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Tankfest Online 2026 Historical Stream

06-28-2026 · 2h 04m

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[00:00:00] many different vehicles you're looking after now. I mean I was trained on
[00:00:03] chieftain, challenger one, challenger two, so I know those tanks. But I mean
[00:00:06] something a breakdown or yeah I mean you've got here the comments done just
[00:00:10] that honest. Quite nice, we've got it all prepped earlier in the year,
[00:00:15] absolutely fine. Put it out for tanks in action and the crutch decided to seize on.
[00:00:21] We have to delay the Soviets at the inner German border for as long as possible.
[00:00:26] This is why Chieftain ends up looking like it does.
[00:00:30] A massive gun, massively thick armor, and the engine is less of a priority.
[00:00:36] It's designed to sit back in a defensive position, hit the Russian to lock range, and fall back.
[00:00:44] Keep fighting, take it.
[00:00:46] Well, until the Royal Armour Court no longer exists.
[00:00:50] We're getting that formation, you have to have reconnaissance assets.
[00:00:57] For the British in the late 1980s, that was the CVRT family.
[00:01:04] Unfortunately it was all a bit macabre there as well.
[00:01:09] If your recce screen came into contact with the enemy formation,
[00:01:13] you were probably no longer in contact with your recce screen.
[00:01:18] Aluminium armour is not holding out against the might of 3rd Guards Tank Army.
[00:01:25] But what they are there to do is identify the main axis of advance of the onrushing Soviet forces.
[00:01:32] Giving battle group, brigade to vision and core commanders time to react.
[00:01:39] That information and the speed that information can get back to them is vital.
[00:01:43] Right. Where are we positioning our defensive light? Where are we counter attacking from?
[00:01:47] If we're at that's even possible. Where are our infantry digging in? Do we need to move them?
[00:01:52] All of this is going through. Where's our artillery going? Do we have close air support?
[00:01:58] From either the Army Air Corps or the Royal Air Force. All of this is happening at the same time.
[00:02:05] You can see why fog of battle happens.
[00:02:08] For the British this does start to change. This is a monolithic period for all sides.
[00:02:14] size, we get set in our ways and continue to do the same thing over and over again.
[00:02:19] It was a bit in the 70s. 60s and 70s, a standard army exercise for the British
[00:02:26] would involve a simulated German, sorry, a simulated Soviet counter-offensive into
[00:02:33] British lines. You'd hold them back, you'd take the losses. The enemy was usually
[00:02:38] plate by the Germans, in fact, using their leopards and eventually their martyrs, the
[00:02:46] British forces would hold them as long as possible until the ammunition, fuel and equipment
[00:02:51] stocks were depleted and then a simulated nuclear warhead would go off, which would
[00:02:57] signal NX. Problem? It's pretty morbid, really. Not great for morale. So by the early 80s,
[00:03:06] This is starting to change. A chap called General Bagnell comes in. Initially as division,
[00:03:13] then corps, then army group commander, and he instills a new level of get up and go with
[00:03:18] the armed forces with the British army of the Rhine. We're not just going to sit there
[00:03:23] and take it. We're going to fall back. We're going to meet the Soviets at the inter-German
[00:03:27] border. We're going to take the hit of that initial thrust, fall back. That is going to
[00:03:32] a whole division taking that hit. We have three armoured divisions and one infantry
[00:03:38] division to play with. That is a large formation, it's not as large as the Soviets, but it is
[00:03:42] a large formation. That first division is going to take that hit. It's going to then
[00:03:47] fall back through the other two divisions. This may seem simple, it is not. That is a
[00:03:53] incredibly complex maneuver to pull off. Those two divisions are then going to draw the Soviets
[00:03:58] in. We're going to let them have ground. We're going to draw them in as long as possible,
[00:04:03] extend their supply lines, extend their confusion. Hit them all the way though, not going to
[00:04:09] let them have it all their own way. Artillery's going to be coming in, air power's going to
[00:04:12] be coming in. We're going to be tritting them until that first division reforms. They will
[00:04:19] then form that counter attack, hopefully smashing into the Soviet lines with as much force
[00:04:25] as they can muster. If that worked, that would have been highly successful. It is an optimistic
[00:04:32] plan, but when you've got mobility on your side, it is possible. See the scorpion nipping
[00:04:39] around here? It would be a miracle if any of those survived that initial engagement,
[00:04:44] but they are still going to be knocking around in a few numbers, especially with the formations
[00:04:49] that are further back. The mobility for the British really starts to change by the mid-1980s.
[00:04:58] I love Chieftain. I'm sure we all love Chieftain. However, its engine does let it down. Its
[00:05:04] mobility is not up there with the latest bits of kit coming into the battlefield in the
[00:05:09] 70s and the early 80s. 432, the venerable 432. APC, the battle taxi, he's getting replaced
[00:05:19] in front line units by this, the Warrior Infantry Fighting Vehicle. It's not just a battle taxi,
[00:05:26] it is there to fight alongside the infantry. You mix that with Britain's new main battle tank,
[00:05:34] the Challenger One with its new engine and new armour, you have a new entirely revitalised
[00:05:40] formation that can and was planning to take the fight to the Soviets. What the Warrior allowed
[00:05:47] to do was it didn't just directly support the infantry the knock-on effect of that was that
[00:05:55] allowed the armor to be freed up the heavy armor to go off and do its own thing it was not tied to
[00:06:02] the four three twos of the somewhat defenseless infantry it is an absolute step change in capability
[00:06:13] Our colleague Stuart is going to next, in the next display, talk in a lot more detail
[00:06:22] about Warrior, so I certainly won't steal his thunder too much in that one.
[00:06:26] So what was the plan for the Soviets?
[00:06:28] The Soviet plan was relatively simple.
[00:06:33] The Soviet plan was, as I said, to smash across the inner German border and effectively keep
[00:06:39] going.
[00:06:40] I'm going to talk a little bit more about the Soviet vehicles when they start to move
[00:06:47] off so you can get a better look at them.
[00:06:51] For the moment we have Warrior, the infantry fighting vehicle which is just heading off.
[00:07:00] And then we have Chieftain, which is the classic British heavy hitter, a real old slugger of a main battle tank.
[00:07:14] Adding on to what James said, the whole idea with British MBTs is sit there, hold on, you've got a big gun, you've got heavy armour,
[00:07:24] You knock out the first few enemy tanks coming in your direction and then you bug out backwards, back to the next prepared position.
[00:07:33] When we talk about Leopard a little bit later, that is a totally different Kephard Fish, but this is a very heavily armoured and very well-armed tank.
[00:07:47] The thing sticking out the front of it is the L11 120mm gun, very very hard hitting.
[00:07:55] It can either fire APDS, it can fire thin rounds or favourites of the British Army.
[00:08:00] It can fire HESH, high explosive squash head.
[00:08:06] So Chieftain is moving round and the next vehicle to move off will be a Challenger 1.
[00:08:17] Earlier Chris spoke about Challenger 3. This is the first generation of that armor scheme.
[00:08:28] Chopper. You still really don't know what's in it today because it is that secret.
[00:08:35] Chieftain is originally a big slab of metal. This is composite. This is why it takes the shape it does.
[00:08:44] It's angular, it's slabsided, and it works fantastically.
[00:08:51] Our Chieftain Mark X is upgraded with still group.
[00:08:57] While that is technically a composite armour, it is metal backed with rubber.
[00:09:03] Challenger is a whole different ball game.
[00:09:07] Its gun is exactly the same as a Chieftain's.
[00:09:10] its fire control system is near enough the same as a chieftain mark 11 but that mobility really
[00:09:17] gives this tank the edge all those reforms i spoke about in the mid 80s this is what allows the army
[00:09:24] the royal armor corps in particular to go out into desert storm what we call operation grand b in
[00:09:31] 1991 where a full armored division and perform exceptionally well in offensive maneuver warfare
[00:09:40] It was an army prepared to fight on the northwest, on the northern plains of Germany.
[00:09:48] It ended up doing, well, basically the opposite of that in 1991, but it achieved it.
[00:09:56] That officer corps, that leadership corps, those senior non-commissioned officers,
[00:10:01] they grew up in the army of the early 80s.
[00:10:10] James was just mentioning the performance of Charlie Won in Op Granby in the first Gulf War.
[00:10:17] Having spoken to General Sabatric accordingly about this, he was the guy who had a big hand
[00:10:24] in the origination of the vehicle.
[00:10:32] But up to the point where Challenger departed for the Gulf, their maintenance record was abysmal,
[00:10:39] shorter spares, what happens is an awful lot of cannibalization to get the vehicles going,
[00:10:44] desertization and then finally following that they did perform extremely well. They moved
[00:10:51] for about 350 kilometers in four days and did a very good job. Now looking at the Warsaw
[00:10:57] Pact vehicles, here you have the BRDM2 which is an amphibious scout car, amphibious that's
[00:11:06] words that's going to occur repeatedly. BRDM-2, that's the AmpliA Scout Car. See how that
[00:11:13] and the vehicle behind it, the 1890, they're both boat shaped. They are both designed to
[00:11:17] cross bodies of water on the surface. The BRDM-2, it's a Scout Car, they're used as
[00:11:24] command variants, anti-tank guided missile variants. This one, quite a jazzy camouflage
[00:11:31] scheme there is actually a nuclear biological and chemical warfare survey
[00:11:36] vehicle. But the whole thing about Warsaw Pact reconnaissance is it was
[00:11:41] aggressive. They went and go forward, probe the enemy, look for weaknesses, and
[00:11:46] suss out the routes by which the main diversions could follow. Now behind the
[00:11:52] RDM-2 is an OT-90. Now those of you who know about tanks will be thinking well
[00:11:59] Well, that's not what that's called at all, that's a BMP.
[00:12:02] It's actually a Czechoslovak version of the soviet-designed BMP armoured personnel carrier.
[00:12:10] It's got a slightly different turret. It was actually altered in the 1990s,
[00:12:17] and originally it started off with a 75mm gromm low velocity gun in the turret.
[00:12:25] been replaced with a 14.5mm machine gun, which is actually round for round a far more effective
[00:12:34] weapon. The whole thing about it is an infantry fighting vehicle, so it can take part in combat.
[00:12:40] The main thing about it, in the back there are eight, what we call, dismounts, infantrymen.
[00:12:46] As it goes past you'll see there are rifle ports in the side, never really quite understood
[00:12:51] what they're all about. The whole thing is that infantry and tanks work together.
[00:12:57] Now, classic T-TAC, T-72, comes out as the one I've suggested in the early 1970s. To
[00:13:06] start off with, it's a budget replacement for the T-64, which is too expensive and difficult
[00:13:11] to build. But the T-72 is an absolute classic of its type. When you look at it, you think
[00:13:20] T-Tank. It's low to the ground. It has got that walk-shaped turret. They've
[00:13:27] deliberately made the thing lower and in order to do that they get rid of the
[00:13:31] only crew member who needs to stand up to do his job. That's the loader. So
[00:13:35] underneath that turret there is an auto loader of the rounds. It's
[00:13:41] also loaded by the breach and there's a carousel underneath. The gunner presses
[00:13:46] button and it puts the right round of the bleach. It's actually very efficient indeed.
[00:13:52] The gun is 125mm, very powerful, but the whole tank itself is
[00:14:02] lighter and faster than something like chieftain. The Soviet water pack wanted vehicles
[00:14:10] and would come aground, do it quickly and get the job done.
[00:14:14] We have a friend of ours, Dac Patrick.
[00:14:17] He is East German.
[00:14:19] He was actually, he served on East German T-72s.
[00:14:24] We were talking about Chieftain and he said,
[00:14:26] I can't, we couldn't imagine why you built a tank
[00:14:30] so big and so heavy.
[00:14:32] Now as that T-72 goes past, you'll notice there is a tube
[00:14:36] attached to the side of the turret.
[00:14:39] That is not what it looks like, something like a tow missile.
[00:14:42] It actually contains the component parts
[00:14:45] for a four-meter snorkel.
[00:14:48] And that can be inserted.
[00:14:51] I mentioned the fact that all wallpack armor
[00:14:55] is either amphibious or submersible.
[00:14:59] It's very difficult to make a main battle tank float.
[00:15:01] It's too heavy.
[00:15:02] So the T-72, you put that snorkel up
[00:15:05] and it crosses a river like that.
[00:15:08] That way they get around the fact that us outside NATO, we'd blow up all the bridges to stop them.
[00:15:15] Now, moving off, one of my absolute favourites. This is a Canadian Leopard 1 tank.
[00:15:23] Now, Leopard 1 is the first tank built by Christmassy for the post-war West German Bundeswehr.
