Pages

DISCLAIMER:
The publication of any images or informations related to nazism, fascism or any other totalitarian regimes must be understood as the reproduction of historical accuracy and not as apology to these regimes, leaders or symbols.
ATENÇÃO:
A publicação de qualquer imagem ou informação referentes ao nazismo, fascismo ou quaisquer outros regimes totalitários deve ser entendida como reprodução do rigor histórico e não como apologia a estes regimes, líderes ou símbolos.

Mk IV "Female" WWI Airship tug, Mk IV "Male" WWI British heavy tank, Mk IV "Male" Tadpole WWI British heavy tank - case report

     Hello, Tankers
      After arriving home from my vacation, my eyes searched in the closet for the start of another project ... I would like to build something from WWI, to honor the 100 years of the Great War.

...and my sight stumbled on a dust covered scrap, dropped in an obscure corner of my stash: A girl with a totally abandoned, helpless looks: A Mk IV "Female" from EMHAR! Another carcass that got built. very cheap, for my crazy projects ...
EMHAR (#4002) MK IV Female WW-I British Heavy Battle Tank
A model from Jurassic Era...
      You must be thinking: In a world full of new models and details, as you choose this ancient and crude thing??
      Well ... Modeling is fun and hobby. And the end result will be a rare vehicle that does not have in my collection. So, let's have some fun, turning some lemons into lemonade !!!
      The kit is very, very old but with a decent building...
The poor Female...
The tracks are awful...
      But, first of all, let's know a little about the lineage of this pioneer girl:
 Mark IV tank C14 (No 509 Female). Commanded by 2nd Lt Francis James Arnold.
Photographed with German forces after the Battle of Cambrai.
History:
      British heavy tanks were a series of related vehicles developed by the British Army during the First World War. The Mark I was the world's first tank to enter combat.

