I figure there are going to be a few models that will show up on BOTH lists!
My nomination: Any Japanese tank. :p
Moderator: MOD_SPWaW

Then you haven't used them.Originally posted by Capt. Pixel
My nomination: Any Japanese tank. :p
More likely, I never used them correctly. :rolleyes:Originally posted by Belisarius
Then you haven't used them.![]()
My nomination: Any Japanese tank
That's more along the lines of what I was thinking in "The Worst Tank".Originally posted by willy
I think that the true test of a really bad tank should be based on an analysis of what threats it was designed to face. If crews were given a piece of equipment that was incapable of dealing with any expected opponent then that is a truly bad AFV.
A one-man, manual traverse turret on a tank whose commander/gunner is obliged to standOriginally posted by Penetrator
That's not really fair is it? It actually was the BEST tank in the world in its time. How else would it still be in service 20 years later?
Hmmm... I just tried a platoon of FT-17M's against a platoon of GE MG34 MMG's. I thought that the machine guns would rip the FT-17's apart. Not so. The tanks suppressed hard, but no effective hits were scored. I tried closing the gap, and the MMG's got chewed to pieces by op fire. Maybe they aren't so bad, in the right context.Originally posted by Penetrator
My point is that it is unfair to measure it up against WW2 tanks, as per the argument for "intended adversaries".
T-35 AHH!Originally posted by willy
The FT-17 was designed in 1917 with a rear mounted engine and a fully traversing turret, and set the pattern of almost every tank to come. It was designed as an Infantry support weapon to kill MG nests, not tanks. It was a very successful tank for it's time and was exported to many countries, armed with MG's or small cannon (up to a 75mm howitzer). By WWII it was obsolete, and not intended for a modern war. On the other hand, the Soviet T-35 was a waste of resources with a big crew and three seperate main guns (two 45mm and one 76mm). It was highly mechanically unreliable, and impossible for a commander to control effectively, on top of all that, the armour wasn't very good. The 10 man crew could have manned two tanks with the same investment in training, and the guns could have equipped three tanks!
Ah see! This is the kinda stuff I was looking for. Truly Godawful design concepts.Originally posted by troopie
The French St. Chamond, that extended far over the front and rear of the track, and got stuck easily. Or the German Sturmpanzerwagen A7V. It had all of 40mm of ground clearance, and short tracks and also got stuck easily.
troopie