Difference between revisions of "Incendiary weapons"

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[[File:1280x720 03 churchill crocodile 21fd4642d554834417468b99fe23f4ea.jpg|alt=Churchill Crocodile, Front|thumb|430x430px|Flamethrower on the Churchill Crocodile]]
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== Incendiary bombs ==
 
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Incendiary bombs are best used to destroy open-topped vehicles (literally to burn them down) where the incendiary mixture will make sure exposed crews will be knocked out and possibly light up the engine of vehicles due to its extreme temperature. While some players consider it has more aesthetic use than in practical use, it can also block [[Night Vision Devices]] and serve as a makeshift "smoke grenade" for tanks and help them hide from enemy eyesight for a while. Alternatively, this could be used like general purpose bombs and burn down enemy bases/airfield if needed, though with a lower effectiveness per payload mass then the general-purpose bombs.
== Description ==
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{{Incendiary bombs}}
 +
== Flamethrowers ==
  
 
The Flamethrower is a fire-based weapon added in [[Update "Fire and Ice"]] with rewards in the [[Battle Pass: Season IX, "Smell of Victory"]]. These usually have a relatively short range with the ability to damage open-topped vehicles.
 
The Flamethrower is a fire-based weapon added in [[Update "Fire and Ice"]] with rewards in the [[Battle Pass: Season IX, "Smell of Victory"]]. These usually have a relatively short range with the ability to damage open-topped vehicles.
  
 
=== Vehicles equipped with this weapon ===
 
=== Vehicles equipped with this weapon ===
 +
==== Ground Vehicles ====
 +
 +
* [[wt:en/news/8418-development-to-55-the-scorched-land-en|TO-55]]
  
==== Ground Vehicles ====
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The flamethrower on the USSR TO-55 has a onboard fuel supply and the coaxial flamethrower is on the turret. The TO-55 was introduced in Sons of Attila update.
  
 
* [[Churchill Crocodile]]
 
* [[Churchill Crocodile]]
Line 19: Line 23:
 
The LCM(6)(F) Zippo has two flamethrowers on the port and starboard sides behind the 40mm gun turret. This weapon system has fuel tanks located in the hull and projectors in small combined turrets paired with [[M73 (7.62 mm)|7.62 mm M73]] machine guns.
 
The LCM(6)(F) Zippo has two flamethrowers on the port and starboard sides behind the 40mm gun turret. This weapon system has fuel tanks located in the hull and projectors in small combined turrets paired with [[M73 (7.62 mm)|7.62 mm M73]] machine guns.
  
== General info ==
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=== Ammunition ===
 
 
=== Available ammunition ===
 
 
Flamethrowers use ignited liquid fuel as ammunition, usually consisting of a mixture of napalm similar to that used in incendiary bombs such as the [[BLU-1 incendiary|BLU-1]]. The Churchill Crocodile uses a mixture called Fuel K, or FTF, Heavy No.1. There is currently no alternative fuel choices for the flamethowers in-game.  
 
Flamethrowers use ignited liquid fuel as ammunition, usually consisting of a mixture of napalm similar to that used in incendiary bombs such as the [[BLU-1 incendiary|BLU-1]]. The Churchill Crocodile uses a mixture called Fuel K, or FTF, Heavy No.1. There is currently no alternative fuel choices for the flamethowers in-game.  
  
 
As an unconventional ammunition type, burning fuel has no armor penetration values and will not damage the internal modules of a vehicle if it is fully armored or CBRN-secured. If a vehicle is open-topped or very lightly armored with gaps, the flamethrower can output a devastating amount of damage.
 
As an unconventional ammunition type, burning fuel has no armor penetration values and will not damage the internal modules of a vehicle if it is fully armored or CBRN-secured. If a vehicle is open-topped or very lightly armored with gaps, the flamethrower can output a devastating amount of damage.
  
Flamethrowers can output a type of damage that no other weapon system in the game can do, called Damage over Time. Ground areas, items, and enemy targets will continue to burn for a brief period after being hit. This can cause damage to the enemy even after the flamethrower has stopped firing.  
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Flamethrowers can output a type of damage that no other weapon system in the game can do, called Damage over Time. Ground areas, items, and enemy targets will continue to burn for a brief period after being hit. This can cause damage to the enemy even after the flamethrower has stopped firing.
  
