During the cold war (1945-1990) US tanks did not exceed 12 feet in width.
around 10,000
For the US Army, the average combat medium tank was 1. 6 tons WW1 M1917 Renault Tank 2. 30 tons WW2 M-4 Sherman Tank 3. 52 tons Vietnam War M-48 Patton Tank (Vietnam War: 17 tons M-551 Sheridan Light Tank) 4. 67 tons M-1 Abrams Tank
Age 23 and served as a tank crewman on a M48 Patton tank with the 1/32nd Armor.
Well it has strong in it and the metal tires and it has steeing in it tha's all
He served the army and he also invented a prototype tank
It depends on what kind of tank! The Challenger II tank, used by the British Army is 350 cm wide. My toilet tank is 38 cm wide.
To increse the surface area of the part of the tank in contact with the ground so that pressure due heavy load due to tank do not make it sink and lets it move faster.
since p=thrust/area,if a wide steel belt(more area) is provided ,it reduces the pressure exerted by the tank on the ground.so,it prevents the tank from sinking into the ground. You may mean the actual tracks. They are engineered of many steel links, often rubber covered to enable the tank to run on many surfaces.
for getting an army tank put - PANZER
What type of tank do you mean? A liquid container or a tank as in the army?
the US Army invented the Sherman tank.
The Army still uses armored cars and light tanks similar to tank destroyers, but not the same kind of tank destroyers as they did in WWII.
Yes.
Dane.g.elliott
The turret
Turrent
A French Army tank scoring a hit upon an opponent