Cold War British Armour Markings
Cold War British Armour Markings
Can anyone point me to a decent online guide circa 1984? My recollection is that there wasn't very much over and above the license plate?
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- Grizzly Madam
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Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
Warpaint: v. 3: Colours and Markings of British Army Vehicles 1903-2003
Warpaint: v. 4: Colours and Markings of British Army Vehicles 1903-2003
Warpaint: v. 4: Colours and Markings of British Army Vehicles 1903-2003
Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
I was trying not to buy any more books. Will just browse online images. Thanks.
Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
What he said!FreddBloggs wrote: ↑Tue Nov 02, 2021 8:48 am Warpaint: v. 3: Colours and Markings of British Army Vehicles 1903-2003
Warpaint: v. 4: Colours and Markings of British Army Vehicles 1903-2003
Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
They ditched WW2-style formation markings and Arm of Service markings in the 1970s, but WW2-style squadron/company markings remained (painted on sides and rear): diamond for HQ Sqn/Coy, triangle for A Sqn/Coy, square for B Sqn/Coy, circle for C Sqn/Coy and a 'Lazy D' for D Sqn/Coy. Infantry Bn Support Coys used a broken rectangle shape (like square brackets). The vehicle calling was painted within the sign. There doesn't seem to be any logic in the colours used; either white, yellow or 'reversed' camouflage colours (green on black or black on green).
My wargames blog: http://www.jemimafawr.co.uk/
Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
Thanks RMD... very helpful. I've seen those markings close up, but they are hard to spot on contemporary photos.
Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
The squadron signs and callsigns were always painted, but often covered in camouflage nets
32 Armd Engineer Regt didn't use the squadron signs and instead just painted the callsigns in large yellow numbers.
32 Armd Engineer Regt didn't use the squadron signs and instead just painted the callsigns in large yellow numbers.
My wargames blog: http://www.jemimafawr.co.uk/
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- Grizzly Madam
- Posts: 3650
- Joined: Wed Sep 13, 2017 9:39 am
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Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
So the normal British Army thing of, everything is standard, except where it isn't.
Re: Cold War British Armour Markings
Well they're Engineers. The RA didn't use tactical signs either. It was just the infantry and armour/cavalry who used tactical signs.
Something worth noting is that Armoured/Cavalry regiments didn't have a Support Squadron, so the organic Close Recce and FV438 Guided Weapon Troops had the HQ Sqn diamond.
The only unit-specific marking I can recall from the 80s is 5RTR's 'Chinese Eyes'.
Other markings: almost all vehicles had the small Union Jack decal on front and rear; either left mudguard or right mudguard. AFVs also tended to have an 'invasion stripes' style of marking, low down and centrally at the the rear, which acted as a night-driving convoy marking. Trucks sometimes had the rear diff painted white for the same reason.
Something worth noting is that Armoured/Cavalry regiments didn't have a Support Squadron, so the organic Close Recce and FV438 Guided Weapon Troops had the HQ Sqn diamond.
The only unit-specific marking I can recall from the 80s is 5RTR's 'Chinese Eyes'.
Other markings: almost all vehicles had the small Union Jack decal on front and rear; either left mudguard or right mudguard. AFVs also tended to have an 'invasion stripes' style of marking, low down and centrally at the the rear, which acted as a night-driving convoy marking. Trucks sometimes had the rear diff painted white for the same reason.
My wargames blog: http://www.jemimafawr.co.uk/