      It was the British Navy - under Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty - that pushed the "tank" into existence (then known as "landships"). Development of the prototype "Little Willie" tracked armored vehicle gave way...
Prototype "Little Willie"
      ... to the production level Tank Mk I ("Big Willie") to which 150 of the type were produced and used in the first recorded tank actions of World War 1 in 1916. These tanks showed a typical building design, with tracks involving the entire tank. This type of design became known as rhomboid.
      The type brought about limited success for it was prone to breakdowns, vulnerable to artillery fire and managed a snail's pace of roughly 3 to 4 miles per hour - and the latter only on ideal surfaces. Conversely, the vehicle was armed with a pair of cannon, led her crew in relatively safety from small arms fire and could cross trenches of approximately 9 feet across. Its initial use came as a nasty shock to the Germans which allowed the British to gain territory on their historical enemy through psychology alone. Within time, the Germans developed wider trenches, anti-tank ditches, strategically placed artillery and minefields, an anti-tank rifle and armor-piercing machine gun ammunition to stop these steel beasts in their tracks.
A British Mark I "male" tank near Thiepval on 25 September 1916, fitted
with wire mesh to deflect grenades and the initial steering tail (shown raised)
      Born of the need to break the domination of trenches, barbed wire and machine guns over the battlefields of the Western Front, it was the first vehicle to be named "tank", a name chosen as an expedient to maintain secrecy and to disguise its true purpose. It was developed to be able to cross trenches, resist small-arms fire, travel over difficult terrain, carry supplies, and to capture fortified enemy positions. It is regarded as successful in many respects, but suffered from many problems owing to its primitive nature. 
      The Mark I entered service in August 1916, and was first used in action on the morning of 15 September 1916 during the Battle of Flers-Courcelette, part of the Somme Offensive.
       The Tank Mk ll was developed from the Tank Mk I was a crew trainer yet even these were pressed into service, some 50 examples being completed and shipped to France. As in the Tank Mk I before it, "Male" variants were the cannon-armed marks...
Mk IV "Male" tank, armed with cannons
...while "Female" variants were machine gun-arrned marks intended to protect the Males on their approach.  Swinton is credited with inventing the terms.
Mk IV "Female" tank, armed with machine-guns
      The Tank Mk ll shared much with the Tank Mk I to which the Tank Mk lll was devised as a another more advanced trainer intended to share features of the upcoming Tank Mark lV series.
Mark II "Male"; tank no. 799 captured by the Germans
near Arras on 11 April 1917.
       Reserved for training from the start, the Tank Mk Ill series never saw combat in The Great War and since development of the Tank Mk IV slow in coming, the Tank Mark Ills were slow themselves to appear in a finalized form. As with the Tank Mk ll, there were 50 Tank Mk Ills produced.
       With the exception of the few interim Mark II and Mark III tanks, it was followed by the largely similar Mark IV, which first saw combat in June 1917. The Mark IV was used en masse (about 460 tanks) at the Battle of Cambrai in November 1917. The Mark V, with its much improved transmission, entered service in mid-1918.
Mark V "Male" tank, showing short 6-pounder (57-mm)
Hotchkiss gun in right sponson
      The unusual rhomboidal shape was to give as long a track run as possible to allow for crossing the wide trenches prevalent on the Western Front battlefields. Due to the height necessary for this shape, a turreted armament would have made the vehicle too high and top heavy. Instead, the main armament was arranged in sponsons at the side of the vehicle.
Mark IV 'Male" cutaway drawing
The Mark IV Heavy Battle Tank:
      The director of the Tank Supply Department, Albert Gerald Stern, first intended to fit the Mark IV with a new engine and transmission. Production of battle tanks was halted until the new design was ready, necessitating the use of the Mark II and III as interim training tanks. Failing to complete development soon enough to start production in time to have 200 tanks ready for the promised date of 1 April 1917, Stern was ultimately forced to take a Mark IV into production in May 1917 that was only slightly different from the Mark I tank.
      The Mark IV Male carried three Lewis machine guns – one in the hull front and two in the sponsons, as well as the two sponson guns (now shorter barrelled QF 6 pdr 6 cwt guns). The sponsons were not mirror images of each other, as their configuration differed to allow for the 6 pdr's gun-layer operating his gun from the left and the loader serving the gun from the right. The guns had a 100 degree arc of fire but only the starboard gun could fire straight ahead. The Female had five machine guns. Two of the machine guns were operated by the gun loaders.
      The decision to standardize on the Lewis gun was due to the space available within the tanks. Despite its vulnerable barrel and a tendency to overheat or foul after prolonged firing, the Lewis used compact drum magazines which could hold up to 96 rounds. The Hotchkiss was fed from a rigid strip which was trimmed down to only 14 rounds for tank use; no sooner had the machine gunner guided the fall of shot onto the target then it was time to change the strip and the process repeated. It was not until a flexible 50 round strip was fully developed in May 1917 that the Hotchkiss would become the standard machine gun for tanks again. The changes caused delays, such as adapting the design for the bulky Lewis cooling barrel, and later, problems when the Hotchkiss strips had to be stored in positions designed for Lewis gun magazines.
       This tank introduced the use of the fascine, a bundle of brushwood, bound with chains, about 3.0 m long and 1.4 m in diameter carried on the front. It was dropped into trenches to allow the tank to more easily cross over.
Mk IV Females with fascines
      And also there were wooden structures with metal reinforcements that performed the same function of fascines: the crib.
Mk IV Female with crib
      A large number of these tanks were also used for development work. In an attempt to improve trench-crossing capability one alternative was to stretch the tank, although this would raise problems connected with steering. Fosters-Daimler came up with a device known as the ‘Tadpole Tail’, which extended the track frames rearwards but, most of the time at least, remained clear of the ground.
Side view of Mk IV Male Tadpole.
Notice the outline of a  common Mk IV Male in white
      The attachment lengthened the tank by 2.74m  and required 28 more track plates on each side and an extension of the chain drive to the rear sprocket. As is often the case, the modified tank worked adequately on trials but did not stand up so well to continued use, the tail being too light and flexible to remain rigid enough.
A Mark IV Male tank with Tadpole Tail in Dollis Hill
Tadpole in trials, negotiating a trench crossing...
      A substantial number of these tails were made and shipped to France, but there is no evidence to suggest that they were employed on service tanks. The original modified Mark IV, a Male machine, was used for various trials,including sledge-towing and the mounting of a Newton mortar in the gap between the rear frames and set to fire forwards, over the tank. 
A Mk IV Male Tadpole in sledge-towing trials
 Tadpole Tail  Mark IV was later fitted with a 6-in. Newton trench mortar between
the rear horns to experiment with close support for tanks in the attack.
      The Tadpole Tail was also fitted experimentally to the Mark V tank, but it does not appear to have been popular with Central Workshops personnel in France, who came up with a solution of their own.
     The main defect of the device was lacked rigidity and therefore was dropped in favour of extending the main hull of the tank, as was done in the Mark V*.  The Tadpole not appear to have been used in combat.
A Tadpole in the mud, happy in his ambience...
      Other experimental versions tested radios, airship tugs and recovery cranes.
Mk I heavy tank testing aerials for wireless
Mk IV Female airship tug
Mk IV Female with crane
Mk IV Supply with crane
      Some of these devices were later used on operational tanks. Mark IVs were also the first tanks fitted with unditching beams by field workshops. A large wooden beam, reinforced with sheet metal, was stored across the top of the tank on a set of parallel rails. If the tank became stuck, the beam was attached to the tracks (often under fire) and then dragged beneath the vehicle, providing grip.
Mk IV Male with unditching wooden beam
      The Mark IV was built by six manufacturers: Metropolitan (the majority builder), Fosters of Lincoln, Armstrong-Whitworth, Coventry Ordnance Works, William Beardmore and Company and Mirrlees, Watson & Co., with the main production being in 1917. The first order was placed for 1,000 tanks with Metropolitan in August 1916. It was then cancelled, reinstated and then modified between August and December 1916. The other manufacturers, contracted for no more than 100 tanks each, were largely immune to the conflict between Stern and the War Office.
      In the end of WWI, many Mark IVs (preferably the Males), now considered obsolete, were converted to supply tanks, having their armament removed and apertures closed. Others were factory built, for a total of around 205 such units.
Two British officers observing a Mark IV supply tank, (402), as it negotiates a small hillock.
This particular vehicle is undergoing trials at an unidentified Royal Flying Corps /
Royal Air Force base and was probably used as an aircraft towing tug.
Mk IV Male 'Supply' supply tank variant going up to the line
at Villers-Bretonneux, August 1918
Service:
      The Mark IV was first used in large numbers on 7 June 1917, during the British assault on Messines Ridge. Crossing dry but heavily cratered terrain, many of the sixty-plus Mark IVs lagged behind the infantry, but several made important contributions to the battle. By comparison, at the Third Battle of Ypres (also known as Passchendaele) from 31 July, where the preliminary 24-day long barrage had destroyed all drainage and heavy rain had soaked the field, the tanks found it heavy going and contributed little; those that sank into the swampy ground were immobilized and became easy targets for enemy artillery.
      Nearly 460 Mark IV tanks were used during the Battle of Cambrai in November 1917, showing that a large concentration of tanks could quickly overcome even the most sophisticated trench systems.
      In the aftermath of the German Spring Offensive on the western front, the first tank-to-tank battle was between Mk IV tanks and German A7Vs in the Second Battle of Villers-Bretonneux in April 1918.

