Cocodrilo Churchill

Cocodrilo Churchill

PaísUk
PapelTanque de la infantería/Tanque de la llama
En servicio1944-1945
ConstruidoUnknow

Galería de fotos de Churchill Cocodrilo, El cocodrilo fue un Churchill VII que fue convertido reemplazando la ametralladora del casco por un lanzallamas. El combustible estaba en un remolque blindado remolcado detrás. Podía disparar varias ráfagas de 1 segundo sobre 150 yardas. El Cocodrilo fue uno de los "Hobart's Funnies", otro vehículo utilizado por la 79.ª División Blindada.

Churchill Crocodile
FotógrafoUnknow
LocalizaciónUnknow
Fotos30
Espera, Buscando Churchill Cocodrilo fotos para usted...
Churchill Crocodile Walk Around
FotógrafoDaryl Nightingale
LocalizaciónUnknow
Fotos50

Ver también:

Segunda Guerra Mundial: La historia visual definitiva de la guerra relámpago a la bomba atómica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Segunda Guerra Mundial Mapa por Mapa (DK History Mapa por Mapa) - Amazon

The **Churchill Crocodile** was a British flamethrower tank developed during World War II, based on the reliable **Churchill Mark VII Infantry Tank**. It was one of the specialized assault vehicles, collectively known as “Hobart’s Funnies,” created for the D-Day landings and subsequent operations to breach enemy fortifications.


Design and Flamethrower System

  • Base Vehicle: The conversion kit was primarily fitted to the Churchill Mark VII, a tank known for its heavy armor and good cross-country mobility, albeit slow speed. This heavy armor allowed the Crocodile to withstand the intense fire it often drew as a primary assault weapon.
  • Flamethrower Location: The fixed flamethrower projector was installed in the hull, replacing the bow-mounted Besa machine gun.
  • Armament Retained: Crucially, the Crocodile retained its main turret armament—the **75 mm QF gun** and a coaxial machine gun—allowing it to engage enemy armor and provide conventional fire support, a key advantage over many other flame-tanks.
  • The Trailer: The unique feature of the Crocodile was its **armored, two-wheeled trailer** towed behind the tank.
    • Capacidad: This trailer carried about **400 gallons (1,800 liters)** of flame fuel (a thickened incendiary mixture) and a supply of pressurized nitrogen gas (the propellant).
    • Range/Bursts: This capacity was enough for approximately **80 one-second bursts** of flame, with an effective range of up to **120–150 yards (110–140 meters)**.
    • Safety/Tactics: The trailer was connected to the tank via a flexible, armored pipe and, most importantly, could be **jettisoned** from inside the tank in an emergency (like being hit or running out of fuel), allowing the tank to continue fighting as a standard gun tank. In action, the crew would keep the tank positioned to shield the vulnerable trailer from enemy fire.

Combat Role and Psychological Effect

  • Primary Role: The Churchill Crocodile was designed for close-range assault on fortified positions like bunkers, pillboxes, and strongpoints that standard artillery struggled to neutralize.
  • Psychological Weapon: Its terrifying capability—shooting a jet of intense flame over a long distance—had an immense **psychological effect**. German troops were often so demoralized by its presence that they would surrender immediately upon seeing the flamethrower fire a warning shot, saving the Allies from bloody fighting.
  • Despliegue: The Crocodiles were assigned to specialist armored units, most famously the **79th Armoured Division**, and were used successfully throughout the Normandy campaign, the push through Western Europe, and later in Italy and even the Korean War.

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