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Every Reason Super Heavy Tanks Failed in World War II

#WorldWar2
#WW2Tanks
#SuperHeavyTank
During World War II, super heavy tanks were designed to dominate the battlefield with massive guns and extremely thick armor. On paper, they looked almost unstoppable. In reality, they became some of the most impractical military machines ever built.

This video explains why super heavy tanks failed as a battlefield concept. Their extreme weight overloaded bridges, roads, engines, transmissions, and recovery equipment. They consumed huge amounts of fuel, broke down constantly, and created logistical problems that modern armies could not afford.

Inside these massive vehicles, crews often faced poor visibility, cramped working conditions, slow movement, and dangerous ergonomics. Their size made them obvious targets for aircraft, artillery, mines, and infantry anti-tank teams. Even thick armor could not solve the basic problem: these tanks were too slow, too expensive, and too difficult to support.

Instead of becoming decisive superweapons, super heavy tanks drained resources that could have been used to produce more practical tanks, trucks, artillery, and aircraft. This is a historical and educational look at why bigger did not always mean better in World War II armored warfare.
#TankHistory
#MilitaryHistory
#ArmoredWarfare
#WarMachines
#WW2History
#MilitaryTechnology
#HistoryExplained

Видео Every Reason Super Heavy Tanks Failed in World War II канала Arsenal Archives
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