Stürmpanzerwagen A7V  "Wodan"
      About 40 captured Mark IVs were employed by the Germans as Beutepanzerwagen (The German word Beute means "loot" or "booty") with a crew of twelve. These formed four tank companies from December 1917. Some of these had their six pounders replaced by a German equivalent.
Mk IV Male Beutepanzerwagen
Mk IV Female Beutepanzerwagen
      The last Mark IV to see service was Excellent, a Mark IV male retained by the naval gunnery school on Whale Island, HMS Excellent. In the early years of the Second World War it was restored to operational status and driven to the mainland, where its new career was allegedly brought to an early end after a number of cars were damaged.

Comparison of World War I tanks
TankCountryYear Prod. totalCrewArmament
number of rounds
Armour
(front/

side/top)
Weight
(tonnes)
Enginepower/
weight ratio
Speed (km/h)Range
Mark I MaleUK19167586 pounder (57 mm/L40) [324],
3×MG [6,272]
12/10/6 mm28.4 tPetrol
105 hp (78 kW)
3.7 hp/t4.5 km/h37 km
Female755×MG [30,080]27.4 t
Mark IV MaleUK191742082×57 mm/L23 [332],
3×MG [6,272]
14/12/8 mm28.5 t125 hp (93 kW)5.6 km/h56 km
Female5955×MG [10,000]27 t
Mark V MaleUK191820082×57 mm/L23 [207],
4×MG [5,800]
14/14/8 mm29.5 t150 hp (112 kW)5.1 hp/t7.5 km/h72 km
Female2006×.303 MG [14,100]28.5 t
Mark V* MaleUK19182008+24 infantry2×57 mm/L23 [221],
8×MG [8,400]
14/12/6 mm33 t4 km/h63 km
Female43210×MG [16,800]32 t
Medium Mark A WhippetUK19182003-44×.303 MG [5,400]14/14/5 mm14 tPetrol 2×45 hp (34 kW)6.4 hp/t13 km/h64 km
Schneider CA1France1917400675 mm/L13 [94–96],
2× 7.92 mm MG [3,840]
11.5/11.5/5.5 mm13.5 t60 hp (45 kW)8 km/h48 km
191724/17/5.5 mm14.6 t75 km
Saint-ChamondFrance1917165875 mm/? [106–108],
4× 7.92 mm MG [7,488]
11.5/8.5/5.5 mm22 t90 hp (67 kW)4.1 hp/t12 km/h60 km
Saint-Chamond191723575 mm/L36 [106–108],
4× 7.92 mm MG [7,488]
19.5/17/5.5 mm24 t
Renault FT mitrailleuseFrance19183,69427.92 mm MG [4,800]16/8/6 mm6.5 t35 hp (26 kW)10.7 hp/t8 km/h35 km
Renault FT canon191837 mm/L20 [240]6.7 t
A7V Germany1918201857 mm/L26 [180],
6×MG [10,000–15,000]
30/20/10 mm32 t2×100 hp (75 kW)6.25 hp/t12 km/h35 km