=== Comparison with analogues ===
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=== History ===
As unique weapon system, the flamethrower mounted on the Churchill Crocodile and the LCM(6)(F) Zippo have no comparable weapons in their respective gamemodes as of [[Update "Apex Predators"]].
 
  
== Usage in battles ==
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==== Background ====
 +
The First World War saw the introduction of many horrifying new weapons of war. The tank, armed planes, submarines, poison gas shells, and more turned what was assumed to be a swift conflict into a four-year-long bloodbath. The Flamethrower was another weapon that made the War to End All Wars so costly. The modern flamethrower made its debut in World War I, but it is the perfection of a tactic that has existed for centuries.
  
=== Ground Vehicles ===
+
Thermal weapons have existed for a very long time because of their recognized use against fortifications and enemy equipment. The earliest recorded example of what could be considered a flamethrower comes from the Ancient Greeks. During the Peloponnesian Wars, a wheeled siege weapon that shot fire was used by the Boeotians against the Athenians during the Battle of Delium in 424 B.C.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flamethrower#Ancient_Greece</ref> This is the earliest recorded instance of a flamethrower-like weapon used in battle. Another early flamethrower is recorded in use by the Romans against the Dacians in 107 A.D. in a similar capacity to the Greek design centuries before. More early flamethrowers would emerge when the Byzantine Empire invented Greek fire. The invention is credited to an architect and chemist named Kallinkinos of Heliopolis c.673. Greek fire was primarily used as a naval weapon, but land forces were recording what was dubbed a cheirosiphona (hand-held siphons) which resembled a modern flamethrower in form and function. The weapon was a hand-held pump that shot Greek fire from a tube in short bursts. Ignition was handled by a piston lighting a match as the fire was ejected.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flamethrower#Roman_Empire</ref> Another early example worth noting is the Chinese ''Pen Huo Qi'' (fire spraying device) another piston flamethrower invented in 919 A.D. two years after the first documented example of Greek fire in China. This device used what was called ''Meong Hou You'' (lit. fierce fire oil, an early Chinese name for petroleum) as its flamethrowing agent. Ignition was achieved by gunpowder, the first time it was used in warfare by the Chinese. This application is shown by the first documented use of this weapon during the 919 Battle of Langshan Jiang where a slow-burning gunpowder match was used to ignite a continuous string of flame by Wuyue to burn their fleet, defeated the Kingdom of Wu in the process.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flamethrower#China</ref>
  
==== Churchill Crocodile ====
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The modern flamethrower was invented in Germany before World War I. The name is a loanword from the German ‘''Flamenwerfer''’ coined during WWI. The original design came from Richard Fiedler, who showcased several designs to the ''Deutsches Heer'' (Imperial German Army) in 1901 with the most notable being a single-shot design that used a two-part cylinder that carried pressurized nitrogen and flammable oil that mixed when fired. Ignition was done with a simple wick and the weapon had a range of 20 yards. While not adopted, Fiedler improved on the design, and in 1908, he collaborated with German officer Bernard Redderman who demonstrated flamethrowers made from converted steam-powered fire engines the year before. The two men got the ''Deutsches Heer'' to test their new joint design with an experimental pioneer company for testing and the flamethrower was adopted in 1911. Despite being adopted before the outbreak of the war the Germans didn’t use it in combat initially. It was issued in limited numbers and first by German soldiers outside Verdun on February 26<sup>th</sup>, 1915. It was on July 30<sup>th</sup> however, that the Germans recognized the true value of the flamethrower. That day saw a concentrated flamethrower attack on British trenches at Hooges, Belgium. The British suffered significant casualties with 31 officers and 751 other soldiers after two days thanks in part to the flamethrower flushing soldiers out and forcing them into the gunfire of supporting units. The flamethrower was adopted on all fronts, and the Germans used it in more than 650 attacks. The design was also gradually copied by the Entente. The first use of a flamethrower on a vehicle came from the Royal Navy mounting two Morris flamethrowers in static positions on their ''Arrogant''-class cruiser ''HMS Vindictive'' for the Zeebrugge Raid in 1916.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flamethrower#Early_20th_century</ref>
As the flamethrower is unable to penetrate fully armored vehicles, it is ineffective damage-wise against most tanks that a player will encounter. Due to the weight of fuel, flamethowers can only hit targets at relatively short ranges.  
 
