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Universal Tank: British Armour in the Second World War - Part 2. HMSO. ISBN 0-11-290534-X. Hara, Tomio (1972). Japanese Medium Tanks. AFV Weapons Profiles No. 49. Profile Publications Limited. Ness, Leland (2002). Jane's World War II Tanks and Fighting Vehicles. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0007112289. Porter, David (2009). Western Allied Tanks 1939 ...
M3 Stuart (432) light tank used by America and Canada; Ram (2,993) regular tank not used in combat, specialist models used; Grizzly I (188) A modified version of the M4A1 Sherman tank license produced in Canada; Valentine (1,420) Valentine tanks produced in Canada. Most sent to the Soviet Union as Lend-Lease aid. Some were retained in Canada ...
American M5 light tank; British Matilda tank – Pz. 748(e) British Mk IV Churchill; Czechoslovakian LT vz. 35 – Panzerkampfwagen 35(t) Czechoslovakian LT vz. 38 – Panzerkampfwagen 38(t) Czechoslovakian LT vz. 38 – 7.5 cm Pak 40/3 auf sfl. 38(t), Ausf H. or Marder III (Sd.Kfz. 138)
Nazi Germany developed numerous tank designs used in World War II.In addition to domestic designs, Germany also used various captured and foreign-built tanks. [1]German tanks were an important part of the Wehrmacht and played a fundamental role during the whole war, and especially in the blitzkrieg battle strategy.
Intended to replace the European Leopard 2 and Leclerc tanks. [37] [41] Decisive Lethality Platform [42] 2017 — 2035 United States: Prospective unmanned MBT presented as part of the Next Generation Combat Vehicle program, not presently in active development. [43] Panther KF51 [44] 2016 2022 — Germany Hungary [45] 3
The first tank type produced was the two-man, Panzer I light tank, designed and produced by the Krupp works as a training vehicle. [6] It was not designed for use in combat; instead, the main battle tank of the German army was to be the Panzer III but delays in its development and manufacture led to the production of an interim vehicle, the ...
This table compares tanks in use by the belligerent nations of Europe and the Pacific at the start of the Second World War, employed in the Polish Campaign (1939), the Battle of France (1940), Operation Barbarossa (1941), and the Malayan Campaign (1942).
During the war, the mass of a panzer increased from the 5.4 tonnes (6.0 tons) of a pre-war Panzer I light tank, to 68.5 tonnes (75.5 tons) of the Tiger II. In the meantime, the Soviets continued to produce the T-34 by the tens of thousands, and U.S. industry nearly matched them in the number of M4 Sherman tanks built and deployed in Western Europe.