Tank sürücülerinin işteki ilk günü olmalı, işin çok YAVAŞ gittiğini gördüğümde tek bir sonuç olmalıydı!
Super machines. Thank you for showing me. Best wishes and see you soon.
The tank is a tracked and armored combat vehicle whose main task is to attack enemy forces with the use of direct firepower. The features that distinguish the tank from other combat vehicles are its heavy armor, high firepower and driving gear designed to go fast on all kinds of terrain. Although they are costly and logistically demanding tools, they are indispensable elements of modern armies due to their ability to attack ground targets and undermine the morale of the infantry.[1]
Although tanks are powerful war machines, they rarely act alone. Despite their armor and mobility, they are weak against shoulder-fired anti-tank missiles, mines, artillery fire and air strikes. For this reason, they often act together with other units. At the same time, they are at a disadvantage because of the disappearance of long-range shooting in forested areas and urban areas, the difficulty of tank crews in noticing threats due to the narrow sight, and even the restriction of the turret's mobility.
Tanks were first used in World War I to break the trench warfare stalemate, and over time they took on the classic cavalry duties on the battlefield. The tank name was first used in tank factories in England. Workers were given the impression that tracked water tanks were produced for the British Army in order to hide the fact that a war vehicle was being built.[2] According to another rumor, the secret report presented to Winston Churchill by British Army Officer Ernest Swinton mentions the new motorized weapon and proposes three possible names. These are "cistern" (cistern, water tank), "motor-war car" (motorized combat vehicle) and tank. However, the tank was preferred because it is easy to say.[3] However, the most difficult scenario is in the official biography of Winston Churchill. In order to hide these new weapons, "Water Carriers for Russia" is written on the drawings and on the projects. However, while writing, it was thought that "WC to Russia" could be written as an abbreviation and it was changed to "Water tanks to Russia" in the drawings. Thereupon, the name of these weapons remained tanks.