M16 Multiple Gun Motor Carriage
The M16 Multiple Gun Motor Carriage, also known as the M16 half-track, was an American self-propelled anti-aircraft weapon built during World War II. It was equipped with four .50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns in an M45 Quadmount. 2700 were produced by White Motor Company from May 1943 to March 1944, with 568 M13 MGMCs and 109 T10 half-tracks being converted into M16s as well.
An American M16 in 1945
An M16 in March 1951, during the Korean War
A damaged M16 half-track at a German museum in 2004
M16A1 from the German Army 'Bundeswehr' at 'Stahl auf der Heide' 2019 - German Tank Museum Munster
The M45 Quadmount was a towed anti-aircraft gun consisting of four .50 caliber M2 Browning machine guns mounted in pairs on either side of an armored open-top gunner's compartment with electrical laying. It was developed by the W. L. Maxson Corporation to replace the earlier M33 twin mount. Although designed as an anti-aircraft weapon, it was also used against ground targets, where it earned the nicknames "meat chopper" and "Krautmower" Introduced in 1944, it saw service as late as the Vietnam War.
M45 on an M20 trailer in the Musée des Blindés
CCKW-353-B2 gun truck with M45 on M20 trailer in bed. This configuration did not see combat in World War II as it was still in testing by the cessation of hostilities
Israeli TCM-20, Israeli Air Force Museum, equipped with a pair of 20mm Hispano-Suiza HS.404 cannon
M16 MGMC