[00:15:32] And it is superb.
[00:15:35] That's a Canadian one.
[00:15:37] The other one, just by me, just up on the bun,
[00:15:39] is actually Australian.
[00:15:41] The third, Leopard 2, is Dutch,
[00:15:45] because it's not only a superb tag,
[00:15:46] it's a superb export success.
[00:15:49] Everybody wanted to buy Leopard.
[00:15:52] It's got 105 millimeter gun, British designed gun,
[00:15:56] but it's built around speed rather than heavy armor.
[00:16:02] Leopard 1 is about 15 times lighter and roughly the same number of miles an hour faster than a chief.
[00:16:12] The fourth here was that tank guns were so effective, it didn't matter how much army you hit it with, it would not do any good.
[00:16:21] So the idea with Leopard, speed, mobility, speed as all or if you like.
[00:16:27] That was the idea, and they weren't going to sit there and hold out.
[00:16:33] They were going to counterattack.
[00:16:35] So as Warsaw Pact columns came across, they would manoeuvre to flank them and do the job that way.
[00:16:43] See what? Two leopards once, and then James was a leopard too, isn't there?
[00:16:52] If you can hear me over those three engines.
[00:16:55] As I said earlier in the World War Two battle, it's absolutely fantastic to see multiple
[00:17:01] vehicles of the same type or similar type in our arena.
[00:17:06] Because unless you're on a battlefield or on a training area, where else are you going
[00:17:10] to see this?
[00:17:12] This is a tank troop.
[00:17:14] This is the smallest formation that tanks are going to be moving around the battlefield.
[00:17:19] And something you may or may not have noticed, they're not subtle.
[00:17:23] on how they're stopped. This is why you need smaller quieter wrecky vehicles. These things
[00:17:29] they're going to commit and there's basically no going back once these things get into the battle.
[00:17:34] You can hear them coming. I'm sure you could all feel them coming as well.
[00:17:41] That is the upside of a tank you can pass into anything else. You can stay in a position,
[00:17:47] in an overwatch position, moving that tarry, getting your arcs properly secured. Then you can
[00:17:53] move off if you need to or fall back or engage. That 120-millimeter smoothbore main gun on
[00:18:01] the Leo 2 is an exceptional piece of kit. You saw a later variance of that earlier on the Challenger 3.
[00:18:13] The Challenger 3's one is slightly longer but it will fire the same ammunition
[00:18:18] and it is incredibly lethal ammunition. When Leppard came into service it gave the British
[00:18:27] Army of the Rhine a bit of a shock. The combination of the Marder, Germany's infantry fighting
[00:18:34] vehicle and the new Mobile Leo IIs when coming into contact with British Centurions and 432s,
[00:18:46] Well, British infantry didn't really come out on top on that one, because Chieftain has lost the firepower advantage
[00:18:53] and the infantry are totally outgunned, which is why the Charlie I warrior combo is so important for the history of the British Army.
[00:19:05] Leo II is not only an export success, as Chris said, it's not only in service today like Leo I, it is in production today.
[00:19:16] Leo 2A7 is being fielded, Leo 2A8 is in production and the order books are full.
[00:19:27] If anybody tells you that tanks are obsolete, just look at who is buying tanks in how much numbers.
[00:19:33] It is staggering. If we wanted to buy Leo 2 for our daily driver, we'd be waiting about five years for the first one.
[00:19:41] There we are, ladies and gents. That's what's called a neutral term. If you do that on
[00:19:49] a tarmac road, the council are going to be pretty act off because you've just handed
[00:19:52] them a big pile of tarmac and the curb stones from both sides. It is something we do slightly
[00:19:58] frown upon. But when you look at those three leopards, you are seeing a considerable amount
[00:20:03] of tank development. From the early, Leopard 1, the Canadian, which has been improved in
[00:20:09] in some ways it's got secondary armour through to the Australian, the last in the queue.
[00:20:18] That has had quite a bit more development, it's been up armoured, it's got better fire
[00:20:22] control system. Still the same L7 gun, but then you have got Leopard 2 and that is still
[00:20:30] very much a current main battle tank. It is in service, that particular example, with
[00:20:37] the Royal Netherlands Army and we are very grateful to them for bringing it here today.
[00:20:55] So as the Leopards make their way off, don't go anywhere, you have got the British Army
[00:20:59] display to come but we hope you have enjoyed this look at post-war NATO
[00:21:07] Cold War armour. And did we say the Leopard 2 had great mobility?
[00:21:17] That's the Royal Netherlands Army just show what it can really do. That's
[00:21:21] impressive.
[00:21:29] Victory Lap 2, bloody marvellous.
[00:21:36] Thank you everybody and we are going to hand back to Steve Bulley.
[00:21:44] Thank you so much James and Chris and well.
[00:21:48] And welcome back to Tankfest Online 2026.
[00:21:51] Unfortunately we did have some unavoidable, unforeseeable and very unfortunate technical issues.
[00:21:56] It should be back. It doesn't affect the drops, and I hope the YouTube stream is back up and running and all smooth
[00:22:04] Yeah, yeah, that's if it happens it's not it's like a thousand degrees out here this yeah
[00:22:09] So I did want to announce that we do have a brand new giveaway
[00:22:13] And it will be coming from one of our community managers called Dwight many of you will be familiar with Chris
[00:22:19] But before then I believe you have a little bit of news to share
[00:22:22] about the next segment. I do well I'm very excited to say that the model we're
[00:22:30] about to see is based on our very own King Tiger V2 with a unique
[00:22:36] pre-production turret. Yeah sorry it's very windy. Okay if we can have a quick
[00:22:40] look at that video now hopefully it's gonna be very quick.
[00:22:52] Hey there tankers, the museum is currently restoring this King Tiger V2 behind me, but
[00:22:59] you, if you're lucky enough, were able to win this little one if you follow the green
[00:23:04] link available in the chat.
[00:23:06] Good luck and see you around.
[00:23:09] Looks so good that model.
[00:23:14] You've got to enter right now.
[00:23:16] We'll look up for Nick on the entry list.
[00:23:18] I'd love one myself.
[00:23:20] Now, both at the Tank Museum and in World of Tanks,
[00:23:23] it's always those weird and wonderful vehicles
[00:23:26] that get the most attention.
[00:23:28] Now, our next video features James Donaldson,
[00:23:31] who has been doing some of the commentary here
[00:23:33] this afternoon, asking what it is
[00:23:36] that makes a tank design weird.
[00:23:40] What makes a tank weird?
[00:23:42] We know what makes a tank bad.
[00:23:44] We know what makes a tank good.
[00:23:45] And maybe even what makes a tank ugly.
[00:23:49] What makes a tank weird? When I was first posed this question, I thought it would be an easy
[00:23:54] answer, but the more you look into it, the more difficult it becomes to pin down. But I'm going
[00:23:59] to give it a go anyway. First things first, being weird does not mean being bad. A weird
[00:24:06] tank doesn't have to be bad, but a bad tank can absolutely be weird. There are plenty of weird
[00:24:13] tanks that are terrible, like the Valiant. And there are plenty of terrible tanks that
[00:24:19] aren't necessarily that weird at all, like the Covenanta. And there are tanks that are
[00:24:24] weird and good, like the S tank. And there's also tanks that are weird for the sake of
[00:24:29] being weird. But what I didn't want to do with this video was just list a bunch of weird
[00:24:34] tanks we have in the collection. Instead, I conducted a highly scientific study. I sent
[00:24:40] a questionnaire out to all staff members of the Tank Museum asking what their weirdest
[00:24:44] tank is and why. The main results of this show that the Tank Museum staff know far too much
[00:24:51] about tanks to come to any sort of consensus, but it did show that a few patterns were emerging.
[00:24:58] Turretless tanks, not tank destroyers, actual turretless tanks. These immediately raised
[00:25:03] Eyebrows. Multi-turreted tanks. A whole category of what were they thinking?
[00:25:09] Normal tanks with weird bits stuck on. These aren't necessarily weird tanks, but they've had weirdness added to them.
[00:25:16] Experimental designs. This is where true weirdness thrives. When designers are allowed to go wild, they really do.
[00:25:24] And the French. A category of their own. French tanks are often weird not because they need to be, but because they simply are.
[00:25:32] Take the AMX 13 for example, it may look like just a light tank,
[00:25:36] but it was one of the main tanks of the French army.
[00:25:39] They could have built it like a normal light tank, but no, they decided to put the engine at the front
[00:25:44] and the ortho-loading oscillating turret at the rear, but because they could.
[00:25:50] But if we had to pick one tank that would truly answer the question,
[00:25:54] what makes a tank weird, it would have to be the MBT-70.
[00:25:59] Now, I would like to make an honourable mention to this, the EBR. Yes, I know it's not a tank,
[00:26:05] but it is really weird. Look, so we've got oscillating, also loading turret in the middle.
[00:26:10] You've got two road wheels in the centre that drop down that are only made of steel for a bit
[00:26:15] of extra traction. You've got a driver at the front and at the back, and they're really small
[00:26:19] compartments anyway, and the most confusing hatch system my colleagues have ever come across.
[00:26:25] The MBT-70 has all the hallmarks of weirdness and then some. The gun, 152
[00:26:32] millimeters and not really a gun, it's a gun launcher, primarily for firing the
[00:26:37] Shaleili ATGW but by this point the US Army had already worked out it was just
[00:26:43] kind of bad. The turret, it may look normal but it has a sub turret and it's
[00:26:48] not even for the commander like the Conqueror, it's for the driver. The idea
[00:26:52] was to make the hull as small as possible, but that didn't really work because the engine
[00:26:58] still had to go somewhere. The suspension is actively controlled, so while in theory a good idea,
[00:27:04] it was very complicated and does just make the thing look really goofy. Plus the whole project
[00:27:10] was a US-German collaboration for a new generation of main battle tanks, but by this point everyone
[00:27:16] had kind of worked out that conventional tanks worked best, and this wasn't a single oddity
[00:27:21] of an experiment. They ended up building 22 prototypes and the whole project cost both
[00:27:26] nations just $3.5 billion in today's money. In the end, I do think it just comes down to vibes
[00:27:35] and some tanks just have weird vibes. Well, weird vibes. Richard, what tank do you think has the
[00:27:46] the weird is fire will do that's a good question and I have to say I mean you
[00:27:50] know the oscillating turrets the French I not so long ago drove an AMX 13 and I
[00:27:55] wouldn't say it was weird but it was just unusual obviously for me as a
[00:27:57] British tank you to do it incredibly small I find it you know actually quite
[00:28:01] quite difficult to get into certainly the commander's capola and I'm not a
[00:28:06] particularly big chap yeah and you know the French have got a history of very
[00:28:10] much doing their own thing. Think about the Schneider, the Shah B1, the ARL 44 and the
[00:28:18] AMX 50, which also I think has an oscillating turret, doesn't it? It does. It does. Now of
[00:28:23] course we're talking a bit about French tanks now. Now a few weeks ago I was incredibly fortunate
[00:28:28] we traveled across to the Maizière de Blondet, the French tank museum in Samur and I caught up
[00:28:33] with Adrien and some of the staff just to have a look at some of the refreshes that they've done
[00:28:39] on the museum and also of course the big news is the Tiger 1 restoration.
[00:28:46] So we're very pleased to be back here at the Musée de Blonde, the French Tank Museum
[00:28:50] in Saint-Mure. Now I believe that since we were last year there have been some pretty
[00:28:54] major changes to the museum so I'm very pleased to be joined by Adrian.
[00:28:59] Thank you, thank you for coming. Glad to welcome you. Yes, there has been a lot of work. Shall
[00:29:06] we begin?
[00:29:07] Absolutely. This is the very beginning. This is the First World War All, with the very first
[00:29:15] French tank, the Schneider, on the Saint-Chamo. Originally, our museum is only on the countryside.
[00:29:25] We have the German All, the French All, etc. We changed all in January. Our museum is now
[00:29:35] in chronological order.
[00:29:37] So this is really, really simpler.
[00:29:41] So it's a lot of movement of vehicles
[00:29:43] and quite hard work, I'd imagine.
[00:29:45] Yes, it was, because now in here we have 170 vehicles.
[00:29:53] All of them, for about, still in running condition
[00:29:58] or complete in mechanical parts.
[00:30:02] This is quite something.
[00:30:04] Here we are at the beginning of World War II.
[00:30:08] You can see really simply the bad guys in dark gray,
[00:30:15] and the good guys with colors.
[00:30:19] Those are French tanks.
[00:30:21] This is the only museum you can see them,
[00:30:24] because, well, we have a French tank museum.
[00:30:27] Absolutely. The camouflage, fantastic.
