M3 Halftrack: Difference between revisions

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''"The most dangerous weapons the Germans have are our own armored halftrack...because the boys in it go all heroic, thinking they are in a tank." -George S. Patton''
{{Topquote|The most dangerous weapons the Germans have are our own armored halftrack...because the boys in it go all heroic, thinking they are in a tank.|George S. Patton}}
[[File:M3 halftrack.png|thumb|"Floor it Johnson they're right on our tail!"]]
The M3A1 Half Track was the primary American Mechanized troop transport utilized throughout World War II.
==Mid war==
[[File:M3 halftrack statcard.jpg|thumb|left|The stats]]
==Late war==


The M3A1 Half Track was the primary American Mechanized troop transport utilized throughout World War II.


==In Real Life==
==In Real Life==
The US Army began using halftracks with the M2 artillery tractor, which was essentially a modified M3 scout car.  An enlarged version was proposed as an infantry transport, and this was accepted as the M3.  The M3 spawned dozens of subvariants with everything from mortars to Self-Propelled Artillery, but the two most iconic ones were the baseline M3 with a single .50 BMG or the [[Dakka|Orkish]] M16, which had no less than 4 .50 cal BMG's strapped to it.
The US Army began using halftracks with the M2 artillery tractor, which was essentially a modified M3 scout car.  An enlarged version was proposed as an infantry transport, and this was accepted as the M3.  The M3 spawned dozens of subvariants with everything from mortars to Self-Propelled Artillery, but the two most iconic ones were, first the baseline M3 with a single .50 BMG (like in the picture) that was meant to ferry a squad of groundpounders around. Second, the [[Ork|Orkish]] M16 which sported a quad-mount .50 cal BMG's on the back, originally intended to deal with any enemy CAS airplane trying to get rowdy. In the end, with so few German airplanes around, they dealt with absolutely everything else on the ground but tanks and concrete pillboxes, because [[Dakka|four goddamn Ma Deuces spewing lead at something not heavily armored at once]] [[Rape|tended to make it suffer critical existence failure really, really fast!]] The M16 version did get the nickname "Kraut Mower" for a reason!


By 1942 it was clear that WMC was not going to be able to produce M2's and M3's in the quantities that the US Army needed, so International Harvester was brought into the project to add capacity.  However this required a redesign of the frame to work with IH's factories; these modified variants were issued new model numbers for the prime mover (M9) and transport (M5) to differentiate them from the WMC versions, and they were both of the larger M3 size.  [[Administratum|So an M5 is an M3 with an IH frame, and an M9 is an M5 with the radio and shell storage of an M2.]]
By 1942 it was clear that WMC was not going to be able to produce M2's and M3's in the quantities that the US Army needed, so International Harvester was brought into the project to add capacity.  However this required a redesign of the frame to work with IH's factories; these modified variants were issued new model numbers for the prime mover (M9) and transport (M5) to differentiate them from the WMC versions (the different frames meant parts were only partially compatible), and they were both of the larger M3 size.  [[Administratum|So an M5 is an M3 with an IH frame, and an M9 is an M5 with the radio and shell storage of an M2.]]


In spite of the decent combat record of the halftrack, many US troops hated the vehicle, with complaints ranging from being too exposed to airburst artillery to being not armored enough against Machine Gun fire. General Omar Bradley seemed to disagree, and instead thought the bad reputation of the vehicle was earned through troops being inexperienced, incompetent, or a mixture of both.  
In spite of the decent combat record of the halftrack, many US troops hated the vehicle, with complaints ranging from being too exposed to airburst artillery to being not armored enough against Machine Gun fire. General Omar Bradley seemed to disagree, and instead thought the bad reputation of the vehicle was earned through troops being inexperienced, incompetent, or a mixture of both.  

Latest revision as of 12:20, 21 June 2023

"The most dangerous weapons the Germans have are our own armored halftrack...because the boys in it go all heroic, thinking they are in a tank."

