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  #1  
Old 30-12-14, 01:46
motto (RIP) motto (RIP) is offline
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Can't help with your query Chris as I know nothing of BARVs but the name of the base is Puckapunyal with 'n' not an 'm'.
This may help with any correspondence you enter into.

David
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Old 30-12-14, 03:47
Mike Cecil Mike Cecil is offline
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Default The Pucka BARV

Hi Chris,

The Beach Armoured Recovery Vehicle (Aust) No.1 Mk.1 at the Army Tank Museum, Puckapunyal, is based on an M3A5 Grant tank. The example, built around 1950, was the only one converted, and Mild Steel was used, as it was intended only as a training vehicle. It was used by the RAEME Training Centre at Bandiana, Victoria. Upon its 'retirement' from duty in the early 1970s, it was transferred to the Army Tank Museum.

The design was based upon the British M4 Sherman-based BARV.

As the Australian version wasn't actually 'armoured', it is a stretch to call it a BARV, but that was its designation. I suppose if 'push came to shove' (no pun intended), then any built to the Aust design for use in a combat situation would have been made from armour (but none were....).

Mike
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Old 30-12-14, 04:29
Chris Ballance Chris Ballance is offline
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Default Australian BARV

Can't fix the post title, did fix the spelling of Puckapunyal in the original post. Terrible, it's a good thing I don't make a living as a writer.

Thanks for the information on the post war M3 BARV conversion! I have always been interested in recovery vehicles. I hope one day to get to visit the REME Museum in the UK and Puckapunyal in Australia. I kick myself for not seeing them when I worked overseas in both countries.

Does any know if the following Puckapunya BARV is based on D7 or a D8?
http://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/...yal-BARV-1.jpg

Chris

Last edited by Chris Ballance; 30-12-14 at 04:37.
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  #4  
Old 30-12-14, 09:18
tankbarrell tankbarrell is offline
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That's a D8, the six bottom rollers give it away, the D7 of the time only having five.
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Old 30-12-14, 12:35
Chris Ballance Chris Ballance is offline
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Default D8 barv

Thanks Adrian for confirming the vehicle is a D8. I just found a copy of the Tankograd Tech Manual on the WW2 D7, but I still have a good bit to learn about both the wartime D7 & D8.

I noticed this BARV D8 is not listed in the online inventory of the Royal Australian Armoured Corps Tank Museum. Maybe it belongs to the collection of the Australian Army Museum of Military Engineering (AAMME) but is in storage at Puckapunyal?

It would also be interesting to know if the vehicle was one of the REME conversions or if was an Australian copy built for the RAEME.

Last edited by Chris Ballance; 30-12-14 at 17:23.
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  #6  
Old 30-12-14, 17:27
Mike Cecil Mike Cecil is offline
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Chris,

It's a new one on me, and I have been to the ATM many times, though not recently, and thought I knew the collection reasonably well!

Sorry for for mis-directing your thread about a BARV you probably already knew about.

Mike
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  #7  
Old 30-12-14, 23:30
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Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is offline
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Chris, I changed the title for you.

To read more about the Grant BARV, see http://anzacsteel.hobbyvista.com/Arm...les/m3ph_2.htm

Regarding the Caterpillar D8 tractor: due to their very low ground pressure it was ideal for beach work, so it was selected as an alternative to the Sherman BARV. It was wadeproofed by the REME. In one of his books Brian Baxter of the REME writes they were also fitted with an armoured body, but other sources state they were only wade proofed but not armoured.

They are referred to as "wade-proofed D8 tractors", never as BARVs. I suggest not using this term as it solely refers to the Sherman BARV.

HTH,
Hanno
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