Tank AA, 20mm Quad, Skink | |
---|---|
Type | Self propelled anti-aircraft gun |
Place of origin | Canada |
Production history | |
No. built | 3 |
Specifications | |
Weight | 28.5 t (25.9 tonnes) combat load |
Length | 19 ft 1 in (5.82 m) |
Width | 8 ft 7 in (2.62 m) |
Height | 9 ft 10 in (3 m) |
Crew | 4 |
|
|
Armour | 2 inches (50 mm) (glacis) |
Main
armament |
4 x 20 mm Polsten |
Engine |
Continental R975C1 radial engine, gasoline 350 hp (253 kW) at 2,400 rpm |
Power/weight | 14 hp/tonne |
Suspension | Vertical Volute spring Suspension (VVSS) |
Ground clearance | 17 inches (43 cm) |
Fuel capacity | 145 Imperial gallons (660 litres, 175 US gal) |
Operational
range |
120 miles (193 km) |
Speed | 24 mph (38.5 km/h) brief level |
Tank AA, 20 mm Quad, Skink was a Canadian self-propelled anti-aircraft gun, developed in 1943-44, in response to a requirement from the First Canadian Army. Due to a lack of threat from the German Luftwaffe, the Skink was cancelled in 1944 after only a few had been built.
The development of a fully enclosed quadruple 20 mm mounting on the chassis of the Grizzly tank (Canadian-built M4A1 Sherman tank) was approved by the Canadian Army Technical Development Board as Project 47 in March, 1943. In keeping with the tradition of giving Canadian armoured fighting vehicles animal names, the proposed tank was named after the skink, Ontario's only lizard.
The Canadian Ministry of Munitions and Supply had the turret designed in-house by its Army Engineering Design Branch (AEDB) with help from the Inspection Board. The Waterloo Manufacturing Co. in Waterloo, Ontario, was given the task of building a preliminary wooden mock-up. This was completed on 18 September 1943. The construction of two welded armour pilot turrets was then authorized. The first pilot turret was demonstrated in mid-December. In January 1944 a pilot turret was successfully tested on a Grizzly chassis. Due to the challenges of welding a turret of such a complex shape from Rolled homogeneous armour plate, Dominion Foundries of Hamilton was contracted to produce a fully enclosed cast turret (One of the largest armour castings ever made in Canada).
Originally it was planned to arm the Skink with four 20 mm Hispano-Suiza cannons and the first prototypes were so-armed. In January 1944, the 21st Army Group in Europe decided that only British 20 mm Polsten guns would be used (the Polsten was a simplified derivative of the Oerlikon cannon) by its units. This required a redesign of the turret, which was completed in April. This change delayed the project by 3 to 4 months, while 21 Army Group's reduction in the number of AA guns to be issued to its units led to a reduction in the number of Skink turrets which were required. This dwindled to zero in late July 1944, when 21 Army Group decided that as the German air force - the Luftwaffe - had been virtually eliminated over North West Europe, there was no longer a requirement for self-propelled anti-aircraft guns. The Skink contract was cancelled in mid-August and only three complete vehicles and eight turret kits were completed.