Gr.StPzw. K7V-G
Gr.StPzw. K7V-G
Groß-Sturmpanzerwagen, Kaiserlich Kriegsdepartement , Abteilung 7 (Verkehrswesen), Großpanzer
Standardgrau Paint
Origin: Kaiserreich Teutonien
Manufacturer: Bäumen-Mädchen Maschinenfabrik
Crew: 12 (Driver, Sponson Gunner #1, Sponson Loader #1, Sponson Gunner #2, Sponson Loader #2, Main Gunner, Main Loader #1, Main Loader #2, Main Loader #3, Turret Gunner/Commander, Mechanic #1, Mechanic #2)
Armor Value:
Effective: 70mm-20mm
Main Armament: 12cm Feldhaubitzekanone L/30
Secondary Armament:
- 2x 7.5cm Feldhaubitzekanone L/30
- 2x 7.9mm MG 18
- 1x 14.5mm Sch.MG 20
Engine: 2x 315 HP Landmaschinen V6
Weight: 105 tonnes
Cruise Range: 100km
Top Speed: 15 kmph Smooth/6 kmph Offroad
DESCRIPTION
Gr.StPzw. K7V-G (Groß-Sturmpanzerwagen K7V-G) was a super-heavy tank manufactured by Kaiserreich Teutonien in 1918-1920. It was the largest tank to be ever deployed in numbers, beaten only after Obelia deployed the collosal C.18C.
K7V-G mainly produced by Bäumen-Mädchen Maschinenfabrik, although parts such as the massive 12cm FhK L/30 artillery piece and other components were manufactured by Erlingen Waffenfabrik. K7V-G were built around the relatively new idea of combined warfare where tanks, aircraft and infantry moved together in high level of coordination, and this tank were specifically made to support infantry to attack trenches. On paper, The heavy armament could bombard the trenches while the tank, alongside infantry moves through the No Man's Land, then the heavy weight could easily destroy trenches in seconds. However, in practice, the result were the opposite.
DEPLOYMENT HISTORY
K7V-G were deployed in Floran-Obelian War (1921-1925) where 7 out of 15 planned K7V-G sent to aid the defense of Anneau de Feu fortresses line againts Obelian 3th and 4th Legion. The tanks proved to be difficult to transport as it needs separate, specialized train to transport the massive and heavyweight tank. They were rarely sent to push the enemy, but rather used as static defensive point in separate locations since the tanks would be easily knocked down by artillery barrages if actually sent to move forth against enemy line.
After the war, 2 out of 7 sent K7V-G were abandoned after their first and only battle, other 3 destroyed by their crews, and last 2 captured by Imperium Obelia. The catasthropic result halted the further production almost immediately, with the remaining 8 only deployed for propagandas and static defenses.
ACTIVATION GROUPS:
Pitch - Move Forth/Reverse
Roll - Turn
AG1 - Activate Main Gun, VTOL and Trim to control, Fire to fire
AG2-3 - Activate Sponson Guns, VTOL and Trim to control, Fire to fire
AG4 - Sponson Machine Guns, VTOL and Trim to control, Fire to fire
AG5 - Turret,Camera to control, Fire to fire
AG6 - None
AG7 - Light
AG8 - None(?)
NOTE
Probably Mobile Friendly, the extensive use of labels could make the gameplay laggy
GALLERY
Specifications
Spotlights
- Icey21 3 months ago
- YarisSedan 2 months ago
- Marulk 3 months ago
- Tingly06822 3 months ago
- SILVERPANZER 3 months ago
General Characteristics
- Created On Windows
- Wingspan 23.3ft (7.1m)
- Length 53.8ft (16.4m)
- Height 18.3ft (5.6m)
- Empty Weight 52,994lbs (24,037kg)
- Loaded Weight 55,747lbs (25,286kg)
Performance
- Wing Loading N/A
- Wing Area 0.0ft2 (0.0m2)
- Drag Points 3242
Parts
- Number of Parts 630
- Control Surfaces 0
- Performance Cost 2,208
gyatt that is sigma rizz ngl im surprised you’re still posting skibidi content
GYATT
@Panzerwaifu69
... on a second thought.... early WWI biplane bombers also used hand grenades and mortar bombs as their payload not unlike modern drones, so...
Airburst munitions (which causes damage through shockwave, shrapnel, or fragmentation) don't quite work against armored targets so I doubt thats's the case.
Let's just say it's a desperate attempt to minimize artillery/bomb damage, especially the airburst one
@ThomasRoderick idk lol, it just looks cool with a cope cage imo
Anybody explain why does a WWI tank require anti-drone cages again?
miraculous
wonderful!
Beautiful Tank
@Panzerwaifu69 no problem
@dekanii thanks!
Good job, this looks very nice