| HUMMER | A type of four-wheel drive all-terrain military vehicle or a similar one intended for civilian use (6) |
| HUMVEE | All-terrain military vehicle |
| CHAMP | Austin four-by-four design for military and later civilian use, built from 1951 to 1956 with a Rolls-royce engine (5) |
| WANKEL | Felix, German engineer who invented a type of four-stroke internal-combustion engine (6) |
| BAROUCHE | A type of four wheeled open carriage (8) |
| DEREQUISITIONED | Formal demand in the act that it should be returned to civilian use (15) |
| PROVIDED | If parking, do drive all over the place (8) |
| NIGHT | Our star's song: Drive All - |
| ARMOUR | Word, from "weapons, tools", for the defensive bards, chain mail, garniture, iron cladding, panoply, shell, shield etc of a horse, knight, military vehicle or termite-eating pichiciego (6) |
| TANKARD | Leaderless unit on military vehicle or vessel |
| APRON | A coverall of a chef, cobbler, cook, farrier or potter, for example, tied at the back; or, a similar garment, such as a girl's pinafore worn over a dress, or that of a bishop or Freemason (5) |
| CLAMP | Type of vice for a workbench; device for immobilising a vehicle; or, a heap of root vegetables stored under a layer of earth or straw (5) |
| CARRIAGE | One's bearing or deportment; a pram for a baby; a four-in-hand, gig or other horse-drawn vehicle; or, a railway passenger-coach (8) |
| MALAPROPISM | Mistaken use of a word for a similar one |
| NOODLE | A long, thin strip of pasta or a similar flour paste, eaten with a sauce or in a soup (6) |
| GOODWILLTOALL | Message hinting at a similar one found, literally, in four areas of the puzzle |
| TANK | An aquarium; a panzer, Sherman, whippet or other armoured vehicle; or, a short word for a vest-like sweater (4) |
| FADE | Word, with an aptly murky, unclear or vague past, for brume, cloudiness, a misty veil or other atmospheric obscurity; thus, a blurred memory, the mind's fog, where clarity fades or a similar state sug |
| NAPALMB | Thickening/gelling agent, composed primarily of benzene and polystyrene, mixed with gasoline or a similar fuel for use in military operations |
| STAPLE | From "pillar, post", a U-shaped metal nail for driving into wood; or, a similar fastener for cloth or papers (6) |