  
However, this weapon is particularly useful for eliminating exposed crew members in open-topped vehicles and SPAA. For example, if a Churchill Crocodile shot flames at a [[Pz.IV H]], it would take no damage. A [[Sd.Kfz. 6/2]], however, would be burnt down within a few seconds.
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In War Thunder, there are currently vehicles that mount flamethrowers. While each model is different, they will be discussed collectively for the sake of this article.
 
 
This weapon is located in the bow gun position, replacing the machine gun mounted in the regular [[Churchill VII]]. As such, it has a very limited traverse and is dependent on the hull position for horizontal targeting. Vertical guidance is quite good, which can allow it to reach targets at short ranges outside of point-blank. Unfortunately, the slow speed of the Crocodile can make it difficult to get within range, so players will need to use the vertical limit to 'lob' shots onto the enemy.
 
 
 
In attacking enemies that are fully armored, a Churchill Crocodile can use its flamethrower to temporarily blind or distract the enemy. Fully armored vehicles can be shot with flames to blind and confuse them which can allow the Crocodile to shoot back or reposition itself. Fire can serve as a deterrent to vehicles with exposed crew from getting too close, something that can be problematic for a Churchill tank.  
 
 
 
It should be noted that since this weapon is very specific, enemies will know a Churchill Crocodile is around when the flamethrower is used. When it is not in use, the fuel trailer is a major indicator of the vehicle. If this fuel tank is destroyed, it will explode. The tank crew will be unharmed, but the weapon system will be rendered unusable.
 
[[File:1280x720 02 lcm zippo 47cf54ff9a788c303241e5efc3cb65fb.jpg|alt=LCM(6)(F) "Zippo" front|thumb|430x430px|Port flamethrower on the LCM(6)(F) "Zippo", located behind the 40mm gun]]
 
 
 
=== Naval Vehicles ===
 
 
 
==== LCM(6)(F) Zippo ====
 
Flamethrowers are a very unique weapon in naval battles and can even burn the ocean surface. The system mounted to the LCM(6)(F) Zippo has long range for a flamethrower, but are very short-ranged in terms of naval weapons.
 
 
 
Like the Churchill Crocodile, one of this weapon system's disadvantages is being mounted to a vehicle that cannot quickly close the gap between it and the enemy to get within range. If they do, however, they can make quick work of small vessels with open gun positions. Larger vessels hit by the flamethrowers can be distracted by the fires, as they can be deadly if left uncontrolled.
 
 
 
This system is bound to the Anti-Aircraft suite when the player wants to manually control the weapons. Unfortunately, flamethrowers do not have the traverse speed or range to effectively combat enemy aircraft. Like other naval weapons, flamethrowers will elevate so that they can reach their effective ranges but with the dual mount, the M73 machine guns will be elevated the same. This means that while the flamethrowers can get on target, the machine guns will be elevated to such a degree that they become virtually unusable since bullet drop differ significantly from the fire arc.
 
 
 
===Pros and cons===<!-- ''Summarise and briefly evaluate the weaponry in terms of its characteristics and combat effectiveness. Mark pros and cons as a list.'' -->
 
 
 
'''Pros:'''
 
 
 
*Very high damage output against exposed crewmembers
 
*Very high rate of fire (stream is constant as long as the weapon is firing)
 
*Fire can temporarily blind or distract enemy targets
 
*Can deter enemy open-topped vehicles
 
*Fire can be used to burn down vegetation
 
*Targets hit by flames will continue to burn for a brief period
 
 
 
'''Cons:'''
 
 
 
*No penetration to damage enclosed fully armored ground vehicles
 
*Limited firing arcs in hull mounts
 
*Short range
 
*Ammunition is lost if fuel tanks are destroyed
 
*The Churchill Crocodile and LCM(6)(F) Zippo can be slow to bring enemies within range of the flamethrowers
 
*Flamethrowing can attract unwanted attention to the projecting vehicle
 
 
 
== History ==
 
  
 
