 seater 1/2-ton class half-track "motorcycle", the [[Sd.Kfz. 2]] (better known as the ''Kleines Kettenkraftrad'' HK 101 or ''Kettenkrad'' for short – ''Ketten'' meaning tracks, and ''krad'' being the military abbreviation of the German word ''Kraftrad'', the administrative German term for motorcycle), to pull small artillery guns, for ammunition haulage, general transport and as a ground towing vehicle for the [[Messerschmitt Me 262]] jet fighter. Built by [[NSU Motorenwerke AG]] [[Neckarsulm]] and [[:de:Stoewer|Stoewer Werke]] [[Stettin]], a total of 8,345 vehicles were produced between 1940 and 1944.

Other Wehrmacht models were:
* 1-ton class, [[Sd.Kfz. 10]] produced by Demag, Berlin; Adler, Frankfurt am Main; Büssing-NAG, Brunswick; Phänomen, Cottbus and Saurer, Vienna, a total of 25,000 vehicles - its drivetrain was used for the [[Sd.Kfz. 250]]
* 3-ton class, [[Sd.Kfz. 11]] produced by Hanomag, Adler, Auto-Union and Skoda from 1938 to 1944, a total of 25,000 vehicles - its drivetrain was used for the [[Sd.Kfz. 251]]
* 5-ton class. [[Sd.Kfz. 6]], manufactured by Büssing-NAG, Berlin-Oberschönweide; Daimler-Benz and Praga (Czechoslovakia), about 3,500 vehicles in total
* 8-ton class. [[Sd.Kfz. 7]], production was of about 12,000 vehicles
* 12-ton class. [[Sd.Kfz. 8]], some 4,000 vehicles were produced by five manufacturers
* 18-ton class. [[Sd.Kfz. 9]], a production of only 2,000 vehicles

Larger German half-track tractors were used to tow anti-tank and field artillery pieces. The largest of these were also used by mechanical engineers to retrieve bogged down vehicles or perform repairs such as engine maintenance. [[Maultier]] half-tracks used to transport supplies to forward units were essentially civilian trucks which had had their rear axles replaced by [[Panzer I]] or [[Panzer II]] running gear. A replacement half-track design introduced later in World War II, the 1943-introduced ''[[Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper]]'', was meant to replace the 3-tonne and 5-tonne capacity models – only some 825 examples were built before the war's end.

A common feature of virtually all German World War II half-tracks was the so-called ''Schachtellaufwerk'' overlapped/interleaved roadwheel arrangement with a "slack track" system possessing no return rollers under the return run of track, used from the small ''Kettenkrad'' to the nine-tonne capacity [[Sd.Kfz. 9]] vehicle, and most famously used on Henschel's [[Tiger I]] and MAN's [[Panther tank|Panther]] main battle tanks.

===Cold War use===
Half-tracks were extensively used after World War II until the late 1960s, mostly in form of surplus World War II vehicles. Half-tracks saw combat in the [[French colonial empire]] in the [[First Indochina War]] and the [[Algerian War]]; in the [[Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts]]; and the early wars of the [[Arab–Israeli conflict]].

Half-tracks continued in use by the [[Israeli Army]] where they were deemed to outperform fully tracked and fully wheeled vehicles for non-combat payload tasks such as carrying telecommunications equipment. As of March 2008, 600 half-tracks were still officially listed as on active duty.<ref>{{Cite web| url=http://www.inss.org.il/upload/(FILE)1206270841.pdf| title=Israel Armed Forces| access-date=2 June 2009| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080813024448/http://www.inss.org.il/upload/%28FILE%291206270841.pdf| archive-date=2008-08-13| url-status =dead}}</ref>

<gallery mode=packed heights=180>
Image:M3-Halftrack-with-20mm-cannon.jpg|Israeli modified M3 Half-track, armed with 20&nbsp;mm cannon
image:SdKfz11-2.jpg|German [[Sd.Kfz. 11]] half-track
</gallery>

==Civilian use==
[[File:Halftrack Cromer Mai 1993.JPG|thumb|Half-track in use in Norfolk, UK in 1993]]

Many Second World War half-tracks were sold off to civilian users either as surplus stock or later due to obsolescence when the fully tracked [[armoured personnel carrier]] was introduced into service. Most were used in engineering-related tasks involving terrain that would be difficult for even [[four-wheel drive]] trucks, such as snow, sand and water-logged soil. Many were significantly modified for their new roles, including being fitted with winches, small cranes, and generators after the rear cabin sides were removed.

