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  2. Dummy tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dummy_tank

    The Jeep did not realistically simulate the noise or movement of a tank, but allowed the dummy to be deployed quickly. [7] Meanwhile, the reverse was also done, to make tanks look like trucks. A further device was put into use that both created simulated tank tracks and erased real ones. [8] An inflatable dummy tank, modeled after the M4 Sherman

  3. TOG2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOG2

    The TOG 2, officially known as the Heavy Tank, TOG II, was a British super-heavy tank design produced during the early stages of World War II for a scenario where the battlefields of northern France devolved into a morass of mud, trenches, and craters as had happened during World War I. When this did not happen, the tank was deemed unnecessary ...

  4. Hobart's Funnies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobart's_Funnies

    The tank could place demolition charges at heights up to 12 feet. The tank was driven against a wall, the framework was lowered into the ground against the wall. The tank then backed up 100 feet laying out an electric detonating cable. The explosives were then detonated by the tank driver. It was the successor to the single-charge device "Carrot".

  5. Tanker boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanker_boot

    Tanker boots have a wrap-around strap closure. Tanker boots of an M1 Abrams crewman. Tanker boots are military boots [1] [2] closely associated with soldiers who serve on tanks. [1] The tanker boot was "designed by Dehner's own H. E. Ketzler and General George S. Patton Jr. in 1937" who "wanted something easy and fast to get on."

  6. T-26 variants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-26_variants

    TU-26 teletank control vehicle with a dummy flame-thrower to represent KhT-130 (OT-130) flame-throwing tank at Kubinka Tank Museum. More than 50 different modifications and experimental vehicles based on the T-26 light infantry tank chassis were developed in the USSR in the 1930s, with 23 modifications going into series production.

  7. T-80 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-80

    A T-80BV is on display in Kubinka Tank Museum and a T-80U is on display at an open-air museum in Saratov. The T-80Us have recently been seen at arms expos in Russia such as VTTV. During the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, Boris Yeltsin ordered the use of tanks against the Supreme Soviet and the Congress of People's Deputies opposing him.

  8. Museum tanks and trench systems enhance Ukraine ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/museum-tanks-trench-systems...

    Old Soviet tanks have been borrowed from museums to help train Ukrainian troops on what a commander of the EU training mission for Kyiv says are booby-trap tactics used by Russian soldiers on the ...

  9. 1:144 scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1:144_scale

    1:144 scale is a scale used for some scale models such as micro/mini armor. 1:144 means that the dimensions of the model are 1/144 (0.00694) the dimensions of the original life-sized object; this equates to a scale of 1/2 inch per 6 feet of original dimension. For instance, an airplane 30 feet (9.14 m) in length would be a mere 2.5 inches (63.5 ...