British heavy tanks of World War I
product
Wikipage disambiguates
.50 BMG.55 Boys1920: America's Great War2nd (Seaham) Durham Artillery Volunteer Corps2nd East Riding Artillery Volunteers2nd Middlesex Artillery Volunteers3rd Royal Tank Regiment7th Queen's Own HussarsA7VAlbert Gerald SternAlbrecht von ThaerAmphibious warfareAmphibious warfare shipAnti-materiel rifleAnti-tank rifleArmoured Vehicle Royal EngineersArmoured fighting vehicleArmoured vehicle-launched bridgeArmoured warfareAubriot-Gabet "Fortress"Box girder bridgeBritish Army during World War IBritish Army uniform and equipment in World War IBritish Heavy Tanks of World War ICanadian Expeditionary ForceChar 2CChar B1Charley's WarCheshire BrigadeComparison of World War I tanksContinuous trackCulture of the United KingdomDaimler CompanyDeborah (disambiguation)Discovery Park of AmericaDummy tankEuropean theatre of World War I
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
primaryTopic
British heavy tanks of World War I
height (mm)
length (mm)
width (mm)
height (μ)
length (μ)
type
width (μ)
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,023,433,097
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
author
David Lloyd George
@en
caption
design date
designer
William Tritton, Major Walter Gordon Wilson
@en
engine
Daimler-Knight 6-cylinder sleeve-valve 16-litre petrol engine
@en
fuel capacity
internal
@en
is UK
yes
@en
is vehicle
yes
@en
length
with tail
@en
without
@en
manufacturer
Metropolitan Carriage, Birmingham
@en
William Foster & Co. of Lincoln
@en
name
British heavy tanks of WWI
@en
origin
United Kingdom
@en
primary armament
Female: Four .303 in Vickers machine guns
@en
Male: Two Hotchkiss 6 pdr QF
@en
production date
pw ratio
Female:
@en
Male:
@en
secondary armament
Female: One .303 in Hotchkiss machine guns
@en
Male: Three .303 in Hotchkiss Machine Guns
@en
service
from 1916
@en
spec label
Tank, Mark I
@en
speed
maximum
@en
suspension
text
Well, we must not expect too m ...... others also did valuable work.
@en
transmission
primary gearbox: 2 forward and 1 reverse
@en
secondary:2 speeds
@en
type
used by
Canada
@en
Empire of Japan
@en
Estonia
@en
France
@en
German Empire
@en
Latvia
@en
Russian Empire
@en
Soviet Union
@en
United Kingdom
@en
United States
@en
variants
Mark II, Mark III, Mark IV, Ma ...... IX, Mark X, Gun Carrier Mark I
@en
vehicle range
weight
Female:
@en
Male:
@en
width
[female]
@en
[male]
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
wordnet_type
subject
hypernym
label
British heavy tanks of World War I
@en