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We do not sell any of the items showcased on this site. Material presented throughout this website is for historical and entertainment value only and should not to be construed as usable for hardware restoration, maintenance, or general operation. All written content, illustrations, and photography are unique to this website (unless where indicated) and not for reuse/reproduction in any form. trademarks protected by all applicable domestic and international intellectual property laws. The "Military Factory" name and logo are registered ® U.S. Flag images indicative of country of origin and not necessarily the primary operator.Ģ024 Military Pay Chart Military Ranks DoD Dictionary Conversion Calculators Military Alphabet Code Military Map Symbols Entries are listed below by initial year of service descending. There are a total of Main Battle Tanks (MBT) entries in the Military Factory. Additionally, Anti-Tank Guided Missiles (ATGMs)) have increased their lethality and forced major protection revisions from MBT designers - leading to the thought that the MBT may very well be seeing its last decade of battlefield dominance. In more recent years, some land forces have been abandoning the MBT concept in favor of more mobile, lightweight wheeled armored vehicles. This was then followed by competing designs from the Soviet Union (the classic T-54/T-55 lines) and the United States (through their M60 'Patton'). The first true Main Battle Tank came from the British who unveiled their Centurion A41 in 1945. With the advent of lighter composite armor, engineers fashioned a new fighting machine which has remained the mainstay of modern land forces today. The MBT arose out of a need for a 'Universal Tank' concept capable of achieving the same results through a single design. During the conflict, land forces relied on a mix of light, medium and heavy tank types to fulfill various requirements. The Main Battle Tank (MBT) became a primary battlefield fixture in the years following World War 2 (1939-1945).