Tank
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The earliest tanks-the British Mark I were used during World War I. Nicknamed Big Willie and fitted with a tractor engine, Mark-I was an effective weapon in battle because it could cross trenches and literally take the battle into the enemy camp. However the story of tank does not start there. The 1934 armoured car Schmerer Panzersphah Wagen (8-RAD) donning a 'swastik’, a vital component of Adolf Hitler's fleet, transports the visitors to the Nazi era of Europe. Also exhibited at the museum are the many variants of the tank that perform specialised services such as aircrew recovery, bridge laying, mine-detonation and dozing. The mine-detonating tank, for instance, uses a revolving drum of heavy chains called ‘flails’ to detonate anti-personnel landmines. It clears the path for troops to move on. Perhaps because of the versatility of the tank, soon anti-tank armour also began using tank-like concepts. Many howitzers and anti-tank guns were mounted on tank classes to give them mobility in the battlefield. Some of the models displayed in the museum were the mainstay of the Indian Army’s self-propelled artillery until recently. ‘Amphibious’ tanks shown in the museum were among those developed for the Normandy Landings during World War-II. Many of the tanks on display at the museum were originally German and Japanese tanks captured during World War II. Pakistani tanks like Chaffee, Walker-Bulldog and Patton that took part in 1965 and 1971 are were also on display here. The rest of the 40 tanks are vehicles that served the Indian Army’s Armoured Corps right from its earliest years. All stand as a mute testimony to the glorious tradition of the mechanised armour since World War I. Notable among the exhibits are the Stuart tank which was taken to record heights of 12000 feet at Zojila Pass in 1948 by the Indian Army’s 7th Cavalry and the British-make Centurion, nicknamed Pattonkiller and Bahadur. Patton was considered the hands of Indian troops. Many of the Patton tanks displayed in the museum (and elsewhere in India) are from the ‘Patton Graveyard’ in Bhikiwind village of the Khem-Karan sector in Punjab. With their guns kept in a lowered position, these tanks remind visitors of the exploits of the Indian Army. In fact, an Indian Centurion tank destroying a Pakistani Patton in 1971 lock, stock and-literally-barrel in the Sialkot sector so alarmed the US manufacturers of the tank that they came calling to check for possible snags. That particular Patton with a gaping hole in its gun turret is the jewel of the museum’s collection. The museum’s collection also includes Soviet-made T-54 which saw action in the 1971 Indo-Pak war and was the Army’s main battle tank for many years. A T-54 can persist in 18 ft depth of water using a snorkel and can also create its own smoke-screen. The Indian tank armour was part of the Allied operations in World War II. Since Independence, Indian tanks have been in action in Kashmir and Goa operations, in Chushul and Sela Pass during the Chinese aggression of 1962 and the Indo-Pak wars.. The latest addition to the museum is the Army’s old warhorse, Vijayanta that played a key role in the 1971 war and is now being phased out from the Army. The museum also houses diverse cavalry memorabilia in its two Memory Halls and has two Model Rooms for automotive armament and electronic equipment. Heroes’ Gallery records the exploits of the braves of the Armoured Corps over the years. An interesting facility in the vicinity of the museum is the Tank Driving Simulator used to train tank drivers. The simulator mimics the roll, pitch and yaw of tanks driven over all kinds of terrain. |
Friday, August 10, 2012
Tank Museum, Ahmednagar.
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