A side view of the 1st prototype A43
Black Prince
Designated A43, the new vehicle was initially known as a "Super Churchill", but was later officially named Black Prince. While it utilised Churchill VII mechanical components as much as possible, the A43 involved much redesign work, mainly because of the wider hull required. The same Bedford twin-six engine was used as in the Churchill and this, combined with the increased weight (to 50 (long) tons), reduced the A43's top speed to only 11mph. Similar in external appearance to the Churchill VII, the Black Prince had wider (24in) tracks, and the air intakes were mounted on the hull top instead of at the side, with the engine exhausting at the hull rear. Six A43 prototypes were ordered and these were delivered for trials in May 1945, too late for combat as hostilities in Europe had ceased. Though given a full test programme, no production order was placed since the A41 Centurion was ready at the same time and proved a much superior vehicle.
SPECIFICATION
Designation: Tank, Infantry, Black Prince (A43)
Crew: 5 (commander, driver, gunner, loader, co-driver-hull gunner)
Battle weight: 112,000lb
Dimensions:
Length 28ft 11 in
Height 9ft
Width 11ft 3 1/2in
Track Width: 24in
Armament: Main: 1 x 17pdr OQF
Secondary: 2 x 7·92 cal Besa MG (one co-axial)
Armour thickness: Maximum 152mm
Minimum 25mm
Traverse: 360*
Engine:
Bedford twin-six 350hp
Maximum speed: 11mph
Maximum cross-country speed: 7mph (approx)
Suspension type: Sprung bogies
Road radius: 80 miles (approx)
Fording depth: 3ft 4in (unprepared)
Vertical obstacle: 2ft 6in
Trench crossing: 10ft
Special features/remarks: Distinguished from Churchill VII by longer gun, bigger turret, wider hull, and absence of side-mounted air intakes. Though powerfully armed and armoured, this vehicle's tactical value was limited by its very slow speed.
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