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Tanks in WW2. Mitchell. Tanks in WW1. Very slow. Extremely loud and hot inside the tank. Barley any air circulation. Continuously stuck in muds/water/terrain. Limited vision to outside the tank. Not very bullet proof and often weak against other cannons and tanks.
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Tanks in WW2 Mitchell
Tanks in WW1 • Very slow. • Extremely loud and hot inside the tank. • Barley any air circulation. • Continuously stuck in muds/water/terrain. • Limited vision to outside the tank. • Not very bullet proof and often weak against other cannons and tanks. • Very flat unprotected design. • Has to stop to shoot large ammunition. • Used gasoline and normally explodes when gas fumes caught muzzle sparks from guns.
Tanks in WW2 • More horsepower delivers more speed. • Faster (more traction) • Rotating turrets, can defend themselves from side attacks. • Developed a way to attack while on the move instead of stopping originally. • Using diesel for more power and it burns slower than gasoline and is less hazardous. • Slopped designed armour that can deflect bullets off on an angle. • More absorbent armour shells • More heavy powered ammunition which shoots up to 105mm. • Increased muzzle velocities for greater armour penetration. • Sleeker designs. • Some can maneuver on water. 105mm round>