Some [[World War II]] half-tracks were used as all-terrain [[fire department]] pumpers or tankers.

{{clear}}

==Gallery==
<gallery mode=packed>
File:Linn tractor 1916 right.jpg|First [[Linn tractor]], 1916
File:CarrierMGArmoured30cwtBurford-Kegresse 3-4.jpg| British semi-tracked armoured personnel carrier [[Kégresse track]] 30cwt.
File:M9-A1 Halftrack IHC.jpg|Preserved [[M9 Half-track]].
File:M3 Half Track, Thunder Over Michigan 2006.jpg|M3 Half Track, Thunder Over Michigan.
File:M3-Halftrack-with-Eyal-crane-latrun-3.jpg|Israeli M3 halftrack with Eyal crane latrun
File:M3-halftrack-ambulance-1.jpg|M3 halftrack ambulance
File:M3 halftrack bed Wings Over Wine Contry 2007.JPG|M3 halftrack with Browning M2 machine guns
File:German halftrack side b.jpg|German halftrack at Museum of the American GIs
File:SdKfz251-9.jpg|Sd.Kfz. 251/9 [[7.5 cm KwK 37|"Stummel"]]
Image:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-559-1085-07, Italien, Flugzeug Me 323 Gigant, Opel "Maultier".jpg|[[Opel Blitz|Opel]] [[Maultier]] exiting a [[Me 323]].
File:M5-Halftrack-latrun-5.jpg|M5 Halftrack open top seating.
Image:SOMUA MCG Saumur 01.jpg|[[SOMUA MCG]] on display at {{Lang|fr|[[Musée des Blindés]]|italic=no}}
File:Sd.Kfz. 9 Donington Grand Prix Collection.jpg|[[Sd.Kfz. 9]]
File:Svidnik war museum 02.jpg| German [[Sd.Kfz. 250]] halftrack.
File:SdKfz 9 pulls Crusader tank 1942.jpg|[[Sd.Kfz. 9]] pulls tank
File:SdKfz10-2.jpg|[[Sd.Kfz. 10]]/2
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-280-1058-16, Russland, Halbkettenfahrzeug mit Pak.jpg|Sd.Kfz. 10
File:Type 1 Ho-Ha, front view.jpg|Imperial Japanese Army [[Type 1 Ho-Ha]]
File:Waldschlepper RS 1500.jpg|Civilian halftrack ''Waldschlepper'' as a forestry vehicle
File:Halftrack glacier crawler.jpg|Halftrack glacier crawler at [[Höfn]]
</gallery>

==See also==
*[[Armoured warfare]]
*[[Universal Carrier]]

==Notes and references==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
* [http://www.eagleservices.ca/sarva/halftrac.htm WWII Half Track Armoured Command Vehicle restored To Its Original Wartime Condition in Edmonton, Canada]

{{Half-tracks}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Half-Track}}
[[Category:Half-tracks| ]]
[[Category:Tracked vehicles]]
[[Category:French inventions]]

Latest revision as of 22:07, 19 November 2024

Citroën P17 half-track truck of the early 1930s

A half-track is a civilian or military vehicle with regular wheels at the front for steering and continuous tracks at the back to propel the vehicle and carry most of the load. The purpose of this combination is to produce a vehicle with the cross-country capabilities of a tank and the handling of a wheeled vehicle.

Performance

[edit]

The main advantage of half-tracks over wheeled vehicles is that the tracks reduce the pressure on any given area of the ground by spreading the vehicle's weight over a larger area, which gives it greater mobility over soft terrain like mud and snow, while they do not require the complex steering mechanisms of fully tracked vehicles, relying instead on their front wheels to direct the vehicle, augmented in some cases by track braking controlled by the steering wheel.

It is not difficult for someone who can drive a car to drive a half-track, which is a great advantage over fully tracked vehicles, which require specialized training. Half-tracks thus facilitate moving personnel and equipment successfully across varying terrain.

The main disadvantage is the increased maintenance to maintain track tension, and the reduced life span of tracks (up to 10,000 km) compared to tires (up to 80,000 km).