==== '''Churchill Crocodile''' ====
 
==== '''Churchill Crocodile''' ====
With the First World War bringing about the development of the tank and the flamethrower, different nations would devise ways to combine the two into a single weapon system during the interwar period. A mobile armored flamethrower would allow the short-ranged weapon system to get close to the enemy with minimal risk from small-arms fire.  
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The first vehicle chronologically is the [[Churchill Crocodile]], the product of a conversion kit by the REME (Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers) and years of development by the Petroleum Warfare Department.<ref name=":0">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churchill_Crocodile</ref> Tasked with weaponizing Britain’s reserves of gasoline against a potential German invasion, this department produced the Heavy Cockatrice which mounted a Lagoda flamethrower on the armoured body of an AEC Matador truck.<ref>[[wikipedia:Petroleum_Warfare_Department#Cockatrice|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_Warfare_Department]]</ref> The concept was subsequently refined with flamethrower variants of the Universal Carrier and [[Valentine (Family)|Valentine tank]] being produced. In 1942, as preparation for the Dieppe Raid, three [[Churchill (Family)|Churchill]] tanks were modified to carry the Ronson flamethrower on the outside of the tank allowing it to operate without sacrificing the hull machine gun. While the Dieppe Raid was a failure, it showed the need for more dedicated vehicles to support the Royal Engineers, and the Churchill Crocodile was developed as part of a new wave of ‘Hobart’s Funnies’.<ref name=":1">https://tanks-encyclopedia.com/ww2/gb/churchill-crocodile</ref>
  
In Britain, efforts by the Petroleum Warfare Department (PWD), Associated Equipment Company (AEC), and Ministry of Supply (MoS) would lead to the development of a flamethrower tank based on the [[Churchill (Family)|Churchill]] infantry tank family.
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This name comes from Major General Percy C.S. Hobart. The Crocodile was a very secretive development of the venerable Churchill with great lengths taken to keep them out of enemy hands. The flamethrower used on the Churchill Crocodile, unlike the earlier Ronson model, replaced the hull-mounted [[BESA (7.92 mm)|BESA]] machine gun on the Churchill with the nozzle. This nozzle was connected to ‘The Link’, a pipe with 3 articulated joints that connect the nozzle to the 6.5-ton trailer. This trailer carried 400 gallons of flamethrowing agent and 5 compressed nitrogen bottles that could jettisoned from inside the tank.<ref name=":1" /> The General Staff’s specifications called for the trailer to be jettisonable and also required the flame tank retain the main armament while the flamethrower itself be able to fire one minute of continuous flame to a range of 80 yards.<ref name=":0" /> The final flamethrower had a maximum range of 150 yards, though 80 yards was its optimal range. Nitrogen gas propelled the flammable liquid (fine petrol) at 4 gallons a second towards an electric spark igniter at the top of the nozzle. The projector was pressured for 80 single-second long bursts though longer bursts were also possible.<ref name=":1" />
[[File:Churchill Crocodile 1944.jpg|alt=Churchill Crocodile|frame|415x415px|Churchill Crocodile firing its flamethrower]]
 
This would be completed in the form of an fuel trailer towed behind the Churchill with lines connecting to a flame projector mounted in place of the bow machine gun. The trailer was lightly armored and could resist light small-arms fire. If the trailer was destroyed or ran out of fuel, the crew could jettison it safely from the inside of the tank.  
 
  
Churchill Crocodiles began service in the European Theatre in 1944 as part of specialized support units. The flamethrowers served as a potent psychological weapon as well, with many German troops choosing to surrender instead of being burned to death. They were deemed effective, despite their short range.
+
In service, the Churchill Crocodile was used in Italy and North-West Europe. The weapon was an effective anti-bunker weapon when used in concert with the Churchill AVRE. Many German bunker crews surrendered after seeing a warning burst from the Crocodile’s flame projector and captured crews of these flame tanks were executed on the spot. The Churchill Crocodile was used in Normandy’s bocages along with the Battle of Brest and Operation Clipper, the Anglo-American assault on Geilenkirchen, Germany along with the British attack on s’Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands in October 1944.<ref name=":1" />
  
