The War ends. The Germans march home and de-mobilise themselves. The Allies take possession of all the German tanks (mostly at Charleroi). French and other Allied forces occupy parts of Germany. A civil war breaks out in Germany with, amongst many factions, Spartakists on the political left, and Freikorps on the right. Germany is crippled by the Allied blockade. Poles fight for a country of their own.
But amongst all that desperate confusion Germany can still sell some leichterkampfwagen to Hungary, and smuggle the parts for some 15 leichterkampfwagen to Sweden, AND make at least two of a completely new design tank; the Hedi type.
Peter speculates that the Hedis were built on Uberlandwagen chassis. OK. Probably. I can buy that.
But then two pop up out of thin air in 1919. I'm intrigued by this. Is anybody else?
Where did the resources come from? I mean the sheets of steel. Who designed it? Where were they built? If they were not built where they were used, how did they get there, right under the noses of the occupation forces?
I dont know what my 'main question' is. I am just agog at how it is possible that these Hedi tanks just appear and disappear like a rabbit out of a magician's top hat.
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Saturday 14th of March 2009 03:52:09 PM
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The book 'Panzerwaffe' volume one (editor: John Prigent / co-writer Rainer Strasheim) by Ian Allen Publishing, 2007, quotes that the two Hedi's were indeed on the Überlandwagen chassis. They were intended to be used as communication / command vehicles, though not necessarily in combination with other tanks. Part of the gun mounts weren't gun mounts at all, but were signalling lamp mounts. The Oberleutnant Hans von Skopnik is said to have seized the two uncompleted vehicles in november 1918, and organised their completion at a company called Steffens & Noelle's. Later photo's show two different types of markings (both are by the way included in the Retrokit model) for apparantly the same vehicle featuring two domes on the roof at the driver's position. The one photo showing both vehicles, shows the second vehicle with only one such dome. Whatever has become of that one isn't known, as there are no known photo's or records of it.
all these things came already up my mind a few years ago. And then I realised that these are neither the right questions nor the realy important ones.
Don't get me wrong - it is an interesting question how it happend, how they did it. Because obviously they did it.
The realy interesting questions are: LKs: Looking at the time which passed during the more than one time sales to Sweden and Hungary: How many did they realy produce? How many were they able to sell? Did they sell to others coutries too?
Hedis: Comparing the completed tanks to the design of the A7V communication / command tank: does not fit - they drawing I hvae seen are totaly different. So what were they realy designed / made for? Also the tanks do not look like improvised tanks. How many were realy built? Comparing the known fotos of them; comparing the environments in which they were fotographed: a strange "feeling" I realy can't explain, comes up and tells me there must be more than 2 tanks. But much more important: where have they gone?
A7V "Imperator": An A7V tank in KoKampf-service! Aren't the fates of all (!) A7Vs well known? Where does this tank come from? Were realy only 20 A7Vs built? If yes, then maybe the French Army lied due to the tanks they captured in Wiesbaden, but why? If there numbers of captured tanks are true, what tanks did they realy count? Remember: KoKampf didn't exist before early 1919. Also I read and learned that all A7Vs with buck mounted guns later became changed to socket mounted guns. Again the question: where did Imperator came from? Where did he go? Are there pictures of his scraping?
Facing the facts: Minimum 2 Hedis are fact + minimum 1 "Imperator" = smallest 3 tanks of which we don't know realy where they came from and what was their fate.
And last but not least: Are these 3 tanks the beginning of rumors about Polish A7Vs? If yes, where have they gone? Were they fighting in the Polish-Russian war? Maybe the Reds captured some?
Well ... I don't have any evidences, but these are the questions crossing my mind, facing the facts.
Regards Chris
-- Edited by elbavaro on Monday 16th of March 2009 12:11:37 AM
-- Edited by elbavaro on Monday 16th of March 2009 09:43:16 AM
This is the sort of question that suddenly occurs to you and makes you wonder why no one has asked it before. I think we discussed a while ago how the 'insurgents', as they would be called nowadays, managed to run a Whippet and a couple of MkIVs without the occupation forces having something to say about it. Perhaps they rented a garage under an assumed name.
