BUICK ‘HELLCAT’ TANK DESTROYER: WW II HOT ROD!

The same GM studio that gave us the iconic and industry-first Concept Car, 
Buick Y-Job, also was responsible for the Hellcat Tank Destroyer. This year 
Buick celebrates its 110th anniversary.
Buick production lines have been rolling for 110 consecutive years but for a short period during World War II, the vehicles produced looked decidedly different. In February 1942, the last civilian car left a Buick facility before full attention was placed on engineering and producing aircraft engines, ammunition and the M18 Hellcat Tank Destroyer.

The M18, top, with Enclave, above with Marty Schorr test driving, originated in the design studio of Harley Earl, whose team also worked extensively on early camouflage paint. Earl’s
staff designed even the Hellcat logo and patches worn by its crew. Flanked by the words
“Seek, Strike, Destroy,” it depicts a wildcat biting down on crushed treads, signifying the Hellcat’s mission of targeting enemy tanks.

Buick engineers brought the Hellcat to life from the design team’s sketches and developed an innovative torsion bar suspension that provided a steady ride. Though it weighed about 20 tons – the same as almost nine modern day Buick Enclaves – the Hellcat was designed to be one of fastest tanks on the battlefield and was capable of traveling upwards of 60 mph. Its power came from a nine-cylinder, 450-horsepower radial-type aircraft engine paired with a three-speed
Hydramatic transmission.

“The Hellcat was considered the hot rod of World War II,” said Bill Gross, a historian who restored an M18 now on display at the Sloan Museum in Flint, MI. “To give perspective,
most German tanks of the day were capable of just 20 mph and even today’s M1 Abrams
tank is outpaced by the Hellcat.”

Once developed, the Hellcat was tested in the same manner as millions of Buick passenger cars before and after it, at the General Motors Milford Proving Ground, above. Top speed testing was done on a paved, banked oval and ride quality tests were done over specially developed stretches of bumps. Of course, the M18 also required unique tests of its ability to ford six feet of water, climb small walls, and ram through structures.

Production of the M18 Hellcat began in mid-1943 and ended in October 1944. The project
was so secretive that a story about the “new” tank destroyer ran in newspapers, above, just a month before production ended!

“The men and women who developed the Hellcat and assembled them on the Buick line in Flint contributed a great deal to the war effort and to military engineering history,” said Gross. “These people were instrumental in bringing such a great conflict to a close and their innovations are still in use today – the M18’s suspension remains a common design
inspiration for modern military vehicles.”

In addition to 2,507 M18 tank destroyers, Buick factory workers produced nearly 20,000 powertrains, a half-million cartridge cases, 9.7 million 20-mm shells, and a number of other war goods during WW II.

For the latest vehicles from Buick, please visit http://www.buick.com/