[00:30:29] Yes. This is camouflage from the beginning of the war.
[00:30:33] We were very, very colorful, but then, then we lacked of time.
[00:30:40] So we do it simpler, only with two colors.
[00:30:46] We are still at the beginning of the war.
[00:30:49] This is the biggest tank, the biggest French tank, the B1 beast.
[00:30:55] Only a few exemplaries nowadays, still in museums.
[00:31:00] Of course, we put just at the front its enemy, the 88, the only gun which can take down the B1s at the time.
[00:31:14] Then, of course, at the France, we'll enter USSR.
[00:31:22] And USSR was, as you know, a very, very, very bad news for German tank,
[00:31:32] because the T-34 and KV-1 were just tough monsters at the time.
[00:31:40] Yeah, absolutely. Of course.
[00:31:42] Of course, I think it's important to add as well that the museum at the moment is closed, which is great for us for filming.
[00:31:48] Absolutely. The museum is closed. We are just before the entry of the visitors. So this is a museum just for yourself.
[00:31:58] And I believe there's still quite a lot of work to do as far as the behind the scenes.
[00:32:02] Yes, absolutely. There is only the vehicles ready to be discovered.
[00:32:08] all the elements to understand the history will be put on time this year or next year.
[00:32:19] Oh wow, okay, so a lot of work to be done. Yes, a very, very big chunk of work.
[00:32:24] We are in the desert part. British tanks on your left, Italians and Germans on the right.
[00:32:35] We are so happy, so lucky to have Italian tanks. This is quite rare vehicles.
[00:32:42] Now would you say the majority of the collection here is, was it found in France?
[00:32:47] You haven't got stuff that's been bought across from other countries or the majority of the collection was actually here?
[00:32:53] This is a long story short. Most of them for the Second World War, where, well, just took in France.
[00:33:04] took in France, because we were one of the major battlefields of World War II.
[00:33:12] We French recovered a lot of tanks just for studies. We wanted to rebuild our industrial
[00:33:21] capacities to build tanks, so we just get Germans, Americans, British tanks to study what was a good
[00:33:31] tank, what was a good idea to get them on built bitter tanks?
[00:33:39] Well, of course, we still have our Tiger II.
[00:33:44] For now, only one still in running condition, which I'm sure many people
[00:33:48] will remember, of course, from Tankfest last year.
[00:33:51] Absolutely.
[00:33:52] And we are really, really lucky because we do know for sure, at last,
[00:33:58] majority office, it's a history.
[00:34:01] It was deployed in Normandy in 1944, but its own crew had to blow it up, because of course this is not the enemy that can destroy a big vehicle like that, it's just lack of fuel, lack of mechanical parts and breakdowns.
[00:34:21] I said that we are lucky, we are lucky also because we are friends out there, this is
[00:34:29] a gift, this is a Sherman Firefly from our friends in Belgium, Baston-Barax, send it
[00:34:40] to us.
[00:34:41] We are in 1944, German's vehicle on your right, British one on the left, and maybe, maybe
[00:34:55] this peculiar center was on the beaches on D-Day.
[00:35:01] This is possible, Churchill, of course.
[00:35:05] One of my favourites.
[00:35:07] Yes.
[00:35:09] We do not know for now its own history because sadly we got those vehicles but paper doesn't do the same thing.
[00:35:22] We only add at the time the idea to get a vehicle, not its peculiarity.
[00:35:32] This is a really interesting part, because everybody talk about big German tanks,
[00:35:40] that allies were building also big vehicles.
[00:35:46] But, those things are the biggest tanks of World War II.
[00:35:53] Jagdpanther, of course, Panther on the Tiger II.
[00:36:03] This very panther is unique.
[00:36:07] It was took to the Germans by the 2nd French Armored Division, which is here in representation
[00:36:18] Louise's, this map of France on the cross.
[00:36:25] There are some Second World War vehicles,
[00:36:28] but this peculiar hole is not about Second World War,
[00:36:32] but about colonial wars.
[00:36:35] OK, the main idea is to show all the periods
[00:36:41] when tanks are not vehicle, obviously, where used.
[00:36:46] And to understand those kind of vehicles,
[00:36:51] this will be a special area to see what is an armor.
[00:36:59] As you can see, this is a good example.
[00:37:02] We'll talk about that.
[00:37:03] What is power, but on the portal view of firepower.
[00:37:10] So this is the gun from IMX-17B.
[00:37:16] And then we enter Cold War, authentic piece of Berlin Wall and then here Soviet
[00:37:28] vehicle on your right, on your left, a light. Yes of course, you saw that. My
[00:37:38] favorite, the cheek. Yes of course. Makes me feel old the thing that I served on that.
[00:37:43] No, no, don't say that.
[00:37:49] You were asking where those tanks come from.
[00:37:54] Yeah, yeah.
[00:37:55] For a part now, those vehicles weren't on a battlefield entrance, of course.
[00:38:01] Of course.
[00:38:02] But we are here, some vehicles took by French forces around the world.
[00:38:09] because with the United Nations giving us areas to maintain peace, we had some
[00:38:23] fights to do and we took some vehicles from our enemies and those vehicles are
[00:38:32] but in display here at the museum.
[00:38:37] But while all the vehicles were in took with the United Nations,
[00:38:43] this very vehicle here was took on Egyptian access in 1956.
[00:38:52] And most of the vehicle from the Cold War era are gifts,
[00:38:58] like those two vehicles from Sweden,
[00:39:02] and we even have a Swiss tank.
[00:39:07] This is a neutral corner.
[00:39:12] Of course, this is the Vietnam War corner
[00:39:19] with American tank M41 and PT-76.
[00:39:27] Do enemies at the time?
[00:39:31] Have you got a particular favourite in the whole collection or
[00:39:35] in the whole collection? Yes.
[00:39:39] I must admit I am a big fan of
[00:39:43] the S tank. Oh, okay.
[00:39:47] I think this is really, really interesting.
[00:39:51] Why do a tank without a turret?
[00:39:55] This is not a tank with a turret. It is a turret with tracks.
[00:39:59] Exactly, yes.
[00:40:00] This is fascinating.
[00:40:01] And it's so specifically designed for this, you know, just hiding and waiting and sandwiching.
[00:40:07] Yes, absolutely.
[00:40:08] Here we are in the Gulf War.
[00:40:12] Those two very vehicles were took on the Salam troops in 1991.
[00:40:21] There's a IMX 10 ERC, IMX 30, those two tanks were on the French side, Americans still had
[00:40:37] the time, the Marines had still M-60, had a fantastic vehicle there, of course, a Challenger.
[00:40:47] This is another part of the story, this is a whole to conclude the story.
[00:40:56] We begin here at the Gulf War, 1991, and we finish this very last war with the Leclerc.
[00:41:05] But in between, you have Yugoslavia, this is a Yugoslavian vehicle, you have, I said
[00:41:13] and it's NATO and the United Nations operations in white, with UN.
[00:41:22] This vehicle was in Lebanon in 2006.
[00:41:32] Last but not least, the Boclairek, of course,
[00:41:38] and some other armor from France, an XLT-B2 Brenniss, just before the Leclerc took over.
[00:41:51] A Leopold II prototype, quite unusual, and a Mercadar-Mercadar-1, a gift from Israel.
[00:42:02] Brilliant. Adrian, thank you so much for this quick wish of Stott's all around here.
[00:42:08] all I can say is obviously anybody that's in the area got to pop in and got to see you.
[00:42:12] And obviously the work doesn't end there. Restorations and your fantastic workshop staff.
[00:42:17] And we are going to have a look later at the very exciting project that you're working on at the moment.
[00:42:21] Absolutely. I go one.
[00:42:25] One of our greatest pride here in Somere is our mechanical workshop. Four mechanics,
[00:42:32] and volunteers are able to make running 100 historical vehicles from the first French tank
[00:42:41] 1917 to nowadays tanks. There is two French tanks 30 years past Renault Air 35 and Inix 30 B2.
[00:42:55] The little one on my left is a vehicle which I've fought in the 40s at the beginning of the Second World War.
[00:43:06] This is a quite colorful vehicle, but it is the colors used at the beginning of the Air Certified production.
[00:43:15] This is normal but quickly after some years there was only two colors used green and brown.
[00:43:28] On my right, 30 years later, iMix 30B, which entered production in the 60s and this version
[00:43:37] is an IMX30B2 production at the beginning of the 80s. This is a very much potent material.
[00:43:47] It is an MBT main battle tank and this was our tank during Cold War.
[00:43:57] You can see them on historical display running here in Somere twice a year.
[00:44:03] While not freeing, it's an international model competition, and a second time in July the
[00:44:11] weekend on the 14th of July.
[00:44:14] Now, a little stick-tick.
[00:44:33] So, Richard, come in.
[00:44:44] Thank you very much.
[00:44:46] Welcome to the workshop, too, as a museum de blandet of Somnir.
[00:44:51] Thank you.
[00:44:52] The beating heart of any museum.
[00:44:53] Yes, of course.
[00:44:56] Now we have four mechanicals to work on the big project to the Tiger I.
[00:45:05] It's for many years where we work too.
[00:45:09] We have different partners, the Panzer Form, to work with us to make this tank work again.
[00:45:19] And I can imagine, so how many years has this been now?
[00:45:23] Is it the second year?
[00:45:24] No, up to three years.
[00:45:26] It will drive again at the end of this summer.
[00:45:33] And we mean that it's work with the four mechanikers.
[00:45:41] We volunteer three years to make this project to end it.
[00:45:48] Fantastic. And what would you say the work so far?
[00:45:51] What's been the hardest thing, do you think, the most difficult part of the whole project?
[00:45:54] We have all the parts we have put out to check everything that will be completed in the second
[00:46:07] World War II was.
[00:46:11] I've always thought, I mean, when you talk about parts and everything, I mean, the technology,
[00:46:16] everybody says the technology for the Tiger was quite complicated.
[00:46:19] The gearbox is going complicated.
[00:46:21] The engine was complicated, all is completed, but it's a very great experience to work to this,
[00:46:32] with the mechanicals, with the volunteers, and with the partners to give us the help.
[00:46:46] Wow, it's fantastic and of course it will mean that your museum is
[00:46:50] it's only the second Tiger one that will be running in the world?
[00:46:53] Yes, of course, of course and it was a great experience to see the
[00:47:01] bus tanks drive under perhaps next year or later on the running year of the Tankfest.
[00:47:10] Oh brilliant, I mean for us it's fantastic and thank you and all of your team so much for
[00:47:14] for all the hard work that goes into keeping the history alive.
[00:47:18] Yes.
[00:47:19] Thank you very much.
[00:47:20] Yes, thank you, Richard.
[00:47:22] We are incredibly lucky here in the Muse de Blondie
[00:47:26] because we do know the story of our Peculia Tiger I tank.
[00:47:32] This vehicle, hair is in pieces.
[00:47:37] The other gun, the famous 88 millimeter gun, fearsome.
[00:47:44] We have here the piece, the toughest piece of its armor, 12 centimeters.
[00:47:54] It's incredibly thick for the beginning of EV tanks.
[00:48:00] But this Pequeria Tiger was engaged in Normandy in 1944.
[00:48:08] It was sent to the 102nd SS AV Tank Battalion in May 1944.
[00:48:20] It was deployed then in Normandy and it fought.
[00:48:25] We do not know which vehicles, which troops it killed or it was battling against.
[00:48:34] But what we do know for sure, at the end of its story, this vehicle was trying to flee
[00:48:45] from the last pocket at the end of the Normandy fighting in late August in the night of the
[00:48:56] 80th to the 90th. It tried with two other
[00:49:01] Tigers to break through the British lines.
[00:49:07] It was night, black night, no headlights. The three vehicles in line tried to break through.
[00:49:16] The first can pass through, but the second was stopped by the British.
[00:49:22] anti-tank fire break its tracks and the second tiger is stopped right there and the third one
[00:49:33] this one smash into the second stopped immediately and the crew was forced to abandon the vehicle.
[00:49:44] vehicle. The vehicle is then retrieved, some time later, by three French fighters that
[00:49:54] reused it against Germans. This is the story we want to tell. This vehicle, once an oppressive
[00:50:07] vehicle, then be a liberation tool in France, and after a tool to occupy Germany.
[00:50:20] Because this Peculia tank, at first named Bretagne by the Free French, was renamed
[00:50:27] Colmar at the time it went to occupation of Germany.
[00:50:34] to one man, which was Michel Obris, the father-founder of our museum. This tiger was retrieved
[00:50:42] from a storage unit of the French army and in the 70s it was put for the first time on display
[00:50:50] Asonur, in the Musée des Blindés.