Crocodiles would go on to serve in the Korean War alongside other Churchill tanks until they were withdrawn from service in 1951.
+
After the war, the British Army tested the Churchill Crocodile in India to see how effective it would have been had it been deployed against the Japanese. The tests concluded that the mountainous terrain of the CBI (China-India-Burma) made the Crocodile modification impractical, though Churchill itself worked fine.<ref name=":1" /> The Churchill Crocodile was briefly used in the Korean War until it was withdrawn from service in 1951. The flame projector on this vehicle was later adapted to [[M4 Sherman (Family)|M4 Sherman]] to make the Sherman Crocodile used by the US Army. Its only use in combat was against a 13-century citadel at Julich, Germany during Operation Grenade. The flame projector was also tested on the [[Comet (Family)|Comet]], but the project ended when the coupler for the trailer broke during trials.<ref name=":0" />
  
==== LCM(6)(F) "Zippo" ====
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==== '''TO-55''' ====
[[File:LCM(6)(F) "Zippo" using flamethrower in Vietnam.jpg|thumb|418x418px|LCM(6)(F) "Zippo" using its flamethrower in Vietnam]]
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To turn the [[T-54/55 (Family)|T-55]] into the [[TO-55]] (also sometimes identified as the OT-55), the Soviets mounted the ATO-200 flame projector. Like the Churchill Crocodile, this flame projector replaces a machine gun, but it is mounted co-axially to the [[D-10T2S (100 mm)|100mm D-10T]] gun on the T-55. Development work on the project began in 1958 and the OT-55 and the ATO-200 were officially adopted in 1961. However serial production only began in 1968 and lasted until 1973.<ref>https://weaponsystems.net/system/1245-TO-55</ref> The ATO-200 is ignited by pyrotechnic charges with 12 charges preloaded. The stowage tank, replacing the hull ammo rack next to the driver on the T-55, carries 460 litres of fuel allowing for on average, a burst of 36 litres. The maximum range of the ATO-200 is 200 meters or 656 feet.<ref>https://tanks-encyclopedia.com/coldwar/ussr/soviet_t-55.php#index17</ref>
Many WWII-surplus LCMs (Landing Craft, Mechanized) were modified by the Mobile Riverine Force in Vietnam as "monitor" patrol craft.  
 
  
Flamethrowers were added to the LCM(6) which increased the offensive capabilities of the vessel, giving it the ability to clear vegetation and burn out enemy positions by the riverside. These flamethrowers gave the vessel the "Zippo" nickname, after a popular brand of cigarette lighters.
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==== '''LCM(6) Zippo''' ====
 +
The ‘Zippo’ gets its name from a popular brand of reusable cigarette lighters in America. This nickname was applied to every flamethrower vehicle used in the Vietnam War of which the [[LCM(6) Zippo|LCM(6) 'Zippo']] is notably the boat-borne version. The flamethrower used on this converted landing craft is the M10-8, a model first designed for the M132 Armored Flamethrower used by the U.S. Army. The M132 was a conversion of the venerable [[M113 (Family)|M113 APC]]. This vehicle was also called the ‘Zippo’ allegedly because the brand of lighter was used if the electrical igniters failed. Designated the E36R1 in its prototype form, the M10-8 flamethrower is mounted on the M113 through a couple built for the M48 Patton tank. The flame gun, called the M8, has a sausage-shaped aperture and it is connected to the M10 fuel and pressure unit which takes up the space of the troop hold. The tanks consist of 50-gallon fuel tanks pressurized at 325 psi with compressed air tanks on top pressurized at 3,000 psi. The M10-8 flamethrower carried 200 gallons of napalm overall and had a range of 12 to 218 yards on the M132.<ref>https://tanks-encyclopedia.com/coldwar-us-self-propelled-flame-thrower-m132-zippo/</ref>
  
== Media ==
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The LCM(6) Zippo came about when RIVFLOT 1 of the Mobile Riverine Force attempted to carry an M132 on the LCM(6) Monitor for countering Viet Cong bunkers which were getting stronger to resist 40mm rounds from a Monitor’s [[Bofors L/60 Mark 3 (40 mm)|Bofors L/60]] cannon. While the vehicle was too heavy, the M10-8 flamethrower was adapted to the Monitor. Two flamethrowers were added and connected with the M10 system to larger 1,325-gallon fuel tanks allowing for 225 seconds of continuous fire. A gasoline lighter would act as the trigger.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monitor_(Vietnam_War)#Zippo_Monitor</ref>
{{Youtube-gallery|1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NxhYLDgeMOE&t=4s=2 Battle Pass: Smell of Victory discusses the LCM(6)(F) Zippo at 0:47 and the Churchill Crocodile at 01:33}}
 
