Amusingly enough, the Sheridan looks the least intimidating out of the lights that's rolling unlike the faces of the Walker Bulldog. Its rather a ridiculous thing for a tank this small to pack a howitzer level gun capable of firing "screw you, the people around you and your cover" HE shells as well as the lulzy Shillelagh.
Amusingly enough, the Sheridan looks the least intimidating out of the lights that's rolling unlike the faces of the Walker Bulldog. Its rather a ridiculous thing for a tank this small to pack a howitzer level gun capable of firing "screw you, the people around you and your cover" HE shells as well as the lulzy Shillelagh.
Still, when it's designed to be dropped in via parachute, it's still armor hitting the field. And when accompanying airborne units, it offers that much needed force multiplier and metal hard cover against incoming small arms. And it was fast. 43 mph on the road and it could swim. Not very well, at 3.6 mph, but it could.
Still, when it's designed to be dropped in via parachute, it's still armor hitting the field. And when accompanying airborne units, it offers that much needed force multiplier and metal hard cover against incoming small arms. And it was fast. 43 mph on the road and it could swim. Not very well, at 3.6 mph, but it could.
Both aspects (being amphibious and airborne) are underrated, along with being light enough to cross many bridges that heavier tanks cannot unlike many of the incredibly heavy modern MBT in western inventories like the Abrams, the Leopard 2, Merkava, Challenger 2, or the AMX Leclerc.