[00:50:54] Bonjour, je suis Franck, du Musée des Blindés, donc je suis mécanicien.
[00:50:58] Donc j'ai eu la grande chance de travailler sur le titre qui est derrière moi.
[00:51:03] Donc ma spécialité a été un peu de tout.
[00:51:06] C'est-à-dire que j'ai fait la partie surtout avant,
[00:51:10] c'est-à-dire tout ce qui est réducteur.
[00:51:12] Donc toute la partie derrière le Barbotin.
[00:51:15] So the biggest difficulties we had was that, as it did not run for about 70 years,
[00:51:20] so a lot of grip, a lot of ballon broke.
[00:51:24] So in the assembly, we realized that there were a lot of things that were leaking too.
[00:51:29] So we had to redo the joints.
[00:51:31] Then we did all the mask part, so we made it mobile because it was gripped.
[00:51:38] After, we did the entire internal greasing system.
[00:51:44] So we have greased all the arm parts.
[00:51:46] So the arms have been removed,
[00:51:48] all the arm part has been checked,
[00:51:51] and every grease pipe has been cleaned to be able to return.
[00:51:56] So that's all the parts we've done until today.
[00:52:01] So here we are on new elements to redo.
[00:52:07] Hello, I'm Alexandre,
[00:52:09] I'm the workshop of the museum of the blind.
[00:52:10] So here we are on the Tyron 1.
[00:52:13] We are in the second phase of the restoration of the car.
[00:52:17] We have put in place the whole part of the gearbox and connected the gearbox.
[00:52:23] Yesterday, we put the engine in place.
[00:52:26] We are connecting this one and checking that there is no more leak.
[00:52:31] And then we will go back to a second phase, which is the deceleration of the vehicle.
[00:52:34] And once the vehicle is validated, we will be able to put the turret,
[00:52:39] to make the cannon and to make its way to China.
[00:53:01] A massive thank you of course to the staff at the Misére de Blonday in Saint-Mer, France.
[00:53:05] I'm absolutely incredible to catch up with them.
[00:53:07] them. The restoration project as well is going incredibly well. I feel absolutely
[00:53:12] honoured because when we were visiting was the first startup as you saw in the
[00:53:15] video there, the very first start of the engine. So amazing and of course we will
[00:53:19] keep you updated on how that restoration is going and ultimately it looks like
[00:53:24] there could be another Tiger I. Absolutely and we wish them the very best of luck.
[00:53:29] You know the Musee de Blonde is easily the second best Tank Museum in the
[00:53:34] entire world and hopefully you know one day we'd love to see that tiger perhaps over here at a
[00:53:39] future tank first but now speaking of restorations we're of course working on the King Tiger V2 of
[00:53:45] course at the moment but we've also decided to put the band back together and work on another
[00:53:52] big British beast. The Tank Museum and Mr Hughes are partnering once again this time
[00:54:00] to bring the Conqueror Heavy tank back to life.
[00:54:03] I just abused and but I'm here with a giant piece of metal which is in fact a Conqueror tank.
[00:54:09] We're going to try and restore it with the tank museum.
[00:54:13] You might remember us from a few years ago, we had a small party in helping them restore
[00:54:18] one of the biggest tanks ever made, the FE's Order of the World 5,
[00:54:22] and brought it back tonight and displayed it at Tankfest.
[00:54:26] we plan to do a very similar thing with this. Now for those of you who don't know there aren't actually
[00:54:33] any running concrete gun tanks left in the world. So our plan will be to bring this toy back alive
[00:54:40] now we're not going to shoot it but it will be toyed around as a working display to be seen at the tanker.
[00:54:47] The vehicle chosen for the project Conqueror 40 BAA1 has recently returned to the tank museum
[00:54:54] from IWM Duxford, where it's been on loan since the 1990s.
[00:54:59] Having been built near Glasgow, it entered service in March 1955, and was sent to serve
[00:55:04] with the British Army of the Rhine as a troop trial vehicle.
[00:55:08] It's thought it may have been the second production vehicle off the line, but its service life
[00:55:12] was short.
[00:55:13] By 1966, the Conqueror was effectively obsolete, and it was sent back to the British Army Storage
[00:55:19] facility at Luggishaw, where its original tire was removed. By 1975 it was being used
[00:55:26] as a tug at an M.O.D. establishment and ten years later it was donated to the Tank Museum.
[00:55:33] This is its current state now, no idea what that is. That seat doesn't look like the
[00:55:41] most comfortable thing to sit on, but the dashboard and all the controls are present,
[00:55:48] The war is present.
[00:55:49] One thing you might be wondering is, what is this?
[00:55:52] This is a Windsor turret.
[00:55:54] It's a relic of the Conqueror Development Programme.
[00:55:56] They have been designed to match the weight
[00:55:58] of the then unfinished Conqueror gun turrets,
[00:56:01] so trials of the new chassis could proceed.
[00:56:04] This will be coming up,
[00:56:05] and we will be putting a proper genuine turret for it.
[00:56:11] And that's gonna be very handy.
[00:56:13] Researchers at the town museum have identified
[00:56:15] an original 120mm gun turret on an MOD range
[00:56:20] and are in negotiations to recover it
[00:56:22] to complete the vehicle.
[00:56:23] So there is, I think there's too much going to be done.
[00:56:26] But on all these pretty things,
[00:56:29] quite common, the boxes are a little bit rotten.
[00:56:33] But let's take a look inside.
[00:56:45] Oh, yes it's mingling there, that's what people don't probably realise is there.
[00:56:52] Just how hot it is today and the smell of old stale peckle coming out of there is really
[00:56:58] nice.
[00:56:59] Shall we show them a little bit, a bit of a closer look inside.
[00:57:02] Now it may look terrible, don't get me wrong, it is terrible, but it isn't that bad that
[00:57:07] we can fix them.
[00:57:08] This is it's current state. No one's touched it. This is how it came.
[00:57:18] There's the back of the nuclear engine. Everything is in place.
[00:57:28] There's a lot of room in here. A lot of room for parking.
[00:57:34] Well, I've been a threat since very smelly.
[00:57:40] Well, I say you might be wondering what is probably going to be the biggest challenge with this project.
[00:57:46] And, of course, I've never worked on a conqueror before.
[00:57:50] So I'm going to go with many things, will be, but my main concern is actually Watson-Deneke here.
[00:57:58] here and that is a M120 and for those that don't know, essentially it's a meter engine
[00:58:05] out of the Centurion tank, you know, someone has took the carburetors off, thrown them
[00:58:10] in the bin and put a fuel injection system on, bringing in what was a 600 horsepower engine,
[00:58:16] all the way up to an 810 horsepower engine, which in fairness is quite impressive, but
[00:58:22] they weren't very reliable when they were new, so that worries me.
[00:58:26] If you would like to help support this project, please visit our website and help us raise
[00:58:31] the £50,000 we need to finish the job.
[00:58:35] Donating is easy and we're able to accept donations from around the world.
[00:58:39] And I want to say, huge thanks to the Tech Museum for trusting us with this project and
[00:58:44] the 4.05.
[00:58:45] We can't wait to see the Amazon.
[00:58:48] The Tech Museum, Mr Hughes.
[00:58:50] We came, we restored, we conqueror, good.
[00:58:56] Thank you for your time Mr. Hughes, another exciting project and fantastic from him and
[00:59:05] of course the Tate Museum for getting off the ground.
[00:59:07] I have to say the video that made me laugh the most was we conquer a road.
[00:59:13] That's what I believe your idea is.
[00:59:14] So well done for that Nick of course as well.
[00:59:16] Don't forget to check out Mr Hughes YouTube channel of course and we went with Baited
[00:59:21] Breath to get updates about the restoration of the conqueror.
[00:59:24] fest 2028 that's when we're expecting to have that vehicle here so make your travel plans now book
[00:59:30] your hotels and get your spending money ready because the Tank Museum is a registered charity and
[00:59:37] it's supported by people like you enthusiast like you at home and we really appreciate every penny
[00:59:44] of that support there are many ways you can support the Tank Museum supporting us in our
[00:59:48] Conqueror project is just one of those ways. Now for a little bit brand new news from us and
[00:59:53] Wargaming has released a new title called World of Tanks Heat.
[00:59:57] Here's a short video where our co-hosts spent a little bit of time there, touring, playing, enjoying.
[01:00:04] We're now in the Vehicle Conservation Centre where I've bumped into Luke.
[01:00:07] It's the coolest place in the Tank Museum and I'm not just talking about the temperature.
[01:00:12] Luke, tell us what's going on in here today.
[01:00:15] Well, nice to meet you all. I am Luke. I'm Head of Community for World of Tanks Heat,
[01:00:19] which is our brand new game, newest entry into the World of Tanks franchise.
[01:00:23] And it's actually marked, well, for you guys, two days extra,
[01:00:26] but it's marked exactly one month today since we launched the game.
[01:00:30] Fantastic. So tell us a little bit about this game.
[01:00:32] It's part of the World of Tanks family,
[01:00:34] but it's slightly different to the World of Tanks game.
[01:00:37] Yes. Well, World of Tanks is quite a historical game, right?
[01:00:41] It's very focused on historical accuracy.
[01:00:43] We are living in an alternate history in World of Tanks seed.
[01:00:47] So we follow like a 70-30 principle.
[01:00:48] 70% reality, basing our tanks on real prototypes and real tanks,
[01:00:52] and then we add 30% of extra heat magic on top.
[01:00:55] And the vehicles are a little bit more modern than they do in the World of Tanks.
[01:00:58] Absolutely. We're settled in kind of what would be the Cold War era, right?
[01:01:02] But as opposed to traditional World of Tanks, we have hero shooter elements in our game.
[01:01:07] So for us, the agents that control the tanks are big focus.
[01:01:10] You know, they come with ultimate abilities, the tanks have abilities,
[01:01:13] and it makes for a very aggressive and dynamic gameplay.
[01:01:16] How is it different from World of Tanks apart from the vehicles themselves?
[01:01:20] Well, we lean a little bit more into some of the traditional kind of shooter game modes, for example.
[01:01:26] Right, we have things like Conquest and Kill Confirm.
[01:01:29] We have Respawns, we have, like I said, we have the Hero abilities and the Tanks have abilities.
[01:01:34] So, it's very fast, based on dynamic, and it's a lot less punishing than World of Tanks.
[01:01:40] Well, you know, you make a little mistake, you're back in the garage.
[01:01:43] And that's something I can tell you a lot about, it has to be said.
[01:01:46] Yeah, same.
[01:01:46] So, I can see it's very busy, it's clearly being well received.
[01:01:50] And what formats is it available on right now?
[01:01:53] So we're actually launched fully cross-platform both on Xbox Series X and S,
[01:01:58] PlayStation 5, as well as Steam and of course our Wargaming Game Center on PC.
[01:02:03] And it's fully cross-platform and cross-progression.
[01:02:07] You can play on one device, keep playing on the other device,
[01:02:09] play with your friends, wherever they are.
[01:02:10] So that's really been great to see and people have been receiving it very well.
[01:02:14] Well, I haven't tried it yet myself, but I'm looking forward to doing it.
[01:02:17] Just one more thing, are there any vehicles in the game which are based on vehicles that you can see in the museum?
[01:02:22] Yeah, we've got quite a few. I think the coolest example is because we are launching our season one next week,
[01:02:28] which is going to be coming with two new tanks and both of them are variants of the Leopard 2,
[01:02:33] which I've been looking at in the vehicle park this morning, which are amazing.
[01:02:37] But there's quite a few examples that are around the museum.
[01:02:41] Fantastic. Well, Luke, thank you very much for joining us.
[01:02:43] If we want to play Heats right now, what do we need to do?
[01:02:46] Well, just head to our website, it's whatheat.com, so wotheat.com,
[01:02:51] and you can play for free on whatever platform you want.
[01:02:54] Luke, thank you very much.
[01:02:55] You're very welcome.
[01:03:46] I know Nick, you have been spending every spare second this weekend playing the Tanksheed.
[01:04:03] I hope you've been making some time for PC still.
[01:04:06] Do you know what?
[01:04:07] I haven't had a chance to try it yet.
[01:04:09] And as for my skills in World of Tanks, well you can probably imagine, it's resulted in
[01:04:13] many smashed keyboards.
[01:04:15] said I know it's something that my son Edison and his mate Kit who are here
[01:04:19] today enjoying their very first Tankfest will enjoy so I hope you've had a great
[01:04:24] day lads. I think I'll have to say a moment then too I did promise my girls at
[01:04:29] home can I give a shout out please. Why the heck not? Yeah my twins Lauren and Amber,
[01:04:33] hi girls. Anyone you want to say? I just promised all these years you've been doing it.
