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Flame tank Flame Tank
rdfs:comment
A number of methods of production were used. Flamethrowers were either modified versions of existing infantry flame weapons (Flammpanzer I and II) or specially designed (Flammpanzer III). They were mounted externally (Flammpanzer II), replaced existing machine gun mounts, or replaced the tank's main armament (Flammpanzer III). Ammunition for the flame weapon was either carried inside the tank, in armoured external storage, or in some cases in a special trailer behind the tank (Churchill Crocodile). Flame Tanks are a class of tanks characterized by their use of flamethrowers as weapons. They store large amounts of flammable liquid in tanks and as a result, explode violently when destroyed. A Flame Tank is a tank equipped with a Flamethrower instead of a main cannon or co-axial machine gun. The Flame Tank was first were used during World War II, during which the United States, USSR, Germany, Italy, Japan and Great Britain all produced flamethrower-equipped tanks. They were extremely effective in the jungles of the Pacific, where they could burn the vegetation and heavily fortified positions and were highly feared by the Japanese.
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"Relentless" "Blood and Iron"
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Call of Duty: World at War
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A flame tank seen in "Relentless"
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Red Army n34:
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n5:abstract
Flame Tanks are a class of tanks characterized by their use of flamethrowers as weapons. They store large amounts of flammable liquid in tanks and as a result, explode violently when destroyed. A Flame Tank is a tank equipped with a Flamethrower instead of a main cannon or co-axial machine gun. The Flame Tank was first were used during World War II, during which the United States, USSR, Germany, Italy, Japan and Great Britain all produced flamethrower-equipped tanks. They were extremely effective in the jungles of the Pacific, where they could burn the vegetation and heavily fortified positions and were highly feared by the Japanese. A number of methods of production were used. Flamethrowers were either modified versions of existing infantry flame weapons (Flammpanzer I and II) or specially designed (Flammpanzer III). They were mounted externally (Flammpanzer II), replaced existing machine gun mounts, or replaced the tank's main armament (Flammpanzer III). Ammunition for the flame weapon was either carried inside the tank, in armoured external storage, or in some cases in a special trailer behind the tank (Churchill Crocodile). Flame tanks are generally considered obsolete. Today, thermobaric weapons such as the Russian TOS-1 are considered to be the successor to flame tanks.