History

[edit]

Kégresse track

[edit]
A car from Tsar Nicholas II of Russia's personal car pool converted with Kégresse tracks
Vladimir Lenin's Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost with Kégresse track, converted by the Putilov Plant), at Gorki Leninskiye

The French engineer Adolphe Kégresse converted a number of cars from the personal car pool of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia to half-tracks in 1911. His system was named after him: the Kégresse track, which used a flexible belt rather than interlocking metal segments. He applied it to several vehicles in the imperial garage, including Rolls-Royce cars and Packard trucks. The Imperial Russian Army also fitted the system to a number of their Austin Armoured Cars. From 1916 onward, there was a Russian project by the Putilov Plant to produce military half-tracks (the Austin-Putilov model), along the same lines, using trucks and French track parts.

After the Russian Revolution and the establishment of the Soviet Union, Kégresse returned to his native France, where the system was used on Citroën cars between 1921 and 1937 for off-road and military vehicles.

Steam log hauler

[edit]
A restored Lombard steam log hauler in New Hampshire, US, in 2008
An early bulldozer-like tractor, on crawler tracks, with a leading single wheel for steering - projecting from the front - on an extension to the frame. The large internal combustion engine is in full view, with the cooling radiator prominent at the front. An overall roof is supported by thin rods, and side protection sheeting is rolled up under the edge of the roof.
The Holt 75 model gasoline-powered Caterpillar tractor. Later models were produced without the front "tiller wheel".

The concept originated with the hauling of logs in the northeastern US, with the Lombard Steam Log Hauler built by Alvin Lombard of Waterville, Maine, from 1899 to 1917. The vehicle resembled a railway steam locomotive, with sled steering (or wheels) in front and at the rear, crawlers driven by chains instead of the driving wheels of a locomotive.[1]

By 1907, dog and pony show operator H. H. Linn abandoned his gas-and-steam-powered four- and six-wheel-drive creations and had Lombard build a motor home/traction engine run by an underslung four-cylinder Brennan gasoline engine to travel the unimproved roads of the day, with wheels at the front and tracks at the rear: the first payload-carrying half-track. By 1909 this was replaced by a smaller machine with two wheels at the front and a single track behind, since rural wooden bridges presented problems.

Stability issues, together with a dispute between Linn and Lombard, led Linn to create the Linn Manufacturing Company, builder of the Linn tractor, for building and putting onto the market his own improved civilian half-track–style machines. Lombard attempted to follow but, for the most part, remained a pulling machine. Linn would later register "Haftrak" and "Catruk" as trademarks, the latter for a half-track meant to convert hydraulically from truck to crawler configuration.

Artillery tractors (here a Holt tractor) used by the French Army in 1914-1915
A Holt seventy-five tractor towing a field gun through a war-damaged village in Europe. The tractor is stacked high with supplies, and a number of uniformed soldiers are walking alongside.
A Holt tractor towing artillery through a French village in 1916

World War I

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Tractors used to tow artillery and designs with front wheels and tracks at the rear began to appear prior to the outbreak of war, often based on agricultural machines such as the Holt tractor. The basic half-track concept was originally showcased by the British during the war.

With such tractors, the tactical use of heavier guns to supplement the light horse-drawn field guns became feasible. For example, in the British Army it allowed the heavy guns of the Royal Garrison Artillery to be used flexibly on the battlefield. In England, starting in 1905, David Roberts of Richard Hornsby & Sons had attempted to interest British military officials in a tracked vehicle, but failed.

Holt bought the patents related to the "chain track" track-type tractor from Richard Hornsby & Sons in 1914[2] for £4,000. Unlike the Holt tractor, which had a steerable tiller wheel in front of the tracks, the Hornsby crawler was steered by controlling power to each track.[3]

When World War I broke out, with the problem of trench warfare and the difficulty of transporting supplies to the front, the pulling power of crawling-type tractors drew the attention of the military. With tanks coming onto the scene, however, the combination of tracks and wheels seemed impractical when fully tracked or six-wheel, four-wheel drive vehicles were available.

The half-track saw a comeback in the 1930s, with development occurring in several countries that would use them in World War II. The White Motor Company, which had designed armored cars for the United States Army and United States Marines, continued after the First World War to develop armored cars and added tracks for the M2 half-track car and M3 half-track.

