Home Artists Posts Import Register

Content

Curator David Willey returns for July's exclusive Patreon Q&A - with his dog Fin. Please feel free to submit your question for next month's edition in the comments section below. Enjoy!

Files

Exclusive Patreon Q&A | July 2021 | The Tank Museum

Curator David Willey returns for July's exclusive Patreon Q&A - with his dog Fin. Please feel free to submit your question for next month's edition in the comments section below. Enjoy! SUBSCRIBE to The Tank Museum YouTube channel: ► http://www.youtube.com/channel/UChl-XKVVBAzoEVsnbOfpcqw? Support the work of The Tank Museum on Patreon: ► https://www.patreon.com/tankmuseum Visit The Tank Museum SHOP & become a Friend: ►https://tankmuseumshop.org/ Press the little bell above to enable NOTIFICATIONS so you don’t miss the latest Tank Museum videos. Follow The Tank Museum on FACEBOOK: ► https://www.facebook.com/tankmuseum/ Twitter: ► https://twitter.com/TankMuseum Instagram: ► https://www.instagram.com/tankmuseum/ Stay up-to-date with the latest Museum news, videos, and special offers: https://mailchi.mp/e6fae2ac8bee/newslettersignup? #tankmuseum #tanks

Comments

Robert Forman

Hello all! During WW2, when in the field, whose responsibility was it for general maintenance of a tank? Was the driver the substitute mechanic or did it fall to the most mechanically minded? For example, in "Fury" the Sherman has broken down and and the loader is doing the repair... thanks and keep up the wonderful content you put out!

Joe Powell

In some videos of a popular tank related YouTuber, he mentions that American WW2 TC command for "Please shoot those chaps over there" would be some variation of "Gunner, coax, doughs, 300,11 o'clock" . Knowing the British tendency to be different, did they use any different terminology, particularly in regards to identifying targets (infantry, tanks, buildings and so on) . Do you happen to know a good book or other source for the subject?