[01:04:39] Hello Marquette and Marquette's mum. I hope you're enjoying the show. So what's your
[01:04:43] highlights of Tankfest been so far. So far all I think about is the heat it has
[01:04:49] been so swelteringly hot this Tankfest it has been unreal you. Well you know I
[01:04:55] think you've got a good point there about the heat we always managed to
[01:04:58] have a mini heatwave over Tankfest. Come on guys challenge a three we've seen
[01:05:02] challenge a three year. It was our first time ever in public. Highlights you're absolutely right.
[01:05:06] Challenge a three was incredible meeting Johnson Bahari and seeing him open the
[01:05:10] show on Friday was a really interesting moment for me.
[01:05:14] Sherman Jumbo.
[01:05:15] Fantastic guests, the challenge, sorry,
[01:05:17] the Leopard 2 from the Netherlands.
[01:05:19] Fantastic.
[01:05:20] You know, the Stug 3, the Sherman Jumbo.
[01:05:23] The Nasshorn.
[01:05:25] I know you've been very excited about that, Richard,
[01:05:27] just dying to see it because it's been a long time coming.
[01:05:30] It has been a long time coming.
[01:05:31] Long time.
[01:05:33] I think it's a good opportune moment, really,
[01:05:34] to thank all of the huge amount of people, of course,
[01:05:38] that take the time out to get a tank first,
[01:05:40] bring these vehicles and their passion is apparent when they come here. As David said,
[01:05:46] as all of you know, it's been very hot over the last few days. A lot of them are camping
[01:05:50] out as well. They are. Yep. And looking around, there's lots of happy people in the audience,
[01:05:55] albeit slightly sunburned. But you know, here we are at the Tang Museum in rural England,
[01:06:01] but occasionally with the same temperature as Arizona. Always during Tangfest, anyway.
[01:06:06] I know we're waiting for the British tanks to get roaring so before then I think now's a good time for
[01:06:12] me to remind everybody about Twitch drops which are going on right now. It is still a valid and
[01:06:17] happening on Twitch where after 60 minutes you would have had a chance of crew books,
[01:06:21] beaks, I don't know where a beaker is, tier 10 Badger, 3D Star called the moderate,
[01:06:25] the tier 8 premium tank, the ST66. After 120 minutes you have the two tank fest token store
[01:06:32] tokens where you can get yourself a Richard commander and put him in charge of all your
[01:06:36] tanks and you will win every battle. After 180 minutes you will have a chance of credit
[01:06:41] personal reserves, the tier 10 IS-4 Granite 3D style, or the tier 9 French premium tank,
[01:06:48] the Char MLE. Now for those that haven't tuned in since last year, we had some big changes
[01:06:54] in World of Tanks PC. We launched 2.0 where we introduced a lot of tier 11 tanks which was
[01:06:59] pretty big. We had a lot of in-game updates, mechanics, matchmaking changes and everything else.
[01:07:03] So I'm hoping, Nick, you will be able to check all of those out soon.
[01:07:07] Let's see if I've improved any. Now we are about to enjoy the last live display of Tankfest 2026,
[01:07:15] which will be the modern display from the British Army. And the vehicles we're going to see among
[01:07:19] them will be something quite interesting, the Boxer, which is one of the new British Army vehicles.
[01:07:24] And I don't know if it's something you're all that familiar with.
[01:07:26] No, I'm afraid it's a bit new for me, but of course it is the first time it's been here.
[01:07:31] It is the first time we've seen it here at Tank First in British Army service.
[01:07:35] In British Army service, of course, yes, absolutely.
[01:07:37] So I think judging by the crowd at the moment, we are...
[01:07:40] Big round of applause.
[01:07:41] Big round of applause.
[01:07:42] I think we are...
[01:07:43] We don't see any movement from here.
[01:07:45] Almost ready to go across, back, live to the arena, to catch up with the British Army.
[01:07:56] Explain what my actual job role is.
[01:08:01] Seeing everybody here, of their own volition, supporting everything that we do is probably
[01:08:06] the highlight of the year.
[01:08:07] I think it's fair to say there's quite a lot of noise about our armed forces at the
[01:08:11] minute.
[01:08:12] Not all of it is always positive.
[01:08:13] So when we get the chance to come to an event like this where people have paid government
[01:08:17] in to come and see us, the conversation we have, the questions we have, the debates
[01:08:21] we have at the ammo stand and the support that you could perpetually show us, it really
[01:08:25] means a lot for all of us.
[01:08:26] So once again, thank you.
[01:08:28] As been touched on, today's, we've got the chance
[01:08:31] to have a lot of the families of the soldiers
[01:08:34] that you're gonna see coming around here.
[01:08:35] So today, where I can, I'm gonna drop the names
[01:08:38] of the crews of the vehicles that we're gonna see.
[01:08:41] The family members out there,
[01:08:42] I do expect that you're gonna make some noise,
[01:08:44] but if you could support that,
[01:08:45] recognize the fact that they're out there doing this for you.
[01:08:48] It's gonna make our day,
[01:08:50] well, it's gonna make our day fantastic.
[01:08:51] It's gonna be a highlight to the end of our weekend.
[01:08:54] So, tell us then, thanks so much for that, Corporal Wright. Tell us then, what's your
[01:08:59] job here up the road at what I used to call the Armoured Trials Development Unit, it's
[01:09:03] now Armoured Trials Unit. I always jokingly say they're there to try and break the kit.
[01:09:09] Absolutely, we call it checking for ruggedisation, squaddy proofing it. Ideas come to us whilst
[01:09:16] yes we've dropped the armoured from our title, we are still very much the home of Mounted
[01:09:20] close combat at bovington so whatever it may be it could be some form of drone
[01:09:24] detection it could be some form of new cabinet new headset helmets anything
[01:09:29] like that once the boffins have created it for us we're going to take it we're
[01:09:32] going to run it through the field and we're going to check to see if it works
[01:09:35] it's a fantastic job okay the army is a big organization and I'm very happy and
[01:09:41] very lucky to have the chance to work down there because we're seeing future
[01:09:44] kit before it gets to us before it gets to our soldiers and our input as the
[01:09:48] experts on that, is truly appreciated. I've spent a slightly nostalgic story for you.
[01:09:54] The last Christmas card I got from my grandfather before he passed away had a very good line
[01:09:58] on it. It says something along the lines of, find a job that you love and you never work
[01:10:03] it down your life. I get to do that whilst working over here. It's not always great but
[01:10:08] I definitely love it.
[01:10:10] And it's a really interesting time for you guys as well at the moment isn't it for the
[01:10:13] Army because there's new kit coming in, old kit going out, you've got to work out
[01:10:18] what works together and we're going to see some of that lovely kit as well aren't we?
[01:10:22] Yeah we are, it's an excited time. We've talked about the new stuff that we've got,
[01:10:27] we're talking about re-rolling the old stuff, how do we make it work,
[01:10:30] fresh change constantly, we all see that and what we do at Army Charles unit is to take ideas,
[01:10:35] make plans with them and make them work. I think we're probably about time to see some vehicles.
[01:10:40] Let's give them a wave and see if anyone was paying attention over there, we'll wave again,
[01:10:44] go on there and say there you go. We'll wake them up so it's been a whole day. So let's see what's
[01:10:50] that first vehicle we're going to bring on because again I imagine a lot of people here think it's
[01:10:54] got to be a tank or something. Hang on what's this one? Really important though. So this is the
[01:10:59] MAN SVR okay so part of the MAN SV or support vehicle range this is the recovery variant.
[01:11:05] This is what we use to drag things out of trouble okay anything up to including about the size of
[01:11:10] of a warrior. You'll see the large crane on the back there. That is a recovery crane.
[01:11:14] That's able to lift things. You're looking at about a 15-ton limit on there. At the rear,
[01:11:19] once it drives around, you'll be able to see winching mechanism, pulleys. That's able to
[01:11:23] drag stuff up to 35 or 50 tons, depending on how it's done. This vehicle is crewed by
[01:11:28] the Rini, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. Okay, most specifically, you're
[01:11:33] always going to have a wrecky mech on there. Today, we've got Corporal Glasgow and Lance
[01:11:37] Corporal Metcalf at Midford. Excuse me. There we go. I've got his name wrong and we still cheered.
[01:11:43] On-camp, Recce-Mex are responsible for checking our lifting equipment,
[01:11:47] ensuring it's all in date, making sure we can do things safely. When we get out of camp,
[01:11:52] these are some of the busiest guys and girls you know, because we don't get many vehicles
[01:11:56] caught in ditches on the tank park, but it happens when we're out there. So if you want a job where
[01:12:00] you're quiet for 20% of the time and busy 80% of the time, this isn't for you. If you want to be
[01:12:05] quiet 80% of the time and very busy 20% of the time, take this job.
[01:12:13] A few points on the SVR itself, it is a big vehicle.
[01:12:17] In that configuration it can weigh up to 38 tonnes and it needs to be that way because
[01:12:22] it needs to be able to pull the vehicles.
[01:12:26] Interestingly it can be used as a multi-purpose tool so it's not just limited to recovery.
[01:12:31] The crane on the top, if used in conjunction with another vehicle, and I've seen this happen,
[01:12:35] it is a pretty impressive sight, two of those put together, are able to lift the turret
[01:12:39] off of a Challenger 2.
[01:12:42] We said before, how many roughly we've got, you know, because again, scale, we're seeing
[01:12:45] one of everything here, but of course, for the military, we're actually talking lots
[01:12:49] most of the time.
[01:12:50] The MAN SV range, you've got about 6,000 vehicles, but that includes all what we generally term
[01:12:55] as army trucks.
[01:12:57] SVRs, you look at in the hundreds.
[01:12:59] Most of them are going to be attached to regiments that you've got the warriors, the vehicles
[01:13:03] that require that kind of recovery.
[01:13:05] As an armoured soldier, I'm probably going to see one per squadron for me because it's
[01:13:09] not there to pull challenges out of trouble.
[01:13:11] We're going to see a vehicle like that coming up shortly.
[01:13:14] And again, in the background, so obviously, serving army, trialling it here, but you've
[01:13:18] seen the stands out here.
[01:13:19] We've got things like the Yeomanry, the people in the background as well, because part-time
[01:13:23] soldiering as well.
[01:13:25] I imagine there's people here in the audience with the skills, recovery, roadstuff, they'd
[01:13:30] be perfect for this, wouldn't they?
[01:13:32] And of course that's the thing, we often talk about the armour giving you transferable skills.
[01:13:36] Remy is very definitely one of those, it's a technical trade.
[01:13:41] Being a technical trade, some of their skills are on a higher pay band, especially if you
[01:13:45] enjoy electronics, join as a technician, you start off as a Lance Corporal, more money
[01:13:51] and you've got that ability to then go and work elsewhere.
[01:13:55] So obviously it's come on, something big and noisy behind, hiding behind the mound there.
[01:14:00] Now another one of these classic vehicles that is essential for an armoured force, wherever
[01:14:06] it's going, but sometimes we don't look at so much down here.
[01:14:09] We only like the real big battle tanks and here we're talking about something that recovers
[01:14:15] them.
[01:14:16] Absolutely.
[01:14:17] So we've got the craft here, Challenger Armoured Repair and Recovery Vehicle.
[01:14:22] the name suggests it's armored it's there to repair and recover challenges. In its OES
[01:14:30] configuration we've got the extra armor on she's a real brute about 68 tons you're looking
[01:14:35] well over 70 with that she needs to be heavy because she needs to recover the extra tanks.
[01:14:40] Again crew today by the Remy we've got Corporal Wood driving today big shout out to her and
[01:14:46] his girlfriend who's present here and then at the top we've got Corporal Tucker. Hi Ali
[01:14:50] you're out there in the crowd I know somewhere and Bob who we mentioned yesterday let's give
[01:14:55] him a round of applause again for being ginger in this heat.
[01:15:18] Now that we've got the personalities out of the way, I should probably tell you what it actually does.
[01:15:22] The crane that you see on the top of there, okay, that is not a recovery crane.
[01:15:26] Unlike the SVR, that's not used for getting vehicles out of trouble.
[01:15:29] That's there primarily to take the pack, the engine, out of challenges.
[01:15:34] It is theoretically possible to take its own pack out as well, although in practice highly difficult.
[01:15:38] At the back there, that's where you see the draw bars.
[01:15:41] Once they've got us out of trouble with a winch that you see on the front,
[01:15:44] the draw bars are then attached to form an A-frame.
[01:15:47] That can pull a fully uploaded Challenger 2 tank out of most situations.