Autochenille and autoneige

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There were many civilian half-track experiments in the 1920s and 1930s. The Citroën company sponsored several scientific expeditions crossing deserts in North Africa and Central Asia, using their autochenilles. After World War I, the US military wanted to develop a semi-tracked personnel carrier vehicle, so it looked at these civilian half-tracks. In the late 1920s the US Army purchased several Citroën-Kégresse vehicles for evaluation followed by a licence to produce them. This resulted in the Army Ordnance Department building a prototype in 1939. In September 1940 it went into production with the military M2 and M3 half-track versions.

Bombardier

With the snow and ice of Canada in mind, Joseph-Armand Bombardier developed 7- and 12-passenger half-track autoneiges in the 1930s, starting what would become the Bombardier industrial conglomerate. The Bombardier vehicle had tracks for propulsion in the rear and skis for steering in front. The skis could be replaced with wheels in the summer, but this was uncommon.

BA-30 armored car

The Red Army also experimented with half-tracks, such as the BA-30, but found them expensive and unreliable. Although not a feature on American World War II vehicles, steering could be assisted by track braking, controlled by the steering wheel.


World War II half-track use

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US 9th Armored Division halftracks advance through Engers, Germany, March 27, 1945

In the US, 43,000 halftracks were produced by three primary manufacturers, the largest being the White Motor Company, the original designer, with a total of 15,414 accepted by the War Department. The other manufacturers, Autocar and Diamond T, built 12,168 and 12,421, respectively. These designs were produced under license in Canada, and were widely supplied under the Lend Lease program, with 5,000 supplied to the USSR alone.[4]

M16 .50 AA Quad on an M3 half-track

The fourth manufacturer of American-made half-tracks was the International Motor Truck Corporation division of International Harvester. IH built approximately 12,853 half-tracks, which were shipped to Europe for use by British and French troops. In 1942, they produced 152 M5 units and 5 M14 units at the Springfield Works; in 1943 they produced 2,026 M9 units, 1,407 M0A1 units, 4,473 M5 units, 1,600 M14 units, and 400 M17 units, all at the Springfield Works; in 1944 they produced 1,100 M5A1 units and 1,100 M17 units also at the Springfield Works; and in 1945 they built 589 M5A1 and 1 M5A3 units at Springfield Works. The IHC half-tracks differed visibly from the White, Diamond T, and AutoCar units in several ways. The IHC units had flat front fenders instead of fenders with compound curves; used the International Red Diamond 450 engines instead of the Hercules 160AX engines used by the other manufacturers; used IHC Model 1856 4-speed transmissions instead of the Spicer 4-speed transmissions used by the other manufacturers; had IHC Model FOK-1370 front drive axles instead of the Timken front axles used by their competitors; used IHC Model RHT-1590 axles in the rear instead of the Timken axles used by their competitors; and were constructed with fully welded armor with rounded rear corners instead of the bolted armor with square corners used by the other three manufacturers.[5]

Allied victory parade August 23, 1944, with IH Half-Tracks

In August 1944, Allied forces liberated Paris. The first vehicle to enter the city was an M3 named "España Cañí" and driven by Spanish soldiers fighting under the French tricolor. There followed several days of parades in late August. One parade of 25 August 1944 was down the Champs-Élysées, with Charles de Gaulle leading throngs of Parisians, and French soldiers driving IH half-tracks.

A German Schützenpanzer Sd.Kfz. 251 half-track. Photograph taken in 1942 in Berlin

Infantry transporters

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Half-tracks were used extensively in World War II, especially by the Germans with their armored Demag-designed Sd.Kfz. 250s and Hanomag-designed Sd.Kfz. 251s; and by the Americans with their M2s and M3s.

Support weapon platforms

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Half-tracks were widely used as mortar carriers, self-propelled anti-aircraft guns, self-propelled anti-tank guns, armored fighting vehicles and in other tasks.

