Humber LRC
The Humber Light Reconnaissance Car, also known as Humberette or Ironside, was a British armoured car produced during World War II.
Produced by the Rootes Group, the Humber Light Reconnaissance Car was an armoured car based on the 4x4 Humber Heavy Utility (Humber box) chassis Vorlage:Citation needed, effectively a derivative of the Humber Super Snipe.[1] It was equipped with No. 19 radio set. From 1940 to 1943 over 3600 units were built.
The vehicle was used by Infantry Reconnaissance Regiments and the RAF Regiment in Tunisia, Italy and Western Europe. Three Mk I vehicles were modified for use by the British Royal Family and the Cabinet ministers and were known as Special Ironside Saloons. After the war, some vehicles remained in service with the British units in India and in the Far East. The LRC was used widely by the Reconnaissance Corps.
Variants

- Mk I
The original version with open-topped hull and 4x2 drive. Armament was a Boys anti-tank rifle and a Bren light machine gun. Only a limited number were built before the Mk I was replaced by the Mk II.[2]
- Mk II
The Mk II had an enclosed roof with a turret for the machine gun and retained the 4x2 drive of the Mk I. The Boys faced forward in the front of the hull.[3]

- Mk III (1941)
The Mk III was externally similar to the Mk II but had 4x4 drive. Production began in late 1941.[4]
- Mk IIIA (1943)
The only difference from the Mk III was additional vision ports at the front angles of the hull.[4]
Surviving vehicles
A number of vehicles are preserved in museums:
- Dutch Cavalry Museum
- Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and of Military History, Brussels, Belgium
- Royal Air Force Museum London has a Mk IIIA
- National War and Resistance Museum, Overloon has a wheeless LRC hull
- Military College of EME, Trimulgherry has an LRC as a gate guardian
- 43rd Reconnaissance Regiment Living History Group (UK) operate an LRC
A reproduction also exists in private ownership in the Czech Republic[5]
Notes
References
- George Forty - World War Two Armoured Fighting Vehicles and Self-Propelled Artillery, Osprey Publishing 1996, ISBN 978-1-85532-582-1.
- I. Moschanskiy - Armored vehicles of the Great Britain 1939-1945 part 2, Modelist-Konstruktor, Bronekollektsiya 1999-02 (И. Мощанский - Бронетанковая техника Великобритании 1939-1945 часть 2, Моделист-Конструктор, Бронеколлекция 1999-02).
External links
- ↑ Fletcher Great Tank Scandal p 35
- ↑ War Wheels: Humber LRC I
- ↑ War Wheels: Humber LRC II
- ↑ a b War Wheels: Humber LRC III
- ↑ http://the.shadock.free.fr/Surviving_Humber_Scout_Cars.pdf