The gunner was provided with a weapons control panel that indicated which rifles were loaded. A centrally-placed fire selector switch knob allowed the gunner to choose between manual, autosingle, or autodouble firing modes. Manual allowed the gunner to select the desired loaded and armed rifles to fire. All loaded rifles that were armed would fire with the trigger actuation. Autosingle fired one 106mm rifle, and each subsequent trigger actuation would fire the next in line. If all rifles were loaded and armed, they would fire in the order of 1, 6, 2, 5, 3, and 4 in order to maintain the maximum two-rifle salvos at all times. By pressing the desired next to fire indicator light, however, the gunner could choose the first rifle to fire. Autodouble would fire two armed rifles at a time; if all were loaded and armed, the sequence would normally fire rifles 1 and 6, then 2 and 5, and finally 3 and 4 in order to maintain turret balance. However, as before, the gunner could choose which pair would begin by pressing the next to fire indicator light for the lower-numbered rifle of the pair. Edit: Forgot to add that the rifles were numbered 1 through 6 clockwise starting with the bottom left rifle when looking at them from behind the vehicle
Another 'not tank', but I really like this—it looks like the kind of child's toy my granfather would buy me from the toyshop near the seafront. A 1950s Humber Hornet equipped with Malkara Anti-Tank Missiles with a range of 4Km. The vehicle is designed to be air portable.
Splendid footage of an M5 & M3 hitting Hedgehog tank traps at speed. Not seen that before... https://x.com/hw97karbine/status/1930903738497298692