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Information About

Comet Tank




name=Comet
  Caption Comet tank in a museum
  Length 655
  Width 304
  Height 267
  Weight 33
  Suspension Christie
  Speed Road 50
  Range 250
  Primary 77 Mm HV
  Secondary 2 x 792 mm Besa MG
  Armour 102
  Engine Rolls-Royce Meteor
  Hp 600
  KW 447
  Crew 5



The Cruiser Comet was a British Tank that first saw use near the end of World War II . It is often considered the best overall British tank of the war.


PRODUCTION

Combat experience against the Germans in the Western Desert Campaign demonstrated to the British the inferiority of their tanks. A request was thus made to Leyland Motors Ltd for a new tank that could achieve combat superiority over German models; for reasons of economy and efficiency, it additionally had to use as many components of their Cromwell Tank as possible.

The initial design was the Challenger , basically a 17 Pounder Anti-tank Gun mounted onto a Cromwell Chassis . The large weapon required a decrease in armor as well as other concessions though and ultimately the project was not deemed a success.

In a second attempt, the A34, the tank designers opted to use a highly modified version of the 17 pounder, the , ammunition was now stored in armored bins, the suspension was strengthened, return rollers were added, and the turret was electrically traversed (something taken from earlier Churchill designs) with a generator powered by the main engines.

The first prototype was ready in February 1944 and production models began to be delivered in September. By the end of the war, 1,200 units had been produced.


USEAGE


The British 11th Armoured Division was the first to receive the new tanks in December of that year and the only division to be completely refitted by the end of the war. Because of its late arrival, the Comet did not participate in any major battles though it was involved in the crossing of the Rhine and the later Berlin Victory Parade in July 1945 . The tanks great speed was greatly exploited on the German Auto-bahns.

During the following Korean War , the Comet served along with the heavier Centurion , a successor tank introduced in 1949 partially based on its design. The Comet remained in British service until 1958 when the remaining tanks were sold to foreign governments; up until the 1980s, it could be found in the armies of various nations such as South Africa .




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