 
 
== See also ==
 
Ground Vehicles that use flamethrowers
 
 
 
* [[Churchill Crocodile]]
 
  
Naval Vehicles that use flamethrowers
+
==== Sources ====
 +
<references />
  
* [[LCM(6) Zippo|LCM(6)(F) Zippo]]
+
== External links ==
 +
<!-- ''Paste links to sources and external resources, such as:''
 +
* ''topic on the official game forum;''
 +
* ''other literature.'' -->
  
== External Links ==
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* [[wt:en/news/7728-development-napalm-comes-to-war-thunder-en|[Devblog] Napalm comes to War Thunder!]]
  
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churchill_Crocodile#Flame_projector
+
[[Category:Game mechanics]]
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napalm
 

Latest revision as of 15:31, 23 March 2024

Incendiary bombs

Incendiary bombs are best used to destroy open-topped vehicles (literally to burn them down) where the incendiary mixture will make sure exposed crews will be knocked out and possibly light up the engine of vehicles due to its extreme temperature. While some players consider it has more aesthetic use than in practical use, it can also block Night Vision Devices and serve as a makeshift "smoke grenade" for tanks and help them hide from enemy eyesight for a while. Alternatively, this could be used like general purpose bombs and burn down enemy bases/airfield if needed, though with a lower effectiveness per payload mass then the general-purpose bombs.

Incendiary bombs
USA  BLU-1 · BLU-27/B · Mk 77 mod 2 · Mk 77 mod 4 · Mk 78 · Mk 79 Mod 1
Germany  FeBb Napalmbombe · Flam C 250 · Flam C 500
USSR  ZAB-50FP · ZB-360 · ZB-500
Britain  Mk 77 Mod 0
China  M116A2
Italy  Aerea 559G1
France  M116A2 · Mk 78 · SECAN 63
Sweden  Brandbomb m/58
Israel  Mk.2

Flamethrowers

The Flamethrower is a fire-based weapon added in Update "Fire and Ice" with rewards in the Battle Pass: Season IX, "Smell of Victory". These usually have a relatively short range with the ability to damage open-topped vehicles.

 Vehicles equipped with this weapon 

Ground Vehicles

The flamethrower on the USSR TO-55 has a onboard fuel supply and the coaxial flamethrower is on the turret. The TO-55 was introduced in Sons of Attila update.

The flamethrower on the Churchill Crocodile consists of a fuel trailer towed behind the tank and a flame projector in the bow gun position.

Naval Vehicles

The LCM(6)(F) Zippo has two flamethrowers on the port and starboard sides behind the 40mm gun turret. This weapon system has fuel tanks located in the hull and projectors in small combined turrets paired with 7.62 mm M73 machine guns.

Ammunition

Flamethrowers use ignited liquid fuel as ammunition, usually consisting of a mixture of napalm similar to that used in incendiary bombs such as the BLU-1. The Churchill Crocodile uses a mixture called Fuel K, or FTF, Heavy No.1. There is currently no alternative fuel choices for the flamethowers in-game.

As an unconventional ammunition type, burning fuel has no armor penetration values and will not damage the internal modules of a vehicle if it is fully armored or CBRN-secured. If a vehicle is open-topped or very lightly armored with gaps, the flamethrower can output a devastating amount of damage.

Flamethrowers can output a type of damage that no other weapon system in the game can do, called Damage over Time. Ground areas, items, and enemy targets will continue to burn for a brief period after being hit. This can cause damage to the enemy even after the flamethrower has stopped firing.

History

Background

The First World War saw the introduction of many horrifying new weapons of war. The tank, armed planes, submarines, poison gas shells, and more turned what was assumed to be a swift conflict into a four-year-long bloodbath. The Flamethrower was another weapon that made the War to End All Wars so costly. The modern flamethrower made its debut in World War I, but it is the perfection of a tactic that has existed for centuries.

