Antwort Was the e100 a real tank? Weitere Antworten – Is the E100 tank real
The Panzerkampfwagen E-100 (Gerät 383) (TG-01) was a German super-heavy tank design developed towards the end of World War II. It was the largest of the Entwicklung series of tank designs which was intended to improve German armored vehicle production through standardization on cheaper, simpler to build vehicles.For the Germans, the Maus and E 100 were both developed during WWII, but only the Maus reached any state of completion, and neither vehicle saw combat.E100 is faster slightly, has much better gun (they both use the 128 but the e100s has more alpha, and the e100 has a 15 cm gun which I used to 3 mark it) and id argue that while angling the e100s turret cheeks are stronger, maus has much better hull armor due to a tiny plate. And maus has more hp.
How heavy was the E100 : The E100 is a fascinating, elusive superheavy tank developed by Germany during the Second World War. At 136 tons its only beaten by the Maus, but the E100 carried the same 128 mm gun on a smaller platform that weighed 60 tons less.
Is the E100 a Maus
While it is not a Maus by any stretch of the imagination, this tank does share a similar play-style with it while maintaining a bit more flexibility over it's colossal counterpart. The massive armor of the E-100 is comparable but not identical to that of the Maus.
IS-7 tank real : The IS-7 is a Soviet tier 10 heavy tank. Development of the IS-7 started in the spring of 1945. Prototypes successfully underwent trials in 1946 and 1947. However, the IS-7 never saw mass production.
The E 75 is a German tier 9 heavy tank. In 1945 the E 75 was conceived as a standard heavy tank of the Panzerwaffe to replace the Tiger II.
While it is not a Maus by any stretch of the imagination, this tank does share a similar play-style with it while maintaining a bit more flexibility over it's colossal counterpart. The massive armor of the E-100 is comparable but not identical to that of the Maus.
Can a kv2 destroy a Maus
Trust me or not, but I just destroyed a static Maus tank from the front with a non piercing KV-2 (1939) shell just right now in Training mode. I pinpointed a vulnerable part of the Maus, (gree colour), between the mantlet and the cannon and it worked!The Jagdpanther is probably the most impressive German tank destroyer design of the Second World War because it has that great combination of firepower with the PAK 43 88 millimetre gun and the proven Panther tank chassis which is reliable and also very well defended.The two prototypes were later blown up before the advancing Russian army reached the testing grounds in 1945, and it is unlikely any Maus tanks ever saw combat. The Russian forces married the turret from the second tank with the hull from the first and took the vehicle to Moscow for evaluation.
Unlike the La-174, the E-100 could only be obtained in the special tournament events, making its acquirement rare to the point of being one of the rarest tanks in the game.
How many E-100 were made : Sir, The Nazis only partially completed one prototype of the E100. It never saw combat but was shipped to the UK for testing after the war and later scrapped.
Is the at8 tank real : The vehicle was conceived as a breakthrough tank. The design project was prepared on May 29, 1943. No prototypes were built, because Nuffield proposed other projects that eventually saw the development of the A39 Tortoise.
Is the IS-2 II a real tank
The IS-2-II is a Soviet tier 8 heavy tank. A project of a double-barreled vehicle based on the mass-produced IS-2 heavy tank.
The IS-7 heavy tank, also known by its project name Object 260, is a Soviet tank that began development in 1945. The vehicle existed only in prototype form and was cancelled in favor of the T-10 tank.The E 25 was planned to be developed into a tank destroyer and reconnaissance tank. The company Argus developed the vehicle whose design was very similar to the design of the Jagdpanzer Hetzer.
Is there any Maus left : The surviving hybrid tank is on display at the Russian Tank Museum at Kubinka. The Maus project was cancelled after Allied bombings and the Germans attempted to destroy the prototypes before the Russian army reached the testing grounds (Picture: Bovington Tank Museum).