Boirault machine

Boirault machine (No. 1)

Top:The Boirault machine used a huge rotating frame around a motorized center.
Bottom: Boirault machine underway.
Place of originFrance French Third Republic
Service history
In serviceJanuary 1915–November 1915 (experimental)
WarsWorld War I
Production history
DesignerBoirault
Designed1914
ProducedJanuary 1915
No. built1
Specifications
Mass30 tonnes
Length8.00 m
Width3.00 m
Height4.00 m
Crew2

Enginepetrol
80hp
Maximum speed 3 km/h

The Boirault machine (French: Appareil Boirault), was an early French experimental landship, designed in 1914 and built in early 1915. It has been considered as "another interesting ancestor of the tank",[1] and described as a "rhomboid-shaped skeleton tank without armour, with single overhead track".[2] Ultimately, the machine was deemed impractical and was nicknamed Diplodocus militaris, [3]after a Sauropod from the Jurassic. It preceded the design and development of the English Little Willie tank by six months.

  1. ^ Harper's pictorial library of the world war by Albert Bushnell Hart, 1920, p.153
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of tanks by Duncan Crow, Robert Joseph Icks, 1975 p.133
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference Gougaud104 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).