World of Tanks 💥 E100 destroys the opponent 💥 One fight in a million 💥 Replays
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The E-100 (Panzerkampfwagen E-100, Gerät 383, TG-01) is a German super—heavy tank developed by Adler as part of the Entwicklung (development, development) program in 1943-1945. In total, one unfinished prototype was built (chassis and body without turret).
History of creation
In the summer of 1941, the German military found that the Soviet Union was superior to Nazi Germany in terms of heavy tanks, the Soviet KV-1 and KV-2 had a number of advantages over the German heavy tanks of those years, so in the fall of 1941, the Land Forces Armament Department (Heereswaffenamt, UVS) set the task for the largest German engineering concerns in a short time to create German heavy and superheavy breakthrough tanks that surpass their Soviet counterparts in both armor and armament.
The project to create a heavy tank, which later received the designation "Tiger", was joined by Henschel with its chief designer Heinrich Ernst Knipkamp and Porsche, led by its founder, Ferdinand Porsche. Already at the start of this project, serious competition between these two companies began. The company "Henschel" developed a prototype VK 45.01 (H), which later became Pz.Kpfw VI "Tiger I", and the Porsche company created a prototype VK 45.01 (P), which later received the designation Pz.Kpfw VI "Tiger P" ("Tiger Porsche"). On April 20, 1942, two prototypes were shown to Hitler and the military, after which Henschel's project was chosen for mass production.
On July 8, 1942, Hitler held a meeting in which the creation of a super-heavy breakthrough tank was discussed. Then two projects were proposed: VK 72.01 from Krupp and Typ 205 "Mäuschen" ("Mouse") from Porsche, on the basis of which the Mouse was later developed. Meanwhile, the company "Henschel" began the development of a whole series of tanks of the Entwicklung project (German — development, development), which included armored vehicles ranging from the E-5 light tank to the E-100 superheavy tank, which was supposed to be the main competitor to the Porsche project. The designers of the automotive company Adler Werke also helped Henschel in the development of the E-100. To save time for the E-100, it was decided not to develop a new turret, but to use the Krupp turret, originally developed for the Mouse, and install a 150-mm cannon with a 76-mm gun in it.
The production of the prototype E-100 began at the Adler-Werke enterprise in Frankfurt am Main, but later the Henschel enterprise took over the construction of the tank, and by June 1944 the armored chassis of the tank were ready. But in 1944, an order was issued to suspend the production of super-heavy tanks, including the Mouse and E-100. The tower was never received from Krupp E-100, and the unfinished prototype itself was taken to storage for further possible resumption of production at the Haustenbeck landfill near the city of Paderborn. In the spring of 1945, the chassis was captured by the British military, and later it was sent to England, where local engineers were able to assemble the chassis and bring it into working condition. In the course of subsequent tests, it turned out that the resulting tank, even without the installation of the tower and some other structural elements, has a very low cross-country capability and a maximum speed that does not exceed 20 km/ h. After some time, the unfinished prototype was sent for melting, which is why it has not survived to this day.
E100 destroys the opponent 💥 One fight in a million
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