My missus used to teach the history of the Weimar Republic, but the mechanized warfare aspect of it was not within the scope of the curriculum. To my embarrassment, I'm not really sure how much of Germany was occupied immediately after the War and to what extent she was allowed to continue running herself.
Some reading is required.
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Well ... there was not much occupied after WW1. It was totaly different to 1945 when Germany was fragmented into 4 occupied zones and all German soldiers were in POW camps.
1918 there was only some area on the right side of the Rhine occupied by the French (like Wiesbaden) and by British (like Cologne). And of course France confiscated Elsaß (Alsace) and Lothringen (Lorraine).
In the East of Germany it was also different, as Poland confiscated several areas and wanted more and more land. This was the reason of founding the "Grenzschutz Ost" (boarder defense east). Some British and other forces were sent to Schlesien (Silesia) for watching the votes about Silesia.
No other occupation. No Allied Military Government was ruling Germany. Of course the Allied Controll Comission was able to go everywhere and controll or search everything which was military- or police-related, but this was no occupation like 1945.
In the past I have read some books about different military units and most of them also told their history; also the inter-war-era. It was often told "They hided everything. Everybody knew what to do when members of the Allied Controll Comission reached the baracks gates. Also some of them understood very well that Germany wanted to keep some power for self-defense.". So as a German it is totaly clear to me how it worked.
so, if I may, I'd like to try to shift the focus more on to the Hedi type tanks.
So, Michel, "Oberleutnant Hans von Skopnik... seized the two uncompleted (Uberlandwagen signalling) vehicles in november 1918, and organised their completion (as Hedi type) at a company called Steffens & Noelle's."
This makes me think immediately of two questions: exactly what date in November 1918 were they seized; before or after the armistice of the 11th? And where were Steffens & Noelle's located and what was the nature of their business, ie why are they involved in making tanks? (OK, that's 3 questions!)
Chris says, "the tanks do not look like improvised tanks" and I agree with that! So did Oberleutnant Hans von Skopnik design them and give his blueprints to Steffens & Noelle's? Or was Joseph Vollmer involved somehow?
In the photo of the two Hedis together, "one of the soldiers standing near the left side tank seems to wear a collar badge of "Grenzschutz Ost". What is known about "Grenzschutz Ost"? Does that put a definitive date and place on the photo? And, "The 'Hedi' was used in action in Berlin in 1919". But do we know when exactly? http://www.landships.freeservers.com/a7vhedi.htm
Am I right in assuming that Steffens & Noelle's are the 'Berlin based construction company' recently acquired by INDUS Holding AG? That would make it easier to explain how these tanks got onto the streets of Berlin 'as if by magic'. Maybe they were built in Berlin?
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Monday 16th of March 2009 10:07:56 PM
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Monday 16th of March 2009 10:08:19 PM
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9th January 1919: Appeal of the German Government to officers and NCOs of the former Imperial Army to build voluntary units - Freikorps - for the eastern boarder protection.
21st January 1919: OHL (Oberste Heeresleitung = Army High Command) is redeployed to the city of Kolberg (yes, famous Kolbererg of 1806 and 1945). Commander is Fíeldmarshal Hindenburg.
Of course the redeployment of the OHL it does not mean that also all units were sent to the eastern boarder. Sure, sometimes complete units trespassed from of the former army to the Freikorps and were ready to fight. But most of the units had to be founded, had to recruit volunteers, organize equipment and weapons, build the units, train them ready to fight and send them to the East. This all takes time and I remember having seen a newspaper announce "Looking for drivers for the Grenzschutz Ost" on 23rd February 1919.
-- Edited by elbavaro on Tuesday 17th of March 2009 12:58:38 AM
I have read that the first A7V was produced by Daimler (mechanics), Steffens (chassis) and Nölle (armour). On the other hand, M Hundleby says that Steffens and Nölle was one company in 1917. Perhaps it was, but with separate divisions.
MH seems to have not known about Hedi's twin at the time of writing his book. But he does say that Hedi was a Geländewagen of the Tank Training Detachment "fitted with surplus armour plates, possibly from 542 A7V-U". Earlier, though, he says that Hedi might have been based on the old 524 A7V-U chassis or on an ordinary carrier, and that the body was "probably" mild steel.