A German Sd.Kfz. 10/4 or 10/5 with Behelfspanzerung

Utility and tractor half-tracks

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A small Sd.Kfz. 2, with the characteristic Schachtellaufwerk overlapped/interleaved roadwheels

The Germans used a small 2 seater 1/2-ton class half-track "motorcycle", the Sd.Kfz. 2 (better known as the Kleines Kettenkraftrad HK 101 or Kettenkrad for short – Ketten meaning tracks, and krad being the military abbreviation of the German word Kraftrad, the administrative German term for motorcycle), to pull small artillery guns, for ammunition haulage, general transport and as a ground towing vehicle for the Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter. Built by NSU Motorenwerke AG Neckarsulm and Stoewer Werke Stettin, a total of 8,345 vehicles were produced between 1940 and 1944.

Other Wehrmacht models were:

  • 1-ton class, Sd.Kfz. 10 produced by Demag, Berlin; Adler, Frankfurt am Main; Büssing-NAG, Brunswick; Phänomen, Cottbus and Saurer, Vienna, a total of 25,000 vehicles - its drivetrain was used for the Sd.Kfz. 250
  • 3-ton class, Sd.Kfz. 11 produced by Hanomag, Adler, Auto-Union and Skoda from 1938 to 1944, a total of 25,000 vehicles - its drivetrain was used for the Sd.Kfz. 251
  • 5-ton class. Sd.Kfz. 6, manufactured by Büssing-NAG, Berlin-Oberschönweide; Daimler-Benz and Praga (Czechoslovakia), about 3,500 vehicles in total
  • 8-ton class. Sd.Kfz. 7, production was of about 12,000 vehicles
  • 12-ton class. Sd.Kfz. 8, some 4,000 vehicles were produced by five manufacturers
  • 18-ton class. Sd.Kfz. 9, a production of only 2,000 vehicles

Larger German half-track tractors were used to tow anti-tank and field artillery pieces. The largest of these were also used by mechanical engineers to retrieve bogged down vehicles or perform repairs such as engine maintenance. Maultier half-tracks used to transport supplies to forward units were essentially civilian trucks which had had their rear axles replaced by Panzer I or Panzer II running gear. A replacement half-track design introduced later in World War II, the 1943-introduced Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper, was meant to replace the 3-tonne and 5-tonne capacity models – only some 825 examples were built before the war's end.

A common feature of virtually all German World War II half-tracks was the so-called Schachtellaufwerk overlapped/interleaved roadwheel arrangement with a "slack track" system possessing no return rollers under the return run of track, used from the small Kettenkrad to the nine-tonne capacity Sd.Kfz. 9 vehicle, and most famously used on Henschel's Tiger I and MAN's Panther main battle tanks.

Cold War use

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Half-tracks were extensively used after World War II until the late 1960s, mostly in form of surplus World War II vehicles. Half-tracks saw combat in the French colonial empire in the First Indochina War and the Algerian War; in the Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts; and the early wars of the Arab–Israeli conflict.

Half-tracks continued in use by the Israeli Army where they were deemed to outperform fully tracked and fully wheeled vehicles for non-combat payload tasks such as carrying telecommunications equipment. As of March 2008, 600 half-tracks were still officially listed as on active duty.[6]

Civilian use

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Half-track in use in Norfolk, UK in 1993

Many Second World War half-tracks were sold off to civilian users either as surplus stock or later due to obsolescence when the fully tracked armoured personnel carrier was introduced into service. Most were used in engineering-related tasks involving terrain that would be difficult for even four-wheel drive trucks, such as snow, sand and water-logged soil. Many were significantly modified for their new roles, including being fitted with winches, small cranes, and generators after the rear cabin sides were removed.

Some World War II half-tracks were used as all-terrain fire department pumpers or tankers.

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See also

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Notes and references

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  1. ^ Lore A Rogers and Caleb W Scribner. "Lombard Steam Log Hauler" (PDF). American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-10-05. Retrieved 6 January 2009.
  2. ^ Hoffman, George (2007-02-21). "Hornsby Steam Crawler". British Columbia.
  3. ^ Bellis, Mary. "History of Bulldozers". About.com. Archived from the original on December 8, 2012. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  4. ^ Dunn, Walter Scott, Stalin's keys to victory: the rebirth of the Red Army, p.156
  5. ^ Crismon, Fredrerick W., "International Trucks" 1995; pp 173-174, 179, 181, 185, 186-188, 192
  6. ^ "Israel Armed Forces" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-08-13. Retrieved 2 June 2009.
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