[01:15:51] And this phrase may sometimes use it wrongly, but theatre entry standard, it's got the extra armour on the outside,
[01:15:59] bar armour at the back and some of the electronic gadgetry that if it's going off on combat situations.
[01:16:06] Yeah, high threat environment. As ever, vehicles like this are combat support, they're not supposed to be frontline fighting vehicles,
[01:16:13] but they go where the front line fighting is, so it needs to have that additional armour.
[01:16:18] It brings to the memory the famous incident in Iraq, we've got Staff Sergeant Lindhurst of the
[01:16:23] Remy, Recky Meck, he received the military cross for successfully recovering challengers.
[01:16:36] Over the course of the day his crew recovered a stricken challenger.
[01:16:41] This is the famous one with a challenge you got hit by so many RPGs. The numbers
[01:16:45] are inflated regardless of that staff linters and the constant small arms RPG
[01:16:50] and mortified recovered it. So whilst not frontline fighting soldiers they've
[01:16:54] definitely got the courage to get in there and help receive those assets.
[01:16:58] And you have to say if you like your vehicles that's it looks perfect for
[01:17:03] its role doesn't it. Dozer blade on the front, big and butch, perfect, so perfect
[01:17:08] tonkatoi. Now another one that's pretty obvious I imagine most of us could work
[01:17:11] this one out it's a bridge layer. We've got it the bridge layer today Titan so
[01:17:17] Challenger 2 Titan armored vehicle launch bridge as its full name we just
[01:17:21] refer to it as Titan. Those with any form of insignia identification will see
[01:17:27] this is crewed by the Royal Engineers okay today driven by Sergeant Smith and
[01:17:32] commanded by Staff Sergeant Ansel. The engineers, okay, very very specialized in
[01:17:38] what they do, and the Titan personifies that. Whilst we've had the SVR and the
[01:17:42] craft that carry out multiple purposes well, the Titan is there to do one thing.
[01:17:47] It's to bridge gaps for us, whether that be a river, whether that be some form of
[01:17:51] small ravine, this is highly specialized and as such is vital to our ability to
[01:17:57] fight manoeuvre warfare.
[01:18:02] Now it's an obvious thing to say but we have to remember this, you imagine all your tanks
[01:18:16] going forward, you've got an armoured force, you come to as the military would call it
[01:18:21] gap crossing, you come to a river, something like that, if you're all held up, it's a
[01:18:26] real problem, you absolutely need these assets if you're going to continue in advance.
[01:18:31] So for the army they're really precious assets aren't they?
[01:18:34] Key. And the same goes vice versa. If we see an enemy one of these it is instantly a high
[01:18:39] value target because we can deny that same ability for them. Most modern war fighters
[01:18:44] based upon combined arms manoeuvre. The key element of that is manoeuvre warfare. You
[01:18:48] want every element moving together in unison with one element can't move. If you can't
[01:18:53] advance it comes to a halt and you become an easy target.
[01:18:58] So we're going to see the vehicle if he finds an appropriate spot, see if he's going to
[01:19:02] actually try and drop that bridge for us.
[01:19:05] But seeing him move around there, one of the issues of course, is now you've got new kit
[01:19:09] coming in, of course you've got to make sure the older kit is still going to be compatible
[01:19:14] and we saw this morning, Challenger 3, is still going to be able to use this bridge?
[01:19:18] Challenger 3 I believe so, don't quote me because we haven't got these prototypes.
[01:19:22] I can talk to Challenger 3 Recovery, we've been out on Crab recovery trials, Challenger
[01:19:28] 3 can be recovered by Crab so that's a tick in the box.
[01:19:31] Similarly, SBR has been tested with Boxer, that's a current one that they're trying to
[01:19:36] work out if it is feasible.
[01:19:47] So back to that key role of the trials unit is making sure the compatibility between the vehicles.
[01:19:54] No one wants to go on a campaign or service anywhere and find that something's not working with something else.
[01:20:02] And again, and you're doing that at the moment, not just with the vehicles, but kit, aren't you?
[01:20:06] Like new crew clothing helmets?
[01:20:08] New helmets, new body armour, rocket boys to death.
[01:20:10] I've been deeply involved in looking at new army boots, but talking and working together,
[01:20:14] We'll draw attention a little bit and we're going to explain what's going to be going
[01:20:18] on in the background whilst this bridge is being laid.
[01:20:21] Today we're laying the number 10 bridge, 24.5 metres, quite an impressive length that we
[01:20:26] can cover with that there.
[01:20:28] Before any of this has happened, with reconnaissance the suitable spot, that could have been done
[01:20:32] by our own reconnaissance, so a light cavalry regiment.
[01:20:36] More than likely we're going to have ID'd where we think we can go and an armoured wrecky.
[01:20:41] have their special reconnaissance, all kinds of measuring sticks, gauges, they're
[01:20:45] going to tell if it's correct or not. Traditionally they would have been on a
[01:20:48] CVRT platform, a Spartan perhaps, now more than likely to be one of the Ajax
[01:20:53] variants or indeed a warrior. As we've touched on and we've gone on about this
[01:20:58] as a high-value target, we are not going to let that go to any form of crossing by
[01:21:02] itself. Before it's moved we're going to have a trooper tanks if we were an armoured
[01:21:06] battle group watching this spot, looking out in depth to make sure there's no
[01:21:10] enemy over there. Move into the crossing, it's going to be protected. It could be
[01:21:14] four warriors, it could be two tanks, it depends what we've got on hand. Reinforce
[01:21:18] in the fact that this is vital. We would rather lose another armoured asset than
[01:21:23] lose one of these because we don't have that many of them. And again we always
[01:21:28] and again part of the history, the museum still teaches that idea of what
[01:21:34] can we learn from the past. The classic situation is always with we never think
[01:21:38] we've got enough tanks but we certainly never have enough armored engineering
[01:21:42] variants do we sort of think so over time this is something that we have to
[01:21:46] learn again we saw the crave it's over there with a dozer blade you know if
[01:21:49] you're going in an urban setting you're going to be needing that dozer blade for
[01:21:54] so many different reasons now so the factor challenger we can fit a dozer
[01:21:58] blade on the front all this sort of engineering assets and can be vital or
[01:22:03] will be vital wherever we're going to find. I'm very glad you mentioned the
[01:22:07] those a blade because I was actually part of a wasn't really a trial because we
[01:22:11] successfully did it this was whilst we're out in Estonia for the first time
[01:22:14] since I believe chieftain we actually fit a track width mine plow onto a
[01:22:19] Challenger 2 so normally you'd see that on the Trojan the other T2 variant the
[01:22:23] big angry one that clashes up we managed to put that on a Challenger 2 and have
[01:22:27] the similar effect your point on urban war fighting most of the world is going
[01:22:32] to be living in urban environment soon whether we like it or not we have to be
[01:22:35] able to fight in that environment and the craft can do that with its blade.
[01:22:39] Spying over there with my recce eyes, we can see a recce vehicle coming to the fore.
[01:22:44] This is very much something that's not really used for the urban environment.
[01:22:48] What we've got here is Jackal 3.
[01:22:50] Jackal 3, this is the latest incarnation of the Jackal and I believe it's the first time it's appeared
[01:22:55] with the British Army here at Tankfest.
[01:22:58] Crewed by the light cavalry regiments, what is it?
[01:23:01] It's a deep reconnaissance and fire support vehicle.
[01:23:06] Today on there, we have, up the top there,
[01:23:10] we've got Lance Corporal Watson from the Scots DG.
[01:23:12] Driving it today, we've got Lance Corporal Ron
[01:23:15] from the Queen's Diderune Guards.
[01:23:16] And the biggest round of applause I want
[01:23:18] is for Mr. Wayne Dennis,
[01:23:20] the Army's most important civil servant, commanding it.
[01:23:23] He has been with ATU for over 20 years.
[01:23:26] I can guarantee you that man has put more kit
[01:23:29] and equipment into the hands of our soldiers than any other.
[01:23:32] He deserves his recognition there.
[01:23:34] Anyway, what does the vehicle do?
[01:23:37] It travels at road speeds when it's on the road, 100 kilometers an hour.
[01:23:40] It can go 50, 60 cross country if you're brave enough.
[01:23:43] The key things that you notice in with the Jackal 3 there,
[01:23:46] it's got a windscreen.
[01:23:47] It's got a windscreen and it's got the enhanced roll over protection,
[01:23:50] or ROPS as we call it on the top, which allows it to actually have a roof.
[01:23:54] It's slightly boxier, slightly heavier than the Jackal 2,
[01:23:57] therefore the engine's been upgraded, gives it better protection as well and it's still
[01:24:02] got that classic V-shaped hole underneath. Designed to operate at length, its last being
[01:24:07] used was Opmucum in Mali, where a troop of these were able to go out for a week at a
[01:24:12] time being resupplied by the supply variant, which we call the Coyote, the six wheel varicant,
[01:24:18] that the troop sergeant would drive.
[01:24:20] I mentioned this before but it's interesting to note we are now not always painting them
[01:24:25] in this what we would consider a Middle Eastern sand sort of colour isn't it?
[01:24:29] Because we've now got urban ops, so we've got urban camouflage and of course
[01:24:33] you mentioned we're out in Estonia so very different camouflage schemes now
[01:24:38] coming back on vehicles.
[01:24:40] Having enjoyed some of your videos on personal camouflage patterns I think it's a
[01:24:45] really interesting time for armored vehicles as well because there is work
[01:24:48] being done. What is the new camouflage pattern going to be? We all remember
[01:24:51] Berlin Camo. Is it going to be digital? Are we going to be going for some kind of
[01:24:55] disruptive camouflage pattern. It's quite exciting in that time. Yeah, that is a vehicle
[01:25:00] that is more than likely being used in a sandy condition, so we've still got that colour.
[01:25:04] But watch this space, because who knows what we're going to be doing. We do a lot on work
[01:25:08] of disruption, trying to break up the outlines of vehicles. That can be achieved with add-on
[01:25:13] camouflage, it can be achieved with simple paint.
[01:25:17] And one thing that perhaps many people hear, you can obviously see that vehicle. We're
[01:25:21] looking through our eyes, it might be that you're going to be looking through binoculars
[01:25:25] if it's again out there on campaign. Don't forget a lot of systems now are looking at
[01:25:29] vehicles through thermal so you're trying to protect against that so you see a thermal
[01:25:33] image of the vehicle and of course the other thing is this word electronic signature. It's
[01:25:37] pumping out another set of signals isn't it that you want to detect if it's the enemy
[01:25:42] or hide if it's yours. The biggest thing for that is radio transmission and being part
[01:25:47] of an armored regiment if anybody's got any experience in tanks you know we like to waffle
[01:25:51] nonsense over the net. So that is a real training thing. We need to really minimise that when
[01:25:55] we're moving into position. We need to be able to do that without transmitting, because
[01:25:59] when we're transmitting we're given our location away.
[01:26:03] And when you see these vehicles, by the way, it's not just out in the middle of light as
[01:26:06] we were used to before with the earlier versions, Iraq, Afghanistan, but the idea of those,
[01:26:12] they did the exercise where they send them across Poland to the Baltic and they are very
[01:26:17] speedy and impressive. You've got a fair old lump there with a 50 calibre that can turn
[01:26:22] up and do some damage. Yeah, five, six hundred kilometres, road mileage you're able to do,
[01:26:28] the whole purpose of the wheel vehicle that we'll touch on, it doesn't have that massive
[01:26:31] logistic chain, we are able to move it by the road, not dependent on rail systems.
[01:26:37] And here's another one of these vehicles. So what we've got here, the Foxarm today,
[01:26:41] crewed by Sergeant Duncan driving it, excuse me, Sergeant Jackson driving it and W02 Duncan
[01:26:46] of the King's Rule Hazards. This is a light protected patrol vehicle, okay, designed to
[01:26:53] operate at length. Unlike a protected mobility vehicle, which tend to be a little bit larger,
[01:26:58] this isn't going to go into high-threat environments. This was paired with jackals on Op Newcombe.
[01:27:04] A direct replacement for the snatch land drivers. We learned our lesson on the Herics that they
[01:27:08] weren't suitable. Classic giveaways, the V-shape hole that lets the blast kind of go up either
[01:27:14] side of it you've only got one door you can't see it but the inside the driver
[01:27:18] side doesn't have a door that's auto-maintain rigidity and another word
[01:27:22] that we're going to touch on recent soon modular okay the modular elements of it
[01:27:26] mean that you can add bits and pieces on the wheels for example are all
[01:27:30] individual drive meaning it does sound nice as well
[01:27:39] this vehicle is capable of driving on three wheels I've not seen it tested but
[01:27:44] But in theory, that's what it can do.