He then says that "the tank" (which one?) was required to be delivered to the Allied Control Commission in July 1919, "but was afterwards scrapped, of which there is photographic evidence".
Returning to the LK, I find it surprising that the Hungarian and Swedish transactions were allowed to take place. One assumes that the Commission was very keen on anything involving armoured vehicles, but, as Chris says, they must have been comprehensively duped.
-- Edited by James H on Tuesday 17th of March 2009 11:16:30 AM
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Using this information puts a possible 'time bracket' on the Hedi sightings; Oberleutnant Hans von Skopnik commandeers the chassis in November 1918, 'Grenzschutz Ost' (standing beside both Hedis) possibly January 1919 but probably February 1919, 'KoKampf' (slogans on Hedi in Berlin) is March 1919, and a possible scrapping date of after July 1919.
The Hundleby 'evidence' I find confusing. I think possibly some meaning has been lost in translation. For example, if he says that a chassis came from the A7V-U and then there are photos of the tank being scrapped, does that mean photos of the A7V-U being scrapped or the Hedi being scrapped?
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Tuesday 17th of March 2009 02:24:24 PM
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And please don't forget the A7V "Imperator" also wearing KoKampf signs!
This means lowest 3 A7Vs in service AFTER December 1918 when French Army supposed to capture all remaining A7Vs in Wiesbaden. Has anyone ever seen any evidence of French scrapping all these A7Vs?
Yes it is known that this seems to be fact, that all A7Vs were captured by the French, but ... I have never ever seen this evidences. And I mean: photographical evidences! No piece of paper, no receipt which says "Yes, me Colonel Fabiene, I receipe that my soldiers have scrapped 9 German tanks of A7V production." In Germany we say "Paper is patient.". And: the French were so proud of their victory - why didn't they send one in a museum? The one at Place de la Concorde was already scrap metal when they put the tank there.
And I agree with philthydirtyanimal: I also think Hundlebys evidence is confusing. This does not mean he is wrong!
But ...
We have to face the facts: until we have not seen photographical evidences of scrapping the last A7Vs (including the Hedis) it is a theory - a theory like Polish A7Vs. Maybe a much better provable one than the Polish rumor. Maybe there is a piece of paper anywhere? But: has it seen anyone in a photo? I have not seen it until now.
Added all these numbers together and standig on a point of totaly neutrallity: what do we have? We have signs, but no evidences for both possible cases. But how much signs do we have at each case?
Scrapped french-captured A7Vs: maybe a piece of paper anywhere? Basis for rumors about Polish A7Vs: smallest 3 A7Vs (or kind of) in service after the armistice and after French occupation of Wiesbaden in december 1918. Possible that they were used in Grenzschutz Ost. Maybe they were captured by Polish.
I do not want to say: it is a fact of polish A7Vs, but we have to be aware of some possible reasons for this rumors.
Remember: how long was it state-of-the-art knowing that Hedi was a single tank?
Just my 5 cents!
Regards Chris
-- Edited by elbavaro on Tuesday 17th of March 2009 03:31:43 PM
I guess everyone in this forum knows the picture of a Freikorps Whippet with the number 53 in front f Berlin Hotel Eden. It is said that it is the same day when the picture was taken with "Hedi" number 54 (I guess everyone know too). You can see both in the book of Max Hundleby & Rainer Strasheim on page 192.
This was on 19th January 1919.
A later picture of Hedi (page 193) it is said March 1919 and shows allready the KoKampf sign
Last but not least some further thing crossed my mind:
As I said the Hedi tanks do not look like improvised tanks to me. Just take a look at all pictures. It is not only the quality of the armour, the design and the mounting of the machine guns. There are details which indicates a professional industrial production. Juts have a look at the flaps - they are 100% like the ones the brandnew A7Vs had when they were sent to the front.
I also said I have a feeling I realy can't explain which makes me think of a possible 3rd Hedi.
Why?
If you have a look at the markings of the A7V in combat service at the western front, you often can see - due to changes in the markings - some kind of "ghost markings". Right?