Thermal weapons have existed for a very long time because of their recognized use against fortifications and enemy equipment. The earliest recorded example of what could be considered a flamethrower comes from the Ancient Greeks. During the Peloponnesian Wars, a wheeled siege weapon that shot fire was used by the Boeotians against the Athenians during the Battle of Delium in 424 B.C.[1] This is the earliest recorded instance of a flamethrower-like weapon used in battle. Another early flamethrower is recorded in use by the Romans against the Dacians in 107 A.D. in a similar capacity to the Greek design centuries before. More early flamethrowers would emerge when the Byzantine Empire invented Greek fire. The invention is credited to an architect and chemist named Kallinkinos of Heliopolis c.673. Greek fire was primarily used as a naval weapon, but land forces were recording what was dubbed a cheirosiphona (hand-held siphons) which resembled a modern flamethrower in form and function. The weapon was a hand-held pump that shot Greek fire from a tube in short bursts. Ignition was handled by a piston lighting a match as the fire was ejected.[2] Another early example worth noting is the Chinese Pen Huo Qi (fire spraying device) another piston flamethrower invented in 919 A.D. two years after the first documented example of Greek fire in China. This device used what was called Meong Hou You (lit. fierce fire oil, an early Chinese name for petroleum) as its flamethrowing agent. Ignition was achieved by gunpowder, the first time it was used in warfare by the Chinese. This application is shown by the first documented use of this weapon during the 919 Battle of Langshan Jiang where a slow-burning gunpowder match was used to ignite a continuous string of flame by Wuyue to burn their fleet, defeated the Kingdom of Wu in the process.[3]

The modern flamethrower was invented in Germany before World War I. The name is a loanword from the German ‘Flamenwerfer’ coined during WWI. The original design came from Richard Fiedler, who showcased several designs to the Deutsches Heer (Imperial German Army) in 1901 with the most notable being a single-shot design that used a two-part cylinder that carried pressurized nitrogen and flammable oil that mixed when fired. Ignition was done with a simple wick and the weapon had a range of 20 yards. While not adopted, Fiedler improved on the design, and in 1908, he collaborated with German officer Bernard Redderman who demonstrated flamethrowers made from converted steam-powered fire engines the year before. The two men got the Deutsches Heer to test their new joint design with an experimental pioneer company for testing and the flamethrower was adopted in 1911. Despite being adopted before the outbreak of the war the Germans didn’t use it in combat initially. It was issued in limited numbers and first by German soldiers outside Verdun on February 26th, 1915. It was on July 30th however, that the Germans recognized the true value of the flamethrower. That day saw a concentrated flamethrower attack on British trenches at Hooges, Belgium. The British suffered significant casualties with 31 officers and 751 other soldiers after two days thanks in part to the flamethrower flushing soldiers out and forcing them into the gunfire of supporting units. The flamethrower was adopted on all fronts, and the Germans used it in more than 650 attacks. The design was also gradually copied by the Entente. The first use of a flamethrower on a vehicle came from the Royal Navy mounting two Morris flamethrowers in static positions on their Arrogant-class cruiser HMS Vindictive for the Zeebrugge Raid in 1916.[4]

In War Thunder, there are currently vehicles that mount flamethrowers. While each model is different, they will be discussed collectively for the sake of this article.

Churchill Crocodile

The first vehicle chronologically is the Churchill Crocodile, the product of a conversion kit by the REME (Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers) and years of development by the Petroleum Warfare Department.[5] Tasked with weaponizing Britain’s reserves of gasoline against a potential German invasion, this department produced the Heavy Cockatrice which mounted a Lagoda flamethrower on the armoured body of an AEC Matador truck.[6] The concept was subsequently refined with flamethrower variants of the Universal Carrier and Valentine tank being produced. In 1942, as preparation for the Dieppe Raid, three Churchill tanks were modified to carry the Ronson flamethrower on the outside of the tank allowing it to operate without sacrificing the hull machine gun. While the Dieppe Raid was a failure, it showed the need for more dedicated vehicles to support the Royal Engineers, and the Churchill Crocodile was developed as part of a new wave of ‘Hobart’s Funnies’.[7]

