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German Tank Museum. The German Tank Museum (German: Deutsches Panzermuseum Munster (DPM)) [1] is an armoured fighting vehicle museum in Munster, Germany, [Note 1] the location of the Munster Training Area camp. Its main aim is the documentation of the history of German armoured troops since 1917.
Main. armament. 2 MG 08 (1 MG per turret) Engine. Daimler M-1574 4-cylinder petrol engine. 74 kW (100 hp) The Daimler DZVR 21 is a light, armored vehicle from the Weimar Republic era. A surviving example is in the Munster Tank Museum.
German Tank Museum, (Deutsches Panzermuseum) – Germany's largest armoured fighting vehicle museum; St. Urban's Church (St.-Urbani-Kirche) – a 13th-century church; The Ollershof is a free open-air museum; St Martin's Church, Munster is an old sheep pen that was converted to a church; Town library
Along with the German Tank Museum in Munster, the Army History Museum in Vienna, the Swiss Military Museum in Full, the Bovington Tank Museum, and the Tank Museum in Saumur, the WTS is one of the most important defense technology collections internationally, but unlike them, it covers the entire technological and historical breadth of defense ...
37 km/h (23 mph) on-road; 25 km/h (16 mph) off-road. The Panzer I was a light tank produced by Nazi Germany in the 1930s. Its name is short for Panzerkampfwagen I (German for " armored fighting vehicle mark I"), abbreviated as Pz.Kpfw. I. The tank's official German ordnance inventory designation was Sd.Kfz. 101 ("special purpose vehicle 101").
The Munster Training Area (German: Truppenübungsplatz Munster) is a military training area in Germany on the Lüneburg Heath. It comprises two separate areas with different purposes: Munster North (Munster-Nord) (size: 102 square kilometres (39 sq mi)) and Munster South (Munster-Süd) (size: 74 square kilometres (29 sq mi)). The two areas are ...
Leopard 1A4 at the German Panzer Museum Munster. The vehicle is displayed with a deep fording snorkel, which would be used to draw in combustion air for the operation of the engine while submerged in water. The Leopard 1A4 formed the sixth batch of 250 vehicles (215 manufactured by Krauss-Maffei and 35 from MaK), starting delivery in 1974.
Surviving examples of the Borgward IV are displayed in the Heeresgeschichtliches Museum in Vienna, [3] the Kubinka Tank Museum, [4] the American Heritage Museum in Greater Boston, USA, and the German Tank Museum in Munster. A fifth one in working condition is displayed in the Overlord Museum in Colleville-sur-Mer (Normandy-France).