Interwar In 1936, the War Office decided on a light tank for the cavalry, a cruiser tank, a medium tank and an infantry or assault tank. By 1938, the medium tank had stagnated as a research project, in favour of heavier cruiser and infantry tanks and after the outbreak of war, the move towards heavy infantry tanks capable of breaking through the
Siegfried Line (
Westwall) on the German border. In 1934,
Sir John Carden of
Vickers-Armstrongs had produced a "Woolworth"
medium tank to a 1934 specification (General Staff number A.9) for a close support tank, using elements of the
Medium Mk III design (which had been abandoned due to financial reasons) but lighter and using a commercial engine to be cheaper. It was accepted as an interim design for limited production as the
Cruiser Tank Mark I. It was expected to be replaced by a Christie suspension design. From 1937–1938, 125 A9s were built. The A9 was lightly armoured but capable of and carried a highly-effective 2-pounder anti-tank gun. The
Cruiser Mk II (A10), was designed by Carden as an infantry tank, built to the same design with added armour for of protection. It was insufficiently armoured for the role but as a "heavy cruiser", it was put into production in July 1938 as another interim design. It had the same gun as the A9, was the first to be equipped with the
Besa machine gun and 175 Mk IIs were produced by September 1940. Experience with the A9 during the
Battle of France in 1940 revealed shortcomings, including inadequate armour and a lack of space for the crew, but it saw useful service in France, the
Western desert and
Greece in 1941. Orders for the Mk I and Mk II Cruisers were limited, for an advanced and faster cruiser tank which would incorporate
Christie suspension designed by
J. Walter Christie and have better armour. In 1936, General
Giffard LeQuesne Martel, a pioneer in tank design who had published works on armoured warfare and pioneered the lightly armoured "
tankette" concept to enhance infantry mobility, became Assistant Director of Mechanization at the War Office. Later that year, Martel had watched Soviet tanks at the Red Army's autumn manoeuvres including the
BT tank, which they had developed from Christie's work. He urged the adoption of a tank that would use the suspension system and also follow the Christie practice of using a lightweight aircraft engine such as the
Liberty L-12 engine or a
Napier Lion. The government authorised purchase and licensing of a Christie design via the
Nuffield Organization. The tank A13 E1 was rudimentary and too small for British use but the Nuffield suspension was most effective and this became the basis of the
Cruiser Mk III (A13). Following testing of two Nuffield-built prototypes (A13E2 and A13E3), the A13 was ordered into production and 65 were manufactured by mid-1939. The Mk III weighed , had a crew of 4, a 340 hp engine which gave a top speed of and was armed with a 2-pounder (40 mm) gun and a machine gun. When it was introduced in 1937, the army still lacked a formal tank division. The trackless element of the Christie suspension was discarded as adding little value for the extra complexity. The
Cruiser Mk IV (A13 Mk II) had heavier armour than the Mk III and production started in 1938.
Second World War The Tank, Cruiser, Mk VI, (
Crusader), was used in large numbers in the
Western Desert Campaign. The contemporary
Covenanter was unreliable and was retained in the UK for training use. The
Cavalier,
Centaur and
Cromwell tanks were the planned successors to the Covenanter and Crusader. Intended to be in production by 1942, the project was delayed and the Crusader was up-gunned as an interim measure with the Mk.III 6-pounder gun; the Cavalier was a development of Crusader. Centaur and Cromwell tanks were an alternative design using the Cavalier engine and the new Rolls-Royce Meteor respectively - the three vehicles were similar in appearance. Orders for the Cavalier were cut back while the similarity between Centaur and Cromwell meant some Centaurs were finished as Cromwells. The Cavalier was used for training while Centaur and Cromwell tanks went into action at the
Invasion of Normandy. The
Comet tank entered service in north-west Europe in 1945 but neither the Cromwell or Comet tanks were in sufficient numbers to replace American tanks in the British Army. During the war, the development of much more powerful engines and better suspension enabled cruiser tanks to increase in size, armour and firepower while retaining their speed and mobility. With "cruiser" tanks similarly armoured to heavier, slower, infantry tanks, the convergence of cruisers and infantry tank designs made the distinction obsolete. The
Centurion tank was designed as a heavy cruiser, by combining the mobility of a cruiser tank and armour of an Infantry tank. The Centurion transcended its cruiser tank origins and became the first modern British
main battle tank. == Cruiser tanks in other armies ==