- John Carden
Sir John Valentine Carden, 6th Baronet MBE (
February 6 1892 –December 10 1935 ) was an Englishtank and vehicle designer. He was the sixthBaronet ofTemplemore ,Tipperary , from 1931.cite book |last=Burgess-Wise |first= David|authorlink= |title=Parting Shot, The Automobile (magazine) |month=April | year=2007 |publisher=Enthusiast Publishing Ltd |location=Cranleigh, UK |id=ISSN 0955-1328]__TOC__
Work
Born in
London , Carden was a talented, self-taught engineer,Fact|date=April 2007 with an ability to put his ideas to practical use. From 1914 to 1916, he ran a company that manufactured light passenger-cars under the brand "Carden". The company's first model was acyclecar , with seating only for the driver.During the
First World War , Carden served in theArmy Service Corps and gained the rank of Captain, acquiring experience with vehicles such as trackedHolt tractor s.After the war, he returned to car manufacturing but sold his original design and factory to Ward and Avey who renamed it the AV. He then designed a new cyclecar and started manufacture at
Ascot but at the end of 1919 sold the design to E. A. Tamplin who continued manufacture as theTamplin car. A further design followed with a two seat fibreboard body. Carden even sold one of these to King Alfonso XIII of Spain before selling the company to new owners in 1922 who renamed it theNew Carden .Two or three years later, Carden met car-designer
Vivian Loyd and the two started a small company inChertsey namedCarden-Loyd , working on light, tracked vehicles for military use. Carden was reportedly described as an "introvert engineering genius", while Loyd was conversely described as an "extrovert engineer-salesman".Fact|date=April 2007What brought the pair real success was a
tankette design: the first Carden-Loyd One-Man Tankette, which was designed in 1925. In the next two years, it was developed into Marks I, II and III, and later, two-man tankette models Mark IV and Mark V. All were built in small numbers but were very promising, and, as a result, Carden-Loyd was bought byVickers-Armstrong in March 1928. Carden himself was employed by Vickers as the technical director. The pair continued developing their tankette model, eventually creating their best-known design, the Mark VI. It became the first successful design for that vehicle type in the world,Fact|date=April 2007 and a classic one, several hundred being produced and exported to 16 countries. Many foreign tankette models developed later were said to be inspired by the Mark VI.Fact|date=April 2007Carden and Loyd also designed light tanks, such as the well-known Vickers-Armstrong Commercial Light Tanks series (used, for example, in Belgium)Fact|date=April 2007 and the
British Army 's Light Tanks, includingLight Tank Mk VI (one of Carden's last designs). The pair also developed the world's first amphibious tank,Fact|date=April 2007 the Vickers-Carden-Loyd Amphibian Tank, and played a role in the development of theVickers E tank model.Aside from tanks, Carden and Loyd also developed several light
artillery tractor s and carriers, including the VA D50 model, which was a prototype of theBren Carrier . Carden's interest in flying also led him to build an ultralight plane based on the French "Flying Flea ", using a modified Ford engine uprated from 10 bhp to 31 bhp. In 1935, Carden startedCarden Aero Engines Ltd., an aircraft engine manufacturer. A partnership withL.E. Baynes led to the founding of Carden Baynes Aircraft Ltd., which producedglider s of Baynes' design fitted with auxiliary engines.John Carden was killed in an aircrash while flying on a
Sabena airliner onDecember 10 ,1935 , betweenTatsfield andBiggin Hill .Fact|date=April 2007 He was returning from Belgium, and, as his visit was connected with tank sales, there was some suspicion of German sabotage.Who|date=July 2007References
* Christopher F. Foss, Peter McKenzie. "The Vickers Tanks", 1995, ISBN 978-1-899506-10-1
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