Tank Chats #6 Vickers Light MKVI B | The Tank Museum
Tank Chats playlist • Tank Chats from The Tank Museum The first mass-produced British tank. Being, in terms of numbers, the most significant British tank at the outbreak of war, the Mark VIB saw service with the British Expeditionary Force in France, the Eighth Army in North Africa and in various subsidiary theatres. As a reconnaissance vehicle it was satisfactory, as a fighting tank quite useless since armour protection was minimal and the armament ineffective against enemy tanks. SUBSCRIBE to The Tank Museum YouTube channel: ► / @thetankmuseum Press the little bell above to enable NOTIFICATIONS so you don’t miss the latest Tank Museum videos. Follow The Tank Museum on FACEBOOK: ► / tankmuseum Follow The TIGER Tank Collection on FACEBOOK : ► / tigertankcollection Twitter: ► / tankmuseum Tiger Tank Blog: ► http://blog.tiger-tank.com/ Tank 100 First World War Centenary Blog: ► http://tank100.com/ #tankmuseum #tanks #tankchats

Light Tank Mk IV | Tank Chats #173 | The Tank Museum

Everyone is Wrong about the Cromwell Tank

Inside the StuG III with Hilary Louis Doyle | Arsenalen Swedish Tankmuseum

Tank Chats #58 Buffalo & Weasel | The Funnies | The Tank Museum

US Armament Reproduction DeLisle Commando Carbine (Silenced .45ACP)

Tank Chats #112 | Churchill Mk I and II | The Tank Museum

Glock: The Curtain Rod Maker With Zero Gun Experience Who Humiliated Every Armourer on Earth

Bigger Isn’t Always Better: A1E1 Independent | Tank Chats Reloaded

More than you want to know about the Panzer III

Tank Chats #79 Cruiser Mark II A10 | The Tank Museum

Tiny Artillery Gun That Fought in WW1: Infanteriegeschütz m.15 with expert Jonathan Ferguson

Every Rank in the Roman Legion Explained

Germany's Puma IFV is a Failure.

Tank Chats #57 Churchill AVRE | The Funnies | The Tank Museum

CVR(T) - Britain's Cold War Light Tanks

Every WW2 Fighter Plane Ranked — Overrated vs Ruthless

The 'Tin-Can' British Tank From The Falklands That Now Hunts Russians In Ukraine

What Happened to the Cox .049? | The Engine That Couldn’t Survive Modern Childhood

Why German Aces Escorted a British Spitfire Home