Mk IV videos:



Surviving vehicles:
Seven Mark IVs survive.
- A Mark IV Female, F4: Flirt II, which fought at the Battle of Cambrai, is at the Museum of Lincolnshire Life, Lincoln.A local company, William Foster & Co., manufactured the first tanks, although as the only Mark IVs built in Lincoln were Male, Flirt was probably built by Metropolitan in Birmingham.
- A Mark IV Female is preserved at Ashford in Kent. This is one of many that were presented for display to towns and cities in Britain after the war; most were scrapped in the 1920s and 1930s. Interestingly this tank appears to sit on a box. This is in fact blocking a hole under the tank which was cut out to remove the engine in order to install an electricity substation inside it. This was then removed a decade or so later to leave a hollow interior.
- The Royal Museum of the Army in Brussels has a Male Mark IV tank, the Lodestar III, still in original colours.
- A Mark IV Female, Grit, is owned by the Australian War Memorial and annually goes on display at their open day.
- In 1999, a Mark IV Female, D51: Deborah, was excavated at the village of Flesquières in France. It had been knocked out by shell-fire at the Battle of Cambrai (1917) and subsequently buried when used to fill a crater. Work is underway on its restoration.
- A Mark IV Male, Excellent, is displayed at Bovington. After World War I, this tank was presented by the army to HMS Excellent, a Royal Navy shore establishment where some tank crewmen were trained. During World War II, it was made operational again for service with the Home Guard when German invasion threatened in 1940. It is still maintained in working order.
- Mark IV Female Liberty: displayed at United States Army Ordnance Museum, Aberdeen, Maryland. Originally named Britannia, this tank took part in the Battle of Arras where it penetrated the German trench lines, destroyed four machine gun positions, helped take 395 prisoners and repulse two German counter-attacks. The tank and her crew were afterwards sent to the US to help sell War bonds. Renamed Liberty, the tank joined the Ordnance Museum collection in 1919. After decades of exposure to the elements it is in poor condition, but about to undergo restoration.

Specs:


Mark IV heavy tank
Place of origin                                                                   Type                       

Tank
Service history
Used by
Wars
Production history
Designer
Major Walter Gordon Wilson
Manufacturer
see text
Unit cost
about £5,000 
Produced
May 1917 – end 1918
Number built
1,220
Specifications
Weight
Male: 29 tons (28.4 tonnes)
Female: 27 tons (27.4 tonnes)
Length
Male and Female: 8.05 m
Tadpole: 10.80 m
Width

Height
Male: 4.12 m
Female: 4.06 m
All: 2.49 m
Crew
8

6.1–12 mm
Main
armament
Male: Two 6-pounder (57-mm) 6 cwt QF guns with 332 rounds
Female: five .303 Lewis guns
Secondary
armament
Male: Three .303 in Lewis guns
Female: none
Tadpole: 152,4mm (6inch)          mortar
Engine
Daimler-Foster, 6-cylinder in-linesleeve valve 16 litre petrol engine
105 bhp at 1,000 rpm
Transmission
Primary: 2 Forward, 1 Reverse
Secondary – 2 speed
Fuel capacity
319 liters
Operational
range
56 km
Speed
6.4 km/h

The kit:
      As my kit is a scrap, I'll do something rare ...an airship tug:
Mk IV Female 261 airship tug - left side
Notice the absence of the guns
Mk IV Female 261 airship tug  - rear view
The Mk IV Female 261 with his customer, the Airship 23, in 1918
      Made me want to build the Airship 23 in scale, but a blimp of 163.00 m in length in 1/35 scale, it would be a cylinder of 4.65 m. It would be a very cool diorama, but ...Infeasible ... Sorry !!!
Airship 23, first of the 23 Class
Painting of two 23-class airships at Pulham by John Lavery.
Note the Mk IV Female tank 261 (without tower) in the foreground
 used for ground-handling.
The tank and the airship in scale....What a diorama...
      To start the scratch of the tank, a schematic drawing is necessary: I modified the excelent drawing of George Bradford to do this:
Mk IV Female airship tug in Royal Navy gray
      I removed the MGs and reinstall the tracks: Notice the Mk IV Male in background. I built this EMHAR kit a long time ago...
Mk IV Male and Female . Notice the fascine, made with bamboo slivers
      I convert the blueprint in 1/35 scale in Corel Draw and start the building: Tower tug...
Building the vertical beams of the tower - left side
The Plastruct used in the tower


