In the 1950s, two factors changed the provision of vehicle radio within the British Army. The first of these was a change of philosophy for battlefield radio communication as a result of wartime experiences and the political and military situation in Europe after 1945 which was addressed by the "New Range" of sealed, primarily VHF/FM Combat Net Radio introduced from 1954. This later become known as the
Larkspur series of equipment after the 1962 project to equip the whole army with the new radio system. This modern design of equipment, although still using valves, was lightweight and where possible avoided the motor-generator / rotary converter power supplies of earlier generation equipment such as the No. 19 set, in order to reduce the sets' power requirements. The second factor was the development of the
'CT' (a contraction of 'combat') range of soft-skin combat vehicles, as a purpose-designed and more rugged alternative to the General Service vehicles based on modified commercial (CL) vehicles. These CT vehicles, particularly the FV1801
Austin Champ ton and the
FV1600 series Humber 1 ton, were powered by the new
Rolls-Royce B range engines. Drawing on wartime experience, these engines were designed with built-in radio suppression, especially their ignition system, and they were also available with purpose-designed high-output generators, and were based on 24 V systems in accordance with agreements reached with the US and Canadian armies in 1948. These 25 A generators were initially thought sufficiently powerful to supply and charge the radio batteries directly, no longer needing the separate charging set. The generator had an internal two-speed automatic gearbox, which increased the charging rate when the engine was running at near-idling speed. However it soon became clear that this was insufficient to meet the demands of the new sets and higher output systems based on alternators were later introduced. Fitted For Radio versions of the Champ and Humber were soon developed. This new term also represented a re-definition of the old FFW. FFR vehicles were those intended for immediate service with radios, and had the sets installed already. FFW now meant vehicles that were only partially equipped for radio use: the standard engine was suppressed against radio interference, the radio mounting racks were either installed, or their mounting brackets were attached to the vehicle body, and aerial mounts had been installed. The intention was that FFW was a low-cost addition at manufacture, but any FFW vehicle could now be rapidly upgraded to full FFR status in the field. Some FFR vehicles were supplied for specialised use (for example to the
Royal Artillery) where non-standard radio equipment was to be fitted immediately, by unit workshops. Two radio versions of the soft-skin Humber were developed: the FV1602 with the same canvas-roofed general service truck body of the FV1601, with the addition of radio equipment. Secondly the FV1604 as a dedicated radio van, with a coachbuilt house body. When the supply of new Champs ceased in 1956, the production of FFR
Land Rovers commenced, initially as 12Volt Rover Mk III and Mk V FFRs, but from 1958 (the start of the Series II Land Rover production – military designation Rover Mk VI) FFR switched to 24 V. The standard dynamo generator was initially replaced by a 40 A
alternator with external
rectifier stack mounted in front of the radiator for cooling giving the vehicle a distinctive appearance seen from the front of the vehicle, behind the radiator grille. Later vehicles were fitted with the AC90 alternator system manufactured by CAV which became a standardised system in light and medium British vehicles. FFR Land Rovers also had the front wing-mounted boxes for the 'Tuner Radio Frequency Antenna (TRFA)'
antenna tuning units, with whip aerials mounted above them. == See also ==