Tanks as we currently know them are obsolete; for the same reasons that battleships are. 1. Too heavy, non-air transportable. 2. They need infantrymen to protect them. 3. They are designed to engage other tanks; wars today require mobility (light weight), fast deployment (air transportable), and combined arms (infantry carrying tanks: landing in a hostile environment ready for battle); instead of waiting on the flight line for infantrymen and tanks to "get together"...they should already BE TOGETHER! Be combined! So, tanks are not obsolete; only the tanks of today. They need to "evolve" into tanks to fight 21st century battles.
i'd say the united states ---- Actually, both China and Russia have far more tanks than the US. However, the vast majority of both nations' tanks are obsolete, mostly T-54/55s and non-updated T-72/80s. The US has by far the largest number of modern tanks, with approximately 5,000 in active service, plus another 3,000 in storage. No other country has more than 1,000 modern tanks, with most countries owning only a few hundred.
OB is the abbreviation for obsolete.
it was obsolete by the invention of the gun
the USSR Built 29,770 Light tanks, 62,424 Medium tanks, 12,831 Heavy tanks and 5 Super heavy tanks ( 2 were prototypes) An total of 105,050. The most common tanks were T-34s and KV tanks.
Austria and Turkey did not use tanks. Germany built only twenty tanks, and they used captured British tanks which were in no short supply.
WWI tanks certainly weren't anything modern by today's standards. Even by the mid-1920s, they were obsolete. But the British were the first to use tanks, and the French were the first to use a turret mounted gun.
They had tanks, airplanes and much more advanced technology in WWII, carriages were obviously accessible but obsolete at the time.
Both of those fuel tanks are for the power unit. Rest assured of that. The reefer units will have a separate fuel tank for that unit, typically located under the chassis behind the cab. Don't be fooled by the lack of a crossover between the two fuel tanks - the crossover system is obsolete, and no longer used. Both of those tanks feed the engine, still.
Obsolete is an adjective.
i'd say the united states ---- Actually, both China and Russia have far more tanks than the US. However, the vast majority of both nations' tanks are obsolete, mostly T-54/55s and non-updated T-72/80s. The US has by far the largest number of modern tanks, with approximately 5,000 in active service, plus another 3,000 in storage. No other country has more than 1,000 modern tanks, with most countries owning only a few hundred.
dinosaurs are obsolete.
OB is the abbreviation for obsolete.
Obsolete
The present-day US Army Battle Axe refers to the M48 and M60 Patton series tanks. These tanks were commonly referred to as "Battle Axes" due to their powerful firepower and heavy armor. However, it is important to note that the M48 and M60 tanks are now obsolete and have been replaced by more advanced models like the M1 Abrams.
obsolete
Card readers are obsolete.
Warriors are not, nor likely to be, obsolete.