This name comes from Major General Percy C.S. Hobart. The Crocodile was a very secretive development of the venerable Churchill with great lengths taken to keep them out of enemy hands. The flamethrower used on the Churchill Crocodile, unlike the earlier Ronson model, replaced the hull-mounted BESA machine gun on the Churchill with the nozzle. This nozzle was connected to ‘The Link’, a pipe with 3 articulated joints that connect the nozzle to the 6.5-ton trailer. This trailer carried 400 gallons of flamethrowing agent and 5 compressed nitrogen bottles that could jettisoned from inside the tank.[7] The General Staff’s specifications called for the trailer to be jettisonable and also required the flame tank retain the main armament while the flamethrower itself be able to fire one minute of continuous flame to a range of 80 yards.[5] The final flamethrower had a maximum range of 150 yards, though 80 yards was its optimal range. Nitrogen gas propelled the flammable liquid (fine petrol) at 4 gallons a second towards an electric spark igniter at the top of the nozzle. The projector was pressured for 80 single-second long bursts though longer bursts were also possible.[7]

In service, the Churchill Crocodile was used in Italy and North-West Europe. The weapon was an effective anti-bunker weapon when used in concert with the Churchill AVRE. Many German bunker crews surrendered after seeing a warning burst from the Crocodile’s flame projector and captured crews of these flame tanks were executed on the spot. The Churchill Crocodile was used in Normandy’s bocages along with the Battle of Brest and Operation Clipper, the Anglo-American assault on Geilenkirchen, Germany along with the British attack on s’Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands in October 1944.[7]

After the war, the British Army tested the Churchill Crocodile in India to see how effective it would have been had it been deployed against the Japanese. The tests concluded that the mountainous terrain of the CBI (China-India-Burma) made the Crocodile modification impractical, though Churchill itself worked fine.[7] The Churchill Crocodile was briefly used in the Korean War until it was withdrawn from service in 1951. The flame projector on this vehicle was later adapted to M4 Sherman to make the Sherman Crocodile used by the US Army. Its only use in combat was against a 13-century citadel at Julich, Germany during Operation Grenade. The flame projector was also tested on the Comet, but the project ended when the coupler for the trailer broke during trials.[5]

TO-55

To turn the T-55 into the TO-55 (also sometimes identified as the OT-55), the Soviets mounted the ATO-200 flame projector. Like the Churchill Crocodile, this flame projector replaces a machine gun, but it is mounted co-axially to the 100mm D-10T gun on the T-55. Development work on the project began in 1958 and the OT-55 and the ATO-200 were officially adopted in 1961. However serial production only began in 1968 and lasted until 1973.[8] The ATO-200 is ignited by pyrotechnic charges with 12 charges preloaded. The stowage tank, replacing the hull ammo rack next to the driver on the T-55, carries 460 litres of fuel allowing for on average, a burst of 36 litres. The maximum range of the ATO-200 is 200 meters or 656 feet.[9]

LCM(6) Zippo

The ‘Zippo’ gets its name from a popular brand of reusable cigarette lighters in America. This nickname was applied to every flamethrower vehicle used in the Vietnam War of which the LCM(6) 'Zippo' is notably the boat-borne version. The flamethrower used on this converted landing craft is the M10-8, a model first designed for the M132 Armored Flamethrower used by the U.S. Army. The M132 was a conversion of the venerable M113 APC. This vehicle was also called the ‘Zippo’ allegedly because the brand of lighter was used if the electrical igniters failed. Designated the E36R1 in its prototype form, the M10-8 flamethrower is mounted on the M113 through a couple built for the M48 Patton tank. The flame gun, called the M8, has a sausage-shaped aperture and it is connected to the M10 fuel and pressure unit which takes up the space of the troop hold. The tanks consist of 50-gallon fuel tanks pressurized at 325 psi with compressed air tanks on top pressurized at 3,000 psi. The M10-8 flamethrower carried 200 gallons of napalm overall and had a range of 12 to 218 yards on the M132.[10]

The LCM(6) Zippo came about when RIVFLOT 1 of the Mobile Riverine Force attempted to carry an M132 on the LCM(6) Monitor for countering Viet Cong bunkers which were getting stronger to resist 40mm rounds from a Monitor’s Bofors L/60 cannon. While the vehicle was too heavy, the M10-8 flamethrower was adapted to the Monitor. Two flamethrowers were added and connected with the M10 system to larger 1,325-gallon fuel tanks allowing for 225 seconds of continuous fire. A gasoline lighter would act as the trigger.[11]

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