Forward to 19th January 1919: Hedi with number 54 has front writing "Tank Detachment - Goverment Loyal Troops"and a huge skull. If you have a look at later pictures of Hedi - you can't see any ghost markings. And the have a look at the picture with the two Hedis together - no marking or ghost marking at all. Definetly the view on them is from behind and at the right side.
The question is: when was the picture of the two Hedis taken exactly?
"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
So, is it a fairly plausible time line? And, Chris, I agree with you, the Hedi tanks do not look improvised. They look well designed, I'd say, better than the A7V.
And whilst I agree that the 'armour plate' was probably just mild steel, did Steffens and Nölle have the capability of making armour plate? They had some two to three months to make these Hedis.
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Tuesday 17th of March 2009 09:00:00 PM
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Wednesday 18th of March 2009 12:57:15 AM
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@James: I am sorry, but be sure: whilst so much ideas crossed my mind I got a headache too.
@Ivan: just to provoke a little: do you have photographical evidence of NO A7Vs in Poland and NO capture of them by Russian forces?
;o))
Ivan, I just was asking questions. Until there is no evidence of where all these A7Vs and Hedis have gone, you don't have any evidence too; but you may have a theory with a chance of 99% beeing right. Right?
@philthidirtyanimal: OK - we can do the discussion anywhere, but may I suggest that we discuss Hedis and Imperator together, as I think they are probably the basis for the Polish A7V rumors.
elbavaro, we can discuss whate'er you choose, where'er; all comment is welcome!
For me though, Imperator is just an A7V that turned up where it shouldnt have been at a time when it shouldnt have.
As for the Polish A7V story, my feeling is that the photographs in this thread http://www.activeboard.com/forum.spark?forumID=63528&p=3&topicID=7237019 could account for its origins. Especially when you remember that at that time journalists called any armoured vehicle a 'tank'. Just look at that first photo that Mark Hansen posted, 'wozniak-walerus'.
But the Hedi tanks! A brand new tank produced when (allegedly) Germany didnt have the resources and was in turmoil. And there is the new photo recently sold on ebay, and Retrokits' kit with Black Lion's decals!
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Ivan, please don't mind me! I believe that you are right.
But facing nothing but the cruel facts: it is still not 100% proven; lets say only 99%; maybe 99.99%. Because you only have a piece of paper - nothing else, nothing less. Lists can be incomplete. Remember the times: Germany was in unrest and stillt today no one knows all Freikorps units ever have seen service. Every year there is smallest one unknown Freikorps badge on the collectors market. Poland in that time had to fight on all boarders. Russia sunk into cruelest civil war and I can't believe that today all units have been on a list.
What I am trying to say is: all signs we do have regarding what happend to the 9 remaining A7Vs in December 1918 is: it seems to be to 99% sure that they were captured in Wiesbaden by the French. 5 years ago I would have said 100%, but still there is Imperator and it teaches us we cant be sure.
I suggested in 2005, when I was young and naive, that the Polish A7V rumour might have been connected with the pic of the Erhardt. At first glance, the two could be confused in the pic below.
Anyway, I've looked at the pics of Hedi in MH's book, and they're puzzling. There's a pic of her in Leipzig, with the name in very neat letters on the right hand side of the bow at about head height.and very professional-looking skull and crossbones on the bow and r/h side. It's dated May 18th, 1919. Any other markings are hidden by the crew members surrounding the vehicle.
Another pic shows her allegedly in Berlin in January 1919, with completely different markings; the number 54 on either side of the bow, a much bigger and clumsier death's head on the side, and the Regierungstreue motto painted on the bow, apparently with a yardbrush.
It could be that they just had a proper paint job done as they became more organised.
As regards Imperator, I can't see anything in the photograph that establishes definitely that it is post-War. I still think all 20 are accounted for, but am willing to learn.
"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
"There's a pic of her in Leipzig, with the name in very neat letters on the right hand side of the bow at about head height.and very professional-looking skull and crossbones on the bow and r/h side. It's dated May 18th, 1919. Any other markings are hidden by the crew members surrounding the vehicle.": http://www.landships.freeservers.com/hedi3.JPG
EDIT: well, the linking doesnt work! "Remote Linking Forbidden". I guess the Landships website is too remote from the Landships forum on the Landships website. The pictures I tried to link to can be found in the Hedi article in the German section of the Tank section (groan), and the last and latest picture can be found in the Hobby News & Rumours section. Or, you can copy and paste the link into the address bar and hit 'Go'!