The horizontal structural reinforcements



The horizontal structural reinforcements and front and rear raisers

Finally, the diagonal ribs

Almost there ....


The mooring system for the airship
Rear tow bar and crank of the mooring system

 Painting time: As the tank was added at a Navy Station (It was the Royal Navy who controlled the R23 airships), I decided to paint the girl in Gray-Navy:

The Mk IV Female airship tug in Navy-Gray


I improved the exhaust pipe with a copper tube ( air conditioning scrap)
Tracks and exhaust in red-oxide...
My intention is to coat the exhaust with asbestos (Tamiya tape)


      Markings for Mk IV Female tug: One frustrating thing is you can not print blank. The solution was to print the decal in yellow and paint with white over ....The White-261 was born...
Panzerserra's decals...right side
Front view
      At this stage, I decided to build a Mk IV Male Tadpole together with airship Female tug, to save time:
The EMHAR Tadpole kit.
The Female airship tug with Tadpole booklet
Kit parts...
Decreasing the diameter of the idler wheels with Dremel and scalp...
and reducing the diameter of the drive sprockets.
This facilitates the fitting of tracks
From the bottom to the front: Mk IV Male gun tank,
Mk IV Female airship tug
and Mk IV Male Tadpole
The Tadpole almost complete...
      My inspiration of colors:

The Female and Male in Gray...


Ready for weathering...

      But, returning to the Female, it is time to turn the yellow decal in white.
After a layer of white paint, applied with steady hand and brush ...
Front view
Notice the "asbestos" in the exhaust pipe...
Rear view of Female airship tug White-261
Painting the markings of the Tadpole with white pen
Close -up
 Lads, this is the final step:
The Tadpole, with White markings - left side
Tadpole, with White markings - right side
       Adding details (great ...) from Value Gear:
Very, very good stuff from Value Gear
The EMHAR 6' mortar, with some details in scratch
Gun-metal...
And almost there ...
      Finally:
      Mk IV Male Tadpole Protitype with mortar - 1918
Mk IV Male Tadpole prototype with mortar - 1918



Mk IV Male Tadpole - left side


Mk IV Male Tadpole - the mortar between the rear horns
Mk IV Male Tadpole -  cargo


Mk IV Male Tadpole - right side




Mk IV Male Tadpole  with Kojak and Rover, the dog.

       Mk IV Male FANTAN (case report- I built this beast a long, long time ago...): The kit represents the Mark IV Male F-56 FANTAN - 2341, from 12th Section - 18th Company - F Battalion, in the Battle of Cambrai, November - 1917

Mark IV Male F-56 FANTAN - 2341
12th Section - 18th Company - F Battalion
Battle of Cambrai, November - 1917
Mark IV Male F-56 FANTAN - left side

The fascine and unditching wooden beam are in scartch
Mark IV Male F-56 FANTAN - right side




Two Mks IV Males: Tadpole and Gun tank
Notice the sizes...
Mark IV Male F-56 FANTAN with Kojak and Rover, the dog...
      And, finally, the Mk IV Female Airship tug "White-261". Royal Naval Air Station, Pulhan, Norfolk, 1918. Here, I added a small accessory that I think would be useful for anchoring and handling of a airship: a windsock. No photographic evidence of this use, but I think it would be logical and useful.
Mk IV Female Airship tug with windsock. Maybe...
Mk IV Female Airship tug "White-261".
Royal Naval Air Station, Pulhan, Norfolk, 1918.
Mk IV Female Airship tug "White-261" - left side


Mk IV Female Airship tug "White-261" - right side


Mk IV Female Airship tug "White-261"
with mooring ropes
Value Gear stuff...

Mk IV Female Airship tug "White-261" with Kojak and Rover, the dog.
Mk IV Male  Tadpole and Mk IV Female Airship tug "White-261"
Two oddballs; Tadpole and M4A3E8 (75) W
pic for size comparison

Two rare girls...
Well, Gents...There this !!!

It's a long way !!!