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Subject Item
n2:
rdf:type
n24:
rdfs:label
Light Tank Mk VIII
rdfs:comment
The Tank, Light, Mk VIII (A25), also known as the Harry Hopkins, after President Roosevelt's chief diplomatic advisor, was a British light tank produced by Vickers-Armstrong during World War II. The Mk VIII was the latest in the line of light tanks the company had built for the British Army, and was intended to be the successor of the previous light tank designed by Vickers-Armstrong, the Mk VII Tetrarch. A number of changes were made to the Mk VIII, most notably increasing its width, length and weight and also increasing the thickness of the armour. The design of the tank was submitted to the War Office in late 1941, with an initial order for 1,000 models being made by the Tank Board of the War Office in the same month, a number that increased to 2, 410 in November. Production began in Ju
owl:sameAs
dbr:Light_Tank_Mk_VIII
n29:
4.34 m
dcterms:subject
n39: n40:
n3:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n4: n8: n9: n11: n13: n15: n19: n26: n34:
n17:
100
n5:
7.92 2025
n32:
Tank, Light, Mk VIII, Harry Hopkins
n23:
Light tank
n36:
Mk VIII Light Tank 'Harry Hopkins'
n41:
2.65 m
n14:
50 n31:
n21:
17.4
n10:
2.11 m
n27:
n28:
n18:
yes
n35:
149
n16:
1943
n37:
148.0
n25:
Steerable road wheels
n20:
yes
n22:
Alecto
n42:
3
n12:
Vickers-Armstrong
n30:abstract
The Tank, Light, Mk VIII (A25), also known as the Harry Hopkins, after President Roosevelt's chief diplomatic advisor, was a British light tank produced by Vickers-Armstrong during World War II. The Mk VIII was the latest in the line of light tanks the company had built for the British Army, and was intended to be the successor of the previous light tank designed by Vickers-Armstrong, the Mk VII Tetrarch. A number of changes were made to the Mk VIII, most notably increasing its width, length and weight and also increasing the thickness of the armour. The design of the tank was submitted to the War Office in late 1941, with an initial order for 1,000 models being made by the Tank Board of the War Office in the same month, a number that increased to 2, 410 in November. Production began in June 1942 but immediately began encountering problems with the tank, and a number of modifications had to be made to the design after complaints were made by the War Office and the Fighting Vehicle Proving Establishment. These problems were so acute that only 6 tanks had been produced by mid-1943, and only 100 when production ended in February 1945. By mid-1941, officials in the War Office and the British Army had taken the decision that light tanks were no longer to be used by the British Army due to their inferior weapons and armour, as well as their poor performance during the conflict. Consequently the Mk VIII was obsolete by the time that any significant number of the tanks had been produced, and none ever saw combat. A number of plans were made by the War Office for the design in light of this decision, including equipping reconnaissance units with them, or the unsuccessful idea of attaching wings to them so that aircraft could tow them as gliders into position to support airborne forces; eventually it was decided to hand over those tanks that had been built to the Royal Air Force for use in airfield defence. One variant on the Mk VIII was designed, the Alecto self-propelled gun which was to have mounted a howitzer and used as a close-support vehicle by airborne forces; however only a few were ever produced and they were never used in combat.