Comparing: E 50 Ausf. M vs. FV4202

E50_Ausf_M

The German Army demanded that the E-series tanks had transmissions positioned in the rear. However, the E 50 and E 75 tanks used the Tiger II engine-transmission compartment, which made rear placement of the transmission impossible. The E 50 Ausf. M tank was a redesign of the E 50 project with the transmission placed in the rear.

GB70_FV4202_105

Experimental tank on the basis of the Centurion medium tank. The vehicle was in development from 1956 through 1959, but never saw mass production. Technical decisions and innovations implemented in the FV4202 became the basis for the FV4201 Chieftain.

Modules
Auto select
Turrets
Guns
Engines
Suspensions
Radios
Main Characteristics
Tank data page Tank data page Tank data page
Tier X X
Battle Tiers 10 11 10 11
Price 6,100,000 6,100,000
Hit Points
Signal range
Speed Limit60 km/h40 km/h
Speed Limit Back20 km/h20 km/h
Weight
Load limit
Crew
  • Commander
  • Gunner
  • Driver
  • Radio Operator
  • Loader
  • Commander
  • Gunner
  • Driver
  • Loader (Radio Operator)
Armor
Hull Armor
Front:
150 mm
Side:
80 mm
Rear:
80 mm
Front:
121 mm
Side:
51 mm
Rear:
32 mm
Turret Armor
Mobility
Engine Power
Horse power / weight
Traverse Speed
Max Climb Angle
Hard terrain resistance
Medium terrain resistance
Soft terrain resistance
Fire Chance
Engine Type
Turret
View Range
Turret Traverse
Traverse Arc
Armament
Damage (Explosion radius)
Penetration
Shell Price
Shell Speed
Damage / min
Rate of Fire
Reload time
Clip
Accuracy
Aim time
Elevation Arc
Ammo Capacity
Camo value
Stationary8.00 %13.00 %
In motion3.00 %9.00 %
When Firing1.72 %2.89 %
Battle performance
Accuracy78.4337 %76.2275 %
Neto Credits Income-15374.6-13504.9
Winrate51.4944 %51.6422 %
Damage dealt1968.011835.03
Kills per Battle0.9997270.934631
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