Ready to repel an expected wartime invasion 1943
The Grant tank was the British version of the American M3 Medium Tank known as the Lee. The Grant armament was a 75 mm gun mounted in a limited traverse right forward sponson. A 37 mm secondary gun was mounted in an independent turret above this. Some 757 M3 Mediums were received in Australia during 1942 and equipped the 1st Australian Armoured Division in Western Australia. Post-war disposal saw many surplus Grants utilised for land clearance purposes in the Wheatbelt. This tank Hector served with 2/10th Armoured Regiment and was donated to the Museum to the permanent collection by the Royal Australian Armoured Corps Association in 2007 to the Museum for conservation and public display.
The Grant was a compromise design with several flaws but was selected because it could quickly enter mass production. The U.S. Army needed a medium tank armed with a 75mm gun and the United Kingdom had an immediate demand for 3,650 medium tanks Design commenced in July 1940, production in December 1940 and the first M3s were operational in late 1941.
The M3 had considerable firepower and good armour, but serious drawbacks in its general design and shape, including high silhouette, archaic sponson mounting of the main gun preventing the tank from taking a hull-down position, riveted construction, and poor off-road performance.
After some initial success in North Africa, its overall performance was not satisfactory and the tank was withdrawn from combat in most theatres as soon as the M4 Sherman tank became available in larger numbers.
Alongside the Matilda II, the M3 Grant was the mainstay of the Australian armoured forces during the war. By December 1942, 757 M3 Medium tanks had been delivered to Australia (and 20 more lost in transit). By June 1944, this force comprised 266 petrol and 232 diesel versions. Many vehicles kept their factory olive drab livery, while others were camouflaged using an Australian specified olive-green/beige pattern. The Grant tanks in Australian service were powered by Wright (Continental) R975 EC2 engine rated at 400hp, with a synchromesh 5-speed transmission. All petrol-engined Grants were declared obsolete at the end of the war and were locally disposed.
Newly arrived M3 Medium tanks parade through Perth on tank transporters
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/38552305?searchTerm=%22armou…
Wartime film footage including;(12:01) M3 Stuart field maintenance;(12:02) 2/10th Australia Armoured Regiment field exercises; (12:05) Arrival of General Grant M3 medium tanks for the 1st Australian Armoured Division; (12:07) Anti/aircraft group Fremantle; (12:08) Service chiefs conference, Corps HQ WA; and (12:10) WAAAF maintenance crews, Pearce, WA.
https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C189071
The M3 Grant platform was the basis for many Australian designed variants
http://anzacsteel.hobbyvista.com/Armoured%20Vehicles/m3ph_2.htm
A bargain to be had in disposed Grant tank?
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/46248173?searchTerm=disposal…
Build your own 1/35 scale model of an M3 Grant Medium Tank.
https://www.hobbylandaustralia.com.au/shop/plastic-military-kits/tamiya…