tankettes
Tankette is a term used for small, lightly armored tracked combat vehicles designed in the interwar period for reconnaissance, infantry support, and training. Typically crewed by one to three personnel, tankettes were cheaper and simpler than main battle tanks and often had limited firepower and armor. Many designs were essentially armored tractors with a fixed gun or light armament and no fully rotating turret.
Design characteristics varied, but most tankettes were compact and lightly protected, with thin armor and modest
Interwar manufacturers and armies used tankettes to explore mechanized doctrine. The British Carden-Loyd tankette family and
Operationally, tankettes served in limited roles during the late 1930s and early years of World War II.
Legacy: Tankettes influenced early light armored reconnaissance and doctrine debates but demonstrated the limits of tiny,