– George S. Patton
"Floor it Johnson they're right on our tail!"

The M3A1 Half Track was the primary American Mechanized troop transport utilized throughout World War II.

Mid war[edit]

The stats

Late war[edit]

In Real Life[edit]

The US Army began using halftracks with the M2 artillery tractor, which was essentially a modified M3 scout car. An enlarged version was proposed as an infantry transport, and this was accepted as the M3. The M3 spawned dozens of subvariants with everything from mortars to Self-Propelled Artillery, but the two most iconic ones were, first the baseline M3 with a single .50 BMG (like in the picture) that was meant to ferry a squad of groundpounders around. Second, the Orkish M16 which sported a quad-mount .50 cal BMG's on the back, originally intended to deal with any enemy CAS airplane trying to get rowdy. In the end, with so few German airplanes around, they dealt with absolutely everything else on the ground but tanks and concrete pillboxes, because four goddamn Ma Deuces spewing lead at something not heavily armored at once tended to make it suffer critical existence failure really, really fast! The M16 version did get the nickname "Kraut Mower" for a reason!

By 1942 it was clear that WMC was not going to be able to produce M2's and M3's in the quantities that the US Army needed, so International Harvester was brought into the project to add capacity. However this required a redesign of the frame to work with IH's factories; these modified variants were issued new model numbers for the prime mover (M9) and transport (M5) to differentiate them from the WMC versions (the different frames meant parts were only partially compatible), and they were both of the larger M3 size. So an M5 is an M3 with an IH frame, and an M9 is an M5 with the radio and shell storage of an M2.

In spite of the decent combat record of the halftrack, many US troops hated the vehicle, with complaints ranging from being too exposed to airburst artillery to being not armored enough against Machine Gun fire. General Omar Bradley seemed to disagree, and instead thought the bad reputation of the vehicle was earned through troops being inexperienced, incompetent, or a mixture of both.

US Forces in Flames of War
Tanks: M4 Sherman - M3 Lee - M5/M3 Stuart - M24 Chaffee - M26 Pershing - M27 Tank - M6 Heavy Tank - T14 Heavy Tank
Transports: M3 Halftrack - Jeep - DUKW
Infantry: US Armored Rifle Platoon - Parachute Rifle Platoon - Rifle Platoon - American Rifle Company - Glider Platoon - Machine Gun Platoon
Artillery: US 155mm - US 105mm Artillery - US 75mm Artillery - US 81mm Mortars - T27 Xylophone - 57mm Anti Tank Platoon - M12 155mm Artillery Battery - M7 Priest - M8 Scott
Tank Destroyer: M10 - M18 Hellcat - T55 Gun Motor Carriage - M36 Slugger
Recon: M3 Scout Car - M20 Security Section - M8 Greyhound Cavalry Recon Patrol
Aircraft: P40 Warhawk - P47 Thunderbolt - P38 Lightning - F4U Corsair
Anti-Aircraft: M15 & M16 AAA Platoon
British Forces in Flames of War
Tanks: Crusader (Tank) - M5/M3 Stuart - Cromwell Recce - Churchill - M4 Sherman - T14 Heavy Tank - Matilda II - TOG 2 - Comet - Challenger - Valentine
Transports: M3 Halftrack - Universal Carrier - CMP 3-ton - LVT-4
Infantry: Mortar Platoon - British Mech Company - Commando Platoon - Parachute Company - Rifle Platoon - Rifle Company - Vickers Platoon
Artillery: 6lb Gun - 17lb Gun - M7 Priest - 25-Pounder Field Troop - Land Mattress
Tank Destroyer: Archer (Tank Destroyer) - Churchill Gun Carrier
Recon: Humber Scout Car Troop - Daimler Armoured Car Troop - Boarhound Armored Car - Staghound
Aircraft: Typhoon - Hurricane - Auster - Kittyhawk
Anti-Aircraft: Crusader AA - Bofors Light AA Troop - Bofors AA Troop