[01:27:46] And that idea is also about, there's another word,
[01:27:49] sacrificial.
[01:27:50] Sometimes you'll see vehicles with that classic V shape.
[01:27:53] It doesn't matter if it loses a wheel.
[01:27:55] It doesn't matter if it loses a bin on the side,
[01:27:58] as long as that central proportion that's in the middle
[01:28:00] there is actually keeping the crew safe.
[01:28:03] And also, amazingly, they're able to repair some of these
[01:28:05] quite quickly, aren't they?
[01:28:06] Things like mastiff and everything.
[01:28:07] Bolt on another wheel station.
[01:28:10] And this is the classic thing.
[01:28:11] Again, I've talked at length with people who visit us
[01:28:13] over there. The NATO, yes it is more of a tank thing, the survivability mobility. NATO
[01:28:19] and all that allies, we always price survivability over manoeuvrability, which is why some of
[01:28:24] our vehicles might be a little bit bigger, but when they do get hit we want to make sure
[01:28:28] our men and women are getting out of it and we can repair it afterwards.
[01:28:32] And that in turn gives soldiers confidence who are in those vehicles because they know,
[01:28:36] and I always thought here when we were handing, we were helping with the Ukrainians getting
[01:28:40] stuff. I was amazed at how the Ukrainian soldiers when they got in British kit they all said oh my
[01:28:46] goodness someone's actually thought about us having been used to old Soviet kit before you know so
[01:28:52] that idea of someone is trying to protect you as a primary asset not just a vehicle.
[01:28:59] And you can see there that speed of those vehicles I'm always fascinated they're
[01:29:03] torsion bars down the side aren't they so you can actually see the springing mechanism
[01:29:08] are those funny rods going down the side of the hull there and they're being twisted every time
[01:29:13] a vehicle goes over a bump. That's how a torsion bar works. Normally they're across the hull of
[01:29:18] a tank, there they are on the outside laterally along the side of the vehicle.
[01:29:28] They're talking about modular, future-proofing, wheeled vehicles. What we've got here is Boxer,
[01:29:33] OK, MIV, Mechanized Infantry Vehicle.
[01:29:36] We'll get the good stuff out of the way first.
[01:29:38] Crew today, we have got Lance Corporal Smith driving it,
[01:29:42] and we've got Staff Sergeant Smith at the Royal Regiment
[01:29:44] of Fusiliers commanding it.
[01:29:49] Unfortunately, a big friend of mine, Sergeant Major Latham,
[01:29:51] refused to go on in here because he didn't want to be mentioned,
[01:29:54] but I've done it anyway.
[01:29:55] What is Boxer?
[01:29:56] OK, Boxer is the future, the backbone
[01:29:59] of our heavy mechanized infantry brigades, OK,
[01:30:01] and indeed some of the armoured ones.
[01:30:03] What is Boxer Knot?
[01:30:04] Some people think this is given as a replacement to Warrior.
[01:30:07] It's not going to be that.
[01:30:08] It's not designed to be that.
[01:30:10] Multiple variants have already been in use.
[01:30:12] This vehicle has been in use in Germany, in the Netherlands,
[01:30:16] in Lithuania, in Australia.
[01:30:18] It is a successful vehicle.
[01:30:19] We know it's good.
[01:30:20] We're going to be getting about 600 of these.
[01:30:22] The initial tranche is going to be built in Germany.
[01:30:25] The remaining going to be brought over here to the UK,
[01:30:27] providing around 1,000 British jobs.
[01:30:31] Now, one of the first things you see about this is scale, isn't it?
[01:30:39] It is a big looking vehicle, but it's very mobile and very fast.
[01:30:43] And we also say in the past, you know, tracks would go places, wheels can't.
[01:30:48] Wheels have caught up in many areas, haven't they?
[01:30:50] There's still actually speed, cheaper, mobile, faster.
[01:30:55] So obviously for the military, any easier to maintain.
[01:30:57] So obviously, militaries like wheel vehicles, don't they?
[01:31:02] I'll recoil at the term cheaper.
[01:31:04] It's a cost-effective version of it.
[01:31:05] The logistical chain is much smaller,
[01:31:07] but you're absolutely right.
[01:31:08] The box is a big vehicle.
[01:31:10] 32 to 38 tons.
[01:31:13] The variants we're going to be getting.
[01:31:14] This is actually the engineer variant.
[01:31:16] It's very hard to tell from the outside,
[01:31:17] but inside you sacrifice half of the seats
[01:31:20] that you would have a section of infantry in
[01:31:22] to be replaced, in effect, with a box
[01:31:24] that you can put, deck cord, charges, all of that in there.
[01:31:28] Medical one is going to be slightly higher,
[01:31:30] and having been in the medical variant,
[01:31:31] the equipment in there is second to none.
[01:31:34] Currently going around in the old battlefield ambulances,
[01:31:36] we've got very much of that time.
[01:31:39] This along with other vehicles, such as Ajax,
[01:31:41] is the cornerstone of us moving forward.
[01:31:44] And when you look at this, so we said that word modular.
[01:31:46] For most people here, if you remember,
[01:31:48] go back, I'm a Thunderbirds generation person.
[01:31:50] So the pod on the back can be lifted off.
[01:31:53] So if you look at that vehicle, from almost about what is it,
[01:31:56] halfway down, that rear section can be lifted off
[01:32:00] and a different pod put on for a different role
[01:32:03] should you need it.
[01:32:04] And there's going to be a range of those sort
[01:32:07] of different roles we know they're
[01:32:08] going to be used for, so different pods.
[01:32:10] And they're developing it further on there.
[01:32:12] It may well be that the new 155 artillery system
[01:32:15] goes basically on the back of a boxer.
[01:32:17] And that looks like a very exciting prospect.
[01:32:19] Having read a little bit about that,
[01:32:21] The thing with Modular as well, not only does it allow it to change its battlefield role
[01:32:25] but we can keep it current and competent. We can swap it out, we can upgrade it. Something
[01:32:30] that possibly British armoured fighting vehicles have been guilty of not doing in the past.
[01:32:35] It future-proofs it and it allows it room to develop, to keep up to pace with developing
[01:32:40] threats.
[01:32:41] All the time we'll be talking about this is first generation, second generation, newer
[01:32:45] things coming along the lines as well and especially now all these, I don't even talk
[01:32:49] about digital stuff, infrastructure, all this way that new things can be plugged in.
[01:32:54] So what else have we got coming around here? So another old favourite, we've seen it
[01:32:58] already this afternoon but still in service, there's a tendency to already say it's gone,
[01:33:03] it isn't, it's still around. No it's not gone and whilst the Regiments
[01:33:07] traditionally using this are moving on to Boxer, Warrior has found a new lease of life.
[01:33:12] Now before we get technical we've got very very important people on this vehicle today.
[01:33:16] all important but we've got Sergeant with a J because he's a rifleman Sergeant
[01:33:20] Coalville gunning we've got Colour Sergeant Gifford commanding and the
[01:33:25] round of applause that I want to hear today driving we've got warrant officer
[01:33:28] to Mikey Dutton this is his last thing he's been doing he's going to be leaving
[01:33:33] the Army in three months or so after 25 years of service originally starting
[01:33:39] with the PWRR he joined the fuselage because he loved the warrior that much
[01:33:44] I was going to say, pretty much everyone who's served in a warrior, they do like it.
[01:33:49] They think it's a great bit of care, don't they?
[01:33:51] It is. Movement, relative reliability, the ability to stop on its nose.
[01:33:57] It really can stop on a six-pence.
[01:34:00] What we've started using them for now is reconnaissance.
[01:34:03] I know you may think reconnaissance is a big noisy vehicle,
[01:34:06] but we can change the way we do reconnaissance with drones.
[01:34:08] It allows you to increase recce standoff.
[01:34:11] What would have had a crew of three if we got here, and seven in the back?
[01:34:15] Well we used to use CVRTs, now we're using Warrior, you've got all that room in the back.
[01:34:28] And even though it's getting an older weapon, that's 30mm rather than count, it's still
[01:34:32] a pretty punchy piece to take with you.
[01:34:35] When you look at what it was used for originally, laying fire down as infantry with dismounting,
[01:34:40] closing in and destroying his Majesty's enemies, 30mm rather than cannon, rapid fire, high
[01:34:45] explosive going overhead, it was perfect for what it was there for.
[01:34:49] Still massively in use, what you see here is the 510, the infantry carrying version.
[01:34:54] We've still got the 511s, the 512s, the 513s, the Recky, the engineer, and then going on
[01:34:58] to your 14s, 15s, the artillery variants.
[01:35:00] So whilst our doctrine may be changing in terms of armored infantry, it's not with the
[01:35:07] other things.
[01:35:08] specialist vehicles and they're still very much in use and very much in demand.
[01:35:12] And behind of course any fleet of vehicles, there's the training remit, there's spares,
[01:35:17] there's all those things and again as we were saying these staying in service for that much
[01:35:21] longer again you've still got to keep an eye on them because if there's a new little bit
[01:35:25] they had what was it a few years ago new cameras put over the rear doors, things like that.
[01:35:30] Again you're still having to have these in the stable up the road because if they're
[01:35:34] in service there might well be something that this is you're going to have to look at a new add-on
[01:35:40] whatever's the next generation. I'm glad you mentioned the camera because that is actually
[01:35:43] something that we did over the road at ATU, came down added it and simple fixes like that that
[01:35:49] have gone missing so long it's a massive difference maker all the vehicles now are getting not 360
[01:35:55] cameras but with that high prep that possibly dare I say drones are creating you want to be able to
[01:36:01] to have full visibility 360 degrees without having to be exposed above the turret.
[01:36:22] We've mentioned it yesterday that one of the great defensive mechanisms on its own is speed.
[01:36:28] fact it is so fast you're hoping basically the enemy gunners aren't going to get charged
[01:36:32] to actually lay their guns on you before you've even got there dropped off the infantry and
[01:36:36] your bag for tea and biscuits. You know it's that quick isn't it?
[01:36:40] As the adage goes speed is the best armour. And bear in mind when that's being used properly
[01:36:47] it's going to be used in conjunction with this. Challenger 2, as we see here, up armoured,
[01:36:54] think we can do, this is the infamous Megatron, our favourite tank from over the road at ATU.
[01:37:04] This is pretty much what we can do with a Challenger 2, top end, a combination of OES
[01:37:09] and TES, if you want to get into a technical debate about what the difference is, Staff
[01:37:14] Sergeant Anthony Charity of the KRH is your guy to do that, he told me he'd love to do
[01:37:18] that. We've got the remote weapons system, we've got the ECM suite at the top, we've
[01:37:22] got the add-on armour. This is the pinnacle. If we're going to go into a high-threat environment,
[01:37:27] this is what we're doing it in. Third-generation main battle tank. We've got composite armour.
[01:37:33] We've got the fully automated electronic far control system, meaning irrespective of what
[01:37:38] speed we're travelling, we can use that weapon system from a fully stabilised position.
[01:37:43] A quick shout-out to those on board and the ones that you can't see. Driving today, we've
[01:37:47] We've got Trooper Thompson from the RTR, we've got Lars Korparima from the RTR and commanding
[01:37:53] we have our Canadian Tuy C from ATU Major Ben Mitchell.
[01:37:58] So in many ways Megatron's become a bit of a star hasn't it because it's always the
[01:38:15] one that comes down here gets photographed is always the one with the extras on and this
[01:38:20] is a plea because of course when Challenger 3 comes into service we want you to leave
[01:38:24] Megatron here so it can become a collection piece. I'm sure you can sign that off you've
[01:38:28] got the right pay grade haven't you? I mean above my pay grade but I'm all for it. Okay
[01:38:32] so it is that and I keep coming back to that's the point you look at all those other bits
[01:38:38] of kit there just the idea someone's got a great idea we added to the vehicle it may
[01:38:43] may be very positive, but what if it interferes with something else? You can see it physically
[01:38:49] there with things like bar armour, why it needs to be mobile, why it can rock at the
[01:38:55] back as you've got all those things, but also other bits of electronics if they're interfering
[01:39:00] with each other, we've done no one any favours.
[01:39:03] That's why we trial it, that's why we test it, you're absolutely right. I can think of
[01:39:07] only a couple of trials where some really good piece of kit has been on it, but integration
[01:39:13] being the drama and unfortunately with the older platforms that's something that you learn to live
[01:39:17] with. Thankfully for most lessons learned we try and stop those issues becoming apparent on the
[01:39:22] newer vehicles. And this idea that there's so many modern plug-in systems that idea we've got an
[01:39:28] infrastructure now that again in the past electronics almost separate for everything
[01:39:32] and we can take one thing out plug something in all that's the idea one hopes isn't it.
