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  2. Armour-piercing ammunition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armour-piercing_ammunition

    Armour-piercing ammunition (AP) is a type of projectile designed to penetrate armour protection, most often including naval armour, body armour, and vehicle armour. [1]The first, major application of armour-piercing projectiles was to defeat the thick armour carried on many warships and cause damage to their lightly armoured interiors.

  3. Armour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armour-piercing_fin...

    Modern 120 mm tank gun shells. KE penetrators for modern tanks are commonly 2–3 cm (0.787–1.18 in) in diameter, and can approach 80 cm (31.5 in) long. As more structurally efficient penetrator-sabot designs are developed their length tends to increase, in order to defeat even greater line-of-sight armour depth.

  4. 9K111 Fagot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9K111_Fagot

    The 9K111 Fagot (Russian: Фагот; "bassoon") is a second-generation tube-launched semi-automatic command to line of sight (SACLOS) wire-guided anti-tank missile system of the Soviet Union for use from ground or vehicle mounts. The 9K111 Fagot missile system was developed by the Tula KBP Design Bureau for Instrument Building.

  5. Ordnance QF 75 mm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordnance_QF_75_mm

    The Ordnance QF 75 mm, abbreviated to OQF 75 mm, was a British tank gun of the Second World War.It was obtained by boring out the Ordnance QF 6-pounder ("6 pdr") 57 mm anti-tank gun to 75 mm, to give better performance against infantry targets similarly to the 75 mm M3 gun fitted to the American Sherman tank.

  6. M26 Pershing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M26_Pershing

    In the spring of 1942, as the M4 Sherman was entering production, U.S. Army Ordnance began work on a follow-up tank. The T20 tank reached a mock-up stage in May 1942, and was intended as an improved medium tank to follow the M4. [10] An earlier heavy tank, the M6, had been standardized in February 1942, but proved to be a failure. The U.S. Army ...

  7. Sabrah light tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabrah_Light_Tank

    The ammunition is loaded using an autoloader with a manual backup loading. The tank has 12 ready-to-use ammunition rounds located in the autoloader drum and an additional 24 stored in the hull. [3] The machine gun uses 500 ready-to-fire rounds of 7.62mm and 1,500 rounds stowed in the hull. [10]

  8. M1 Abrams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_Abrams

    The Tank Urban Survival Kit (TUSK) is a series of improvements to the M1 Abrams intended to improve fighting ability in urban environments. [150] Historically, urban and other close battlefields have been poor places for tanks to fight. A tank's front armor is much stronger than that on the sides, top, or rear.

  9. Tanks of the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanks_of_the_Soviet_Union

    The tank was first created in 1932, based on the British Vickers tankette and other operational amphibious tanks. The tank was mass-produced starting in 1933 up until 1936, when it was replaced with the more modern T-38, based on the T-37A. Overall, after four years of production, 2552 T-37A's were produced, including the original prototypes.