Exxon, although they were Esso at the time.
The slogan "Put a Tiger in Your Tank" was used by the American oil company Esso, which is now known as ExxonMobil. This catchy advertising campaign, launched in the 1960s, aimed to convey the idea of power and energy associated with their gasoline products. The tiger became a recognizable mascot for the brand during that time.
This was an advertising slogan for Esso petrol about 40 years ago.
Esso (now known as Exxon) famously used the slogan "Put a tiger in your tank" in their advertising campaigns in the 1960s and 1970s. The campaign was meant to convey that using their gasoline would make your car powerful like a tiger.
This is an old advertising slogan for ESSO, now EXXON oil company, John D. Rockefeller's old Standard Oil Company (S. O., ESSO). The idea was that ESSO gasoline was so good your mighty V-8 powered Detroit lead sled of a car would roar like a tiger with ESSO gas in the gas tank. Not to be confused with Tony the Tiger, who was pimping Kellogg's Frosted Flakes.
Putting Tiger Woods jokes aside.... It's an old slogan for gasoline, meaning that the gas you were putting inside your car was very strong and powerful.
the tiger tank was one of the Germans most heavily armoured tanks
There is only one tank named the Tiger and that's the Panzer 6, the biggest panzer was the Panzer 8 Maus
There was only two tigers, the tiger 1, which was very powerful and armourd but slow. The king tiger, twice the power and armore, but was twice as slow. The Tiger 1 and Tiger 2 had the same top road speed. Go to Wikipedia for more info.
The tiger is six and the king tiger is seven Clarification: both the Tiger 1 and Tiger 2 (King Tiger) are designated Panzerkampfwagen VI (or panzer 6) the tiger 2 being designated Panzerkampfwagen VI Ausf.B Tiger II. I'm not sure what a Panzer 7 was.
The Tiger I tank stopped production in August 1944 and stopped usage in combat in May 1945. The Tiger II tank both stopped Production and usage in April 1945.
ESSO. (Standard Oil, S. O. ESSO). Known today as Exxon. Not to be confused with Tony the Tiger, who was selling Kellogg's Frosted Flakes.
Germany.