Ah yes... The British, Canadian & Polish Armoured Recce Regiments didn't receive a 17pdr tank until August 1944 at the very earliest*, so kept the five-troop squadron organisation until the end of Normandy and in some cases longer. Hence B Sqn had 6-10.Spanner wrote: ↑Thu Mar 02, 2023 6:57 amI remember the information you gave me when I first stumbled down this path, mate. I still have the photos you gave me- including that 9 Troop, B Squadron tank. With the change to four troops per squadron you'd expect 9 Troop to be in C Squadron- but obviously not. But 11 and 12 Troop were definitely C Squadron, hence the decals. I think.And then there's the whole thorny subject of troop numbers, tank hull/turret numbers, callsign markings...
Probably.
Perhaps.
When they dropped a troop from each squadron mid-campaign, they seem to have picked a random troop to delete. So for example, you might have 1,2,3,4 - 6,7,8,9 - 11,12,13,14. Or perhaps something more random such as 1,2,3,5 - 6,8,9,10 - 12,13,14,15. So 9 Tp might still be within B Sqn, even after the move to a four-troop squadron organisation. The regiments that reorganised before the campaign started did things sensibly and re-numbered the whole lot 1-12.
Then you've got those regiments that gave every tank an individual number... And the ones that marked the seniority of the troop within each squadron (1-5, 1-5, 1-5)...
* The fact that the South Albertas only had 75mm-armed Shermans and no Fireflies makes Currie VC's achievement even more remarkable! The Welsh Guards got absolutely hammered by Weiss' Tigers during Operation Bluecoat for the lack of a 17pdr.