M116 Husky Explained

M116 Husky
Origin:United States
Is Vehicle:yes
Service:1960-70s
Used By:United States
Wars:Vietnam War
Designer:Pacific Car and Foundry
Manufacturer:Blaw-Knox
Pacific Car and Foundry (M733)
Number:197
93 (M733)
Variants:M733
Weight:10600lb
Length:15feet
Width:6.8feet
Height:6feet
Crew:1
Armour:none
Primary Armament:none
Engine:Chevrolet V8
Transmission:Hydra-Matic
Payload Capacity:3000lb
Passengers:13
Clearance:15.5inches
Vehicle Range:300miles
Speed:37mph land
3.7mph water

The M116 Husky was a tracked amphibious cargo carrier/marginal terrain vehicle that served with the United States Marine Corps.

Design

The M116 was a lightweight low-silhouette vehicle designed to transport cargo or personnel over unimproved roads, loose sand, soft marshy terrain and inland waterways. Its low ground pressure of 1.67psi2.74psi when fully loaded gave good mobility on marginal terrain.[1]

The M116 was designed by Pacific Car and Foundry as a replacement for the M76 Otter. Pacific Car and Foundry built four prototypes and then three pre-production models, however the production contract was awarded to Blaw-Knox which produced 197.[2]

Variants

The M733 was an armored variant of the M116 with steel armour plates added to provide ballistic protection capable of stopping .30-caliber ball ammunition. The purpose of the vehicle was to provide small arms protection for infantry security elements accompanying marginal terrain vehicles. The primary armament was one M60 machine gun, but two other pintle mounts were provided for additional M60s. The M733 could also mount the M2 Browning .50 caliber machine gun or an 81mm mortar.[1] The M733 was produced by Pacific Car and Foundry which built 93 with the first deliveries occurring in 1966.[2]

History

Both the M116 and M733 served with the Marines in the Vietnam War.[3] The M116E1 was placed into service in April 1969 by the 11th Motor Transport Battalion to support the 1st Marine Division in the low and often inundated areas south of Danang. Virtually unaffected by weather, the M116 had the effect of reducing reliance on helicopter support. The M733 was placed into service in August as a convoy escort.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Carrey, Richard. Amphibious Vehicles. United States Marine Corps Development and Education Command. 1981.
  2. Book: Doyle, David. Standard Catalog of U.S. Military Vehicles - 2nd Edition. Penhuin. 2003. 978-0873495080.
  3. Book: Gilbert, Ed. The US Marine Corps in the Vietnam War: III Marine Amphibious Force 1965–75. Osprey Publishing. 2006. 978-1841769875. 38.
  4. Book: Smith, Charles. U.S. Marines in Vietnam: High Mobility and Standdown 1969. History and Museums Division, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps. 1988. 978-1494287627. 272.