[01:39:37] Modularity as we've said buzzword but it's all about that future proofing and modularity.
[01:39:43] So one other thing when the Challenger 2's, obviously some of those Challenger 2 hulls being used in Challenger 3's, they're being upgraded of course.
[01:39:51] What we're looking at here as well, the Hunter Killer system, and he's going to use his smoke, so be warned as we go around,
[01:40:00] he's doing that just by putting diesel on the hot exhaust and it's a way of creating and it's also actually again thermal as well to a degree doesn't it?
[01:40:10] It does, so we're fortunate because at the front you'll see we do have the normal multi-barrel smoke grenade discharges.
[01:40:16] Much more of a defensive thing, we really need to get out of trouble, let's pop it.
[01:40:20] But the ability to blast smoke by simply delt and the diesel on
[01:40:29] can create confusion and it can mask our movement.
[01:40:32] But what you've got to remember with smoke is it works both ways.
[01:40:35] We can't magically see through our own smoke, so it needs to be used liberally.
[01:40:40] and again it's a simple thing but the fact you're hiding your bridge layer
[01:40:44] etc if that's all going on the fact that smoke is confusing the enemy maybe
[01:40:48] we're there maybe whatever and again as an army we've got to get better at that
[01:40:52] all the time isn't it the Russians are very very good at deception you don't
[01:40:57] just dig one tank hide and put a challenger in it you do five and hope
[01:41:02] they waste all their ammunition on the empty one sort of thing that way now
[01:41:06] it's backing off in there. What we're going to do in just a moment, few ladies and gentlemen,
[01:41:11] we're going to bring those vehicles back out, they're going to parade around so you've got a
[01:41:14] chance taking a photograph. They'll stop briefly so with any luck you'd be able to give a wave and
[01:41:19] if the families are here they'll be able to see their hubbies or partners there in a bit more of
[01:41:25] a close-up for a photo moment and before they all, and then they're going to be heading off from the
[01:41:30] but before they all do go, I repeat what I was saying earlier, they are your army,
[01:41:36] if you're British here, they're the people that can defend you, we do need to own them more
[01:41:40] and we do need to care and make sure we do the right thing by them, so please give them a round
[01:41:45] of applause so we can show our support to them and their families who've come here with them today.
[01:41:51] Thank you so much.
[01:45:51] David Willey and also to Corporal Lucas Wright for talking us through these amazing armored
[01:45:58] vehicles that are currently part of the Army fleets.
[01:46:03] They're not going to be staying around for long, they've all got to get off, I think
[01:46:05] they're on a promise of fish and chips tonight, so if you want to get any pictures now's the
[01:46:10] time to do it while their parts are up.
[01:46:13] And once again, please give them a great big round of applause.
[01:46:17] As David said, these are our army and really important, of course, on Forces Week.
[01:46:30] As I mentioned earlier, not that anyone ever listens to anything I say, don't dash off.
[01:46:33] The Tank Museum sites open until six o'clock this evening, so you've got plenty of time
[01:46:38] to go into the Tank Museum if you've not been in it, go into the Vehicle Conservation Center
[01:46:43] if you've not been in there, or popped down to see the Tank Park or even the Babcock
[01:46:49] Activity Zone. Of course they're proud partners of Tankfest this year, which leaves me only
[01:46:55] to say thank you very much indeed to you for coming. Don't forget your 2027 tickets at
[01:47:01] 2026 prices at tankfest.org when you get home. And for myself, a big thank you for all of
[01:47:11] the staff, all of the volunteers, the directors, the speakers today and of course as well,
[01:47:17] big thanks to everyone who's done the audio visual. Hopefully you've enjoyed Tankfest.
[01:47:21] Make sure you put in the feedback form and have a very safe journey home.
[01:48:11] Another fantastic display from the British Army, of course, and no better way to round
[01:48:18] off the live arena show at Tankfest 2026, but please stay with us because we've got a few
[01:48:24] more things to show you before we wrap it up.
[01:48:26] That's all right.
[01:48:27] It's been absolutely fantastic.
[01:48:28] Plenty of noise, plenty of dust and plenty of sunshine.
[01:48:33] Tickets are available for Tankfest 2027 right now, so please go to our website, tankmuseum.org,
[01:48:41] have a look at your travel plans. And travel plans. Travel plans. Sorry, Nick, go on.
[01:48:48] Oh, sorry, yes, I was not done yet. So there are many ways you can support the Town Museum,
[01:48:53] and I've said before, the Town Museum is a registered charity, and we couldn't exist
[01:48:57] if it wasn't for your support. People out there, people who are enthusiastic about the
[01:49:01] story of Armored Warfare. So if you've appreciated what we've done today, and if you'd like to
[01:49:08] support us please go to our website there are many different ways that you can support us we've
[01:49:12] got our king tiger v2 appeal we've got our brand new conqueror appeal and of course you can go
[01:49:19] along to our online shop and find something as a souvenir for tank first that you never knew you
[01:49:25] need it now i'm done i have something richard oh yeah yeah yeah so i need to read the names
[01:49:32] properly you do have the winners of the RC Tank giveaway so for the top two the
[01:49:38] winner is my laptop, love the name, eat my laptop, that's the name they chose and then
[01:49:44] for the King Tiger which unfortunately we have to send for some minor repairs
[01:49:49] before we ship it out, is going to grigo underscore gr so congratulations to
[01:49:55] those two people thank you very much, were you playing with it is that what
[01:49:58] happen? Yes, we tried to drive it in the arena and then that didn't go so well.
[01:50:03] Oh, I'm actually congratulating you on a great prize this one.
[01:50:06] I'm sorry, we had to cross your name out.
[01:50:09] Somebody might say something that's like, Richard on this?
[01:50:12] Now, keeping on the theme of the modern British Army,
[01:50:14] FAM was extremely fortunate to be invited to the B&M Driver and Maintenance School
[01:50:20] in Bovington Camp recently.
[01:50:22] And this is what he got up to.
[01:50:28] I can guarantee you you've never seen a classroom quite as amazing as what we're about to show
[01:50:34] you.
[01:50:35] I'm down here at the DNM School, the Driving and Maintenance School on Bovington Camp.
[01:50:39] And this is where the guys learn everything all the way leading up to them driving Challenger
[01:50:43] 2.
[01:50:44] Everything from learning about different bits on the vehicle to getting in the simulator
[01:50:47] and then driving the real deal on the roads.
[01:50:49] So let's get in there and have a look at the kit that's behind me.
[01:50:58] I'm joined here by Lance Corporal Scott Eustace, who is part of the Royal Tank Regiment and is
[01:51:04] here in what has to be regarded as one of the coolest classrooms I've ever been in.
[01:51:08] Scott, when you finished your Phase 1 training and you started Phase 2 and walked through those
[01:51:12] doors for the first time, can you tell us a little bit about how you felt? I imagine it was
[01:51:15] probably quite overwhelming. Yeah, I was a little bit overwhelmed, scared as well I think, because
[01:51:20] as this is big, killing machine's actually in front of me. Yeah, there's just so much on the
[01:51:25] on the vehicle, like I guess sort of the common eye,
[01:51:28] there's like all these different, you know, lids
[01:51:31] and certain things and bolts and stuff.
[01:51:33] And it's very confusing.
[01:51:34] And it's like, you're curious as well.
[01:51:36] You can like, exactly,
[01:51:38] it's just a wild and fresh spot and sort of thing.
[01:51:41] Yeah, it's definitely quite a bit scary at first.
[01:51:43] Obviously now, you know, I'm really trained on it.
[01:51:46] So it's not as terrifying to look at,
[01:51:49] but yeah, I was definitely confused,
[01:51:51] but also quite curious as well.
[01:51:53] What's the first step in actually becoming a driver
[01:51:55] for a challenge or two because I highly doubt they would just let you hop straight in and
[01:51:58] get driving around the camp.
[01:52:00] So you start off doing the theory work, you'll learn the maintenance, everything works, ins
[01:52:04] and outs, that sort of stuff. Then you go with the simulation bit, you let you hop into
[01:52:09] more or less a one-on-one remake, or actually isn't the vehicle, minus the armor, turret
[01:52:13] and engine as well of course. And you'll learn literally from, again, moving a few
[01:52:18] meters to go around a certain corner to reversing, doing bridge crossings, that sort of stuff.
[01:52:23] Everything you do in real life,
[01:52:24] you do in the simulations first.
[01:52:25] Okay.
[01:52:26] Because, have a safety.
[01:52:27] Yeah.
[01:52:28] And yes, you'll start off with that,
[01:52:29] and eventually you'll progress.
[01:52:30] You'll have to go on with the vehicle itself
[01:52:31] and do it in real life.
[01:52:32] Which is whatever I look forward to the moment.
[01:52:34] Shall we have a look at it then?
[01:52:35] Yes, let's go.
[01:52:36] Let's do it.
[01:52:37] Let's do it.
[01:52:38] Let's do it.
[01:52:40] So you'll put your feet first on the seat.
[01:52:43] Yeah.
[01:52:44] And then kind of like, wiggle yourself in.
[01:52:45] It's a bit uncomfortable,
[01:52:46] but it's a bit confusing,
[01:52:47] but if you just give it a go to anyone.
[01:52:49] Give it a go, yeah.
[01:52:50] But, just don't hit anything else, of course.
[01:52:52] do my best. Yeah, so you can then try and get your head up into this little, this round
[01:53:03] my crumb as well. Yeah, again, it's very confusing at first. It's supposed to be smaller.
[01:53:08] Yeah, yeah, and all the better end tools. Cool, yeah. So, what you work for is your
[01:53:13] celerator and then brake power is that first. When you brake and you want to put two feet
[01:53:16] on because it's a big vehicle and you get more pressure out of it as well yeah
[01:53:22] it's kind of richly arranged you want to see you've got your gear selector to
[01:53:26] right as well essentially it's not like a normal manual where you put into gear
[01:53:29] you kind of put into like a selection it'll go to one to two or one to six or
[01:53:33] whatnot I've got a pre-selector yeah essentially yeah and you've got your
[01:53:36] handbrake there you've got a crank it it's on a chain so it's not just like yeah
[01:53:41] I've got a crank a few times so and then it'll see your tillers as well where you
[01:53:44] left and right. In reverse, so it's the opposite way around. Yeah, then you should be able to start driving.
[01:53:56] Oh wow, that's so weird. It's got feedback as well.
[01:54:14] Wow, well, that's an experience. I've never been in a simulator quite like this. Incredibly
[01:54:26] detailed. I mean, I've got the entire cluster to my left. It's just, yeah, it's very, it
[01:54:35] feels very surreal. I'm not sure I'd be able to fit one of these in my room at home, but
[01:54:40] absolutely brilliant experience. This has been really, really cool. And thank you so
[01:54:43] So much, it's absolutely fantastic. Thank you.
[01:58:13] Well, finally, that is the end of our live stream for Tankfest 2026.
[01:58:27] Have you all had a great time this weekend?
[01:58:28] I made it.
[01:58:29] Marvelous.
[01:58:30] Will you come back again next year?
[01:58:31] Absolutely.
[01:58:32] Hopefully.
[01:58:33] Fantastic.
[01:58:34] As I said earlier, tickets are available now at tankmuseum.org.
[01:58:36] But I've got a few thank yous I'd like to say.
[01:58:39] First of all, thank you to all of you for watching and for your continued support.
[01:58:44] It really is so important to us and we really, really appreciate it.
[01:58:48] Want to thank all of our visitors, all of our staff and our volunteers who make this
[01:58:52] incredible event happen.
[01:58:54] There are months and months of work going on behind the scenes here to bring you such
[01:58:58] a special event.
[01:59:00] And also, I'd like to thank our partners and friends at World of Tanks for all of their
[01:59:05] support for the Tank Museum.
[01:59:06] now and over the years and all the team behind the cameras as well.
[01:59:10] So thank you all very much.
[01:59:12] And of course all it really needs for us is again to thank Nick, our co-host here.
[01:59:17] It's a fair few years now and also everybody of course, all of you at home, all of the
[01:59:22] community, all of the world, the tanks players and everybody else.
[01:59:25] So thank you once again for joining us.
[01:59:28] And thank you.
[01:59:29] I want to reiterate again, thank you Nick and to the museum for great hospitality, the
[01:59:32] amazing ice cream in this heat.
[01:59:34] It's been a pleasure.
[01:59:36] to all of you viewers at home. I hope you enjoyed the show and claiming all your goodies.
[01:59:40] Congratulations to the winners. Check out the Tank Museum and worldoftanks.eu
[01:59:44] websites for the latest news and information and we'll see you next time. See you next year.
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