Goliath tracked mine
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Development
During and after World War I, a number of inventors devised small, remote-controlled, tracked vehicles intended to carry an explosive charge. During the war, the French developed two vehicles. The Crocodile Schneider Torpille Terrestre[2] (transl. 'Land Torpedo Crocodile Schneider') carried a 40 kg (88 lb) explosive charge and saw limited combat use in June 1916. However, it performed poorly and was eclipsed by the first tanks, then being introduced.[3] The Aubriot-Gabet Torpille Électrique (transl. 'Aubriot-Gabet Electric Torpedo') was driven by a single electric motor powered by a trailing cable. This vehicle may have been steered by clutch control on its tracks, although early versions may have lacked steering.[3] This may not have mattered as its task was simply to cross no man's land to attack the long trenches of the enemy.[4] The Wickersham Land Torpedo was patented by American inventor Elmer Wickersham in 1918[5] and in the 1930s, a similar vehicle was developed by the French vehicle designer Adolphe Kégresse.
In late 1940, Kégresse's prototype was recovered by the Germans near the Seine; the Wehrmacht's ordnance office directed the Carl F.W. Borgward automotive company of Bremen, Germany to develop a similar vehicle for the purpose of carrying a minimum of 50 kg (110 lb) of explosives. The result was the SdKfz. 302 (Sonderkraftfahrzeug, transl. 'special-purpose vehicle'), called the Leichter Ladungsträger (transl. 'light charge carrier'), or Goliath, which carried 60 kg (130 lb) of explosives. The vehicle was steered remotely via a joystick control box. The control box was connected to the Goliath by a 650-metre (2,130 ft), triple-strand cable. The cable was stored on a cable drum in the rear compartment of the Goliath. The cable was used for steering the vehicle left/right, forwards and reverse (reverse on the electric driven 302 version only) and to ignite the explosive charge. Each Goliath was disposable, being intended to be blown up with its target. Early model Goliaths used two electric motors but, as these were costly to make (3,000 Reichsmarks) and difficult to maintain and recharge in a combat environment, later models (known as the SdKfz. 303) used a cheaper two-stroke petrol engine.[6]
Service
Romanian version
During 1944, Romania designed and built its own model of remote-controlled tracked mine, known as "Romanian Goliath", due to lack of information about its actual name. However, it was markedly different from its German counterpart. The few surviving photos show that the vehicle had no armour, and it is not known if that was ever changed. It did have some functional improvements, however, as the Romanian-designed chassis allowed it to cross trenches and craters much better than its German counterparts. Little is known about the vehicle, other than that it never went beyond the prototype stage and that it weighed about two tonnes.[8]
Surviving examples
Surviving Goliaths are preserved at:
- The Museum of World War II, Massachusetts, USA
- The Museum Stammheim , Germany
- the Deutsches Panzermuseum, Germany
- the Bundeswehr Military History Museum, Dresden, Germany
- The Technik Museum Sinsheim, Germany
- The Tøjhus Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark
- Heeresgeschichtliches Museum, Vienna, Austria
- the Musée du Débarquement Utah Beach, Normandy, France
- Musée des Blindés, Saumur, France
- Musee No. 4 Commando, Ouistreham, Normandy, France
- the Canadian War Museum, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
- Fort Garry Horse Museum, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
- United States Army Ordnance Museum
- Karl Smith collection, USA
- the Imperial War Museum, Duxford, UK
- The Tank Museum, Bovington Camp, UK
- The REME Museum, UK
- Dutch Cavalry Museum, Netherlands
- War Museum Overloon, Netherlands
- Het Nederlands kustverdedigingsmuseum: Fort aan den Hoek van Holland
- Het Memory Oorlogs- en Vredesmuseum Nijverdal, Netherlands
- Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History, Belgium
- December 44 Museum, La Gleize, Belgium
- the Kubinka Tank Museum, Russia
- Arsenał in Wrocław, Poland
- Polish Army Museum, Poland
- Warsaw Uprising Museum, Poland
- Muzeum dopravy (transportation museum), Bratislava, Slovakia.
- Swedish Army Museum, Stockholm, Sweden
- Friends' Association of the Scientific Collection of Defence Engineering Specimens Koblenz (VFF WTS), Koblenz, Germany[9]
- The Flying Heritage & Combat Armor Museum, Everett, Washington, USA
- Australian Armour and Artillery Museum, Smithfield, Queensland, Australia
See also
- Borgward IV
- Mobile Land Mine, equivalent British World War 2 vehicle; fifty built.
- Springer (tank)
- Teletank, a series of Soviet remote controlled tanks
- Unmanned ground vehicle
References
- Citations
- ↑ Goliath Demolition Tank on YouTube
- ↑ Land torpedo Crocodile Schneider (France). weaponews.com.
- ↑ 3,0 3,1 Everett and Toscano (2015) p.412
- ↑ Everett, Bart, A Brief Early History of Unmanned Systems. Mechanix Illisttated (February 19, 2017).
- ↑ US patent 1407969
- ↑ Army manual D 654/10, Leichter Ladungsträger, Gerätebeschreibung und Bedienungsanweisung. OKH (1 april 1943).
- ↑ 7,0 7,1 7,2 Everett and Toscano (2015) p.489
- ↑ "Goliath" — Дистанционно управляемая машина (October 5, 2018).
- ↑ Friends' Association of the Scientific Collection of Defence Engineering Specimens Koblenz | Home.
- Bibliography
- Chamberlain, Peter, and Hilary Doyle (1999). Encyclopedia of German Tanks of World War Two, 2nd ed. London: Arms & Armour. ISBN 1-85409-214-6.
- Unmanned Systems of World Wars I and II. MIT Press (6 november 2015). ISBN 978-0-262-02922-3.
- Gassend Jean-Loup (2014). Autopsy of a Battle, the Allied Liberation of the French Riviera, August September 1944. Atglen PA: Schiffer Publications.
- Jaugitz, Markus (2001). Funklenkpanzer: A History of German Army Remote-and Radio-Controlled Armor Units, trans. David Johnston. Winnipeg, Manitoba: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. ISBN 0-921991-58-4.
- Jentz, Thomas L. Panzer Tracts, No. 14: Gepanzerte Pionier-Fahrzeuge (Armored Combat Engineer Vehicles, Goliath to Raeumer). S. Darlington, Maryland: Darlington Productions. ISBN 1-892848-00-7
- Morison, Samuel Eliot (1957). History of United States Naval Operations in World War II vol. 11. Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston, Mass..
External links
- Media related to Goliath tracked mine at Wikimedia Commons
- Dutch Cavalry Museum has a Goliath-tank in its collection.
- Goliath in Kubinka tank museum
- Leichte Ladungsträger Goliath Sd.Kfz.302 (E-Motor)
- Leichte Ladungsträger Goliath Sd.Kfz.303a / Sd.Kfz.303b (V-Motor)
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Self-propelled artillery | ||
Assault guns | ||
Tank destroyers (Panzerjäger, Jagdpanzer) | ||
Half-tracks | ||
Armored cars | ||
Self-propelled anti-aircraft guns |
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Demolition vehicles | ||
Experimental vehicles, prototypes | ||
Proposed designs | ||
Designations | ||