French Automitrailleuse Dodge-White
When General Maxime Weygand was made Delegate-General of the colonies in North Africa in September 1940, he found the forces there in some disarray, so set about reoganising and instituting changes.
One of his first orders was to break up armoured and motorised units - Chasseurs d`Afrique, Foriegn Legion Cavalry and other Spahis and local units, to create independent mechanized columns with integrated artillery, armour and infantry (horsed cavalry too).
Weygand found the quality of material left in Lebanon and Syria after the fall of France to be generally in a poor state of readiness. So began organising a program to cannibalize useful parts from the worst vehicles to rebuilt and recover others in better working condition.
Among the vehicles so built were the Automitrailleuse Dodge-White. By combining the chassis of the Dodge 3T trucks or T110 (purchased from Egypt) and the armored plates of outdated White and White-Laffly armoured cars, some dating back to WWI, the French engineer teams were able to create a few of these basic but functional armoured cars. They served along with refurbished White-Lafflys in the mixed mobile columns. Another variant without a turret called the automitrailleuse Dodge (having run out of spare White-Lafflys to cannibalize), was called the Tanake.
The Tanake and the Dodge-White soldiered on with the Free French in Egypt, and some ended up in the Syrian army, well past WWII.
From photos I`ve identified two different configurations one with a small hexagonal turrent - Which appears to have been taken off a Panhard 165/175 (similar in looks to the AM80), this turret was retrofitted with a 25mm SA 37L gun, whilst the other has a round turret from a White AM50.
I`ve found very little actual information on the vehicles, but I would assume they weighed around 4-5 tons with a maximum speed of 60-70 MPH in perfect conditions.
Photos and plans
Dodge T110 with D60 cab
Ages back Paul of EWM supplied me with a white metal AM50 turret
Your model has turned out very nice. It looks about right and I reckon that with the vehicle’s improvised, “make do” nature that that’s what really matters. 👏👏
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Geoff
Cheers Geoff, Yet one more unique model for my collection.
DeleteBeautiful and rare thing.
ReplyDeleteVery kind - thanks
DeleteA great collaborative effort by Baber Enterprises, and an interesting historical 'back story'. A very lovely addition to your colonial models.
ReplyDeleteCarlL
The boys are very clever
Delete