what do you think happened to these?

Feel free to discuss anything and everything to do with tanking here!
Post Reply
michelekingtiger
Lance Corporal
Posts: 179
Joined: Sun May 17, 2009 8:13 pm
Location: Hitchin

what do you think happened to these?

Post by michelekingtiger »

rumaging through google i found a couple of images which were very interesting. firstly are a couple of what looks like a german vehicle/tank scrap yard! what do you think happened to it all?
and the other is once more of unseen tanks, well tanks i havent seen anyway.
if anyone knows anything about these then please do share ! :)
-1/16 Tamiya King Tiger Porsche Turret (late war)
-RC Sdkfz halftrack
-1/16 HL Tiger (early)
Rivetcounter
Sergeant
Posts: 540
Joined: Sat Sep 27, 2008 12:04 pm
Location: Brussels, Belgium

Re: what do you think happened to these?

Post by Rivetcounter »

First 2 scrap metal second 2 prototype tanks that where never produced
They shall not grow old as we who are left grow old.
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning,
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM
michelekingtiger
Lance Corporal
Posts: 179
Joined: Sun May 17, 2009 8:13 pm
Location: Hitchin

Re: what do you think happened to these?

Post by michelekingtiger »

ah okays cheers :)
i know in poland tanks were scraped to help rebuild the economy, thought more of those vehicles would have survived  :-\ i would of happily put them in my garden lol
its always the prototype tanks which look the coolest and most outrages, no wonder they werent produced  :'(
-1/16 Tamiya King Tiger Porsche Turret (late war)
-RC Sdkfz halftrack
-1/16 HL Tiger (early)
User avatar
Woz
Warrant Officer 2nd Class
Posts: 1322
Joined: Thu Oct 23, 2008 12:06 am
Location: UK
Contact:

Re: what do you think happened to these?

Post by Woz »

The third tank was a prototype for a tank that could withstand the shockwave of a nuclear explosion.
User avatar
vonrundstedt
Staff Sergeant
Posts: 994
Joined: Mon May 18, 2009 12:25 am
Location: Northampton, UK

Re: what do you think happened to these?

Post by vonrundstedt »

Deffinately scrapped for thier metal to be used else where. I went to a school where the main fabric of the building was made from metal reclaimed from scrapped air craft after the war. The other two tanks are very interesting but as rivetcounter and MKT suggest, never produced.
"He knows every thing about nothing, and not so much about that, if you know somebody who knows what he knows, then you must know....someone quite thick!
User avatar
wibblywobbly
Major
Posts: 6396
Joined: Fri Oct 17, 2008 9:30 am
Location: South Wales Valley
Contact:

Re: what do you think happened to these?

Post by wibblywobbly »

All I know is that after the war the UK government simply told the scrapdealers in the UK that they needed to rebuild Europe, and that there were a lot of vehicles littering the French countryside. They dealers went over and removed it all, which is why there is not a lot left. Some dealers became rather wealthy as a result of this venture.
Tiger 1 Late
Panther G
King Tiger
M36 B1
User avatar
tankmad
Warrant Officer 2nd Class
Posts: 1335
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2009 10:02 pm
Location: glasgow
Contact:

Re: what do you think happened to these?

Post by tankmad »

If only they knew how much it would be worth today they might have kept some ;D
Stevie
http://www.tankworld.co.uk
This is not an obsession I can give it up anytime
daviddunlop
Private
Posts: 92
Joined: Fri Jan 16, 2009 11:10 pm
Location: Winnipeg, Canada

Re: what do you think happened to these?

Post by daviddunlop »

I wonder if there was really that much money to be made in large amounts of scrap armor right after the war? There was a military surplus dealer about an hour out of Winnipeg a number of years ago who bought 6 surplus Shermans in the late 1960's because he figured the weight in scrap steel would more than cover the costs of the vehicles. Turned out the foundries wanted the steel in small chunks and paid a very low price because the armored steel took a lot more time and effort to melt and rework to make it compatible with general steel scrap. The dealer also spent a fortune in acetylene cutting the Sherman's up. Worst investment he said he ever made.

On the other side of the value coin, however, I remember reading an article a while back dealing with the design of sophisticated research equipment where accurate measurements of radioactive isotopes were required. Apparently, ever since we started exploding atomic weapons in the atmosphere, all metals we produce contain radioactive contaminants which will corrupt any readings from any equipment we make. Someone in England then remembered that the Imperial German Battle Fleet that they scuttled at Scapa Flow after the First World War all had armor plate manufactured in the pre-Atomic age and a number of these warships have been salvaged over the years to provide this nice clean metal. We probably could have done the same thing with surplus Tigers and Panthers today, if they were around in any numbers.  :o

David
Last edited by daviddunlop on Wed Jul 08, 2009 2:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
Post Reply

Return to “General Discussion”