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Wednesday 18th of March 2009 03:42:34 PM
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Wednesday 18th of March 2009 04:03:22 PM
-- Edited by philthydirtyanimal on Wednesday 18th of March 2009 04:04:41 PM
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It is definetly the Main station of Leipzig - there are other pictures of Hedi with two Mar IV and the soldiers at the same place. But in some books it is writen something like "shows Hedi at the Kraftfahrer-Kaserne (motor drivers baracks) in Berlin-Lankwitz, which is definetly wrong.
Is it possible for you to post those 'other photos' elbavaro? Or maybe give a book reference so I can look them up in my local public library? (I cant afford $250 for Hundleby's A7V & Beutepanzer book)
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1. What if the 'Hedi' with the clumsy writing and '54' painted on is not the same vehicle as the one in Leipzig with 'Hedi' written on? I can't see 'Hedi' written on the '54' vehicle anywhere. The photos are in different places at different times, and the statements about them were made before the photo showing two Hedis was known.
2. I cant see any writing at all on Herr Doherr's photo of the two Hedis; are they a 3rd and 4th Hedi?
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Is it possible for you to post those 'other photos' elbavaro? Or maybe give a book reference so I can look them up in my local public library? (I cant afford $250 for Hundleby's A7V & Beutepanzer book)
Well .... To be honest: due to German law regarding copyright violation I am not willing to scan and post them.
But 1 picture is also shown in the book "Sturmpanzerwagen A7V" at page 274.
1. What if the 'Hedi' with the clumsy writing and '54' painted on is not the same vehicle as the one in Leipzig with 'Hedi' written on? I can't see 'Hedi' written on the '54' vehicle anywhere. The photos are in different places at different times, and the statements about them were made before the photo showing two Hedis was known.
2. I cant see any writing at all on Herr Doherr's photo of the two Hedis; are they a 3rd and 4th Hedi?
Chris's English is (despite his modesty) better than my German, but if I understand this correctly, they are implying that the photo of the 2 Hedis together is a fake, although it certainly doesn't look like one. Then again, they seem to believe the story of the Polish A7Vs, so I think the site needs to be treated with some caution.
Imperator would seem to be a genuine A7V in Kokampf service. The position of its name in the photo implies that it was painted over its original name, which we don't as yet know. Was it a wartime vehicle that escaped scrapping (which would mean that the records are wrong) or a production vehicle that had somehow gone unnoticed and went straight from the factory to Kokampf/Freikorps? Does anyone recognise where the photo was taken? A barracks, possibly?
"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
Regarding "fake": I have read the German thread and what they are saying regarding Mario Doherrs picture (btw: I know that smallest two of this picture were saled at ebay; one is more blueish and the other one is like a normal white+black one) is that this is the evidence unless if Mario would have done a good fake. So everyone agrees to your opinion it must be true.
Rainer Straßheim: funny thing that - due to my reading books and seeing pictures about the whole A7Vs - I have come to a similar theory.
Where has the picture of Imperator have been taken? Well ... I have a theory, but only a theory. In Fred Kochs book "Beutepanzer im Ersten Weltkrieg" (Captured tanks in the first World War) there is a picture of a femal Mark IV at page 47 I have never seen before. This tank has very "unusual" Iron Crosses and a skull at the side. The text to this picture says "This captured tank is assumed to have been waiting as a reserve in a Berlin barracks. In case of ermergency he should strengthen the fighting troops." If you have a look at the background of the picture and at the ground it looks very similar to that of Imperator. And it is possible that this is motor barracks at Berlin-Lankwitz. But .... don't barracks look allways similar?
Gosh! That person to whom Rainer Strasheim is replying seems like a very intelligent gentleman.
I dont think that Mario Doherr's photo is a fake. And it has been examined by Rainer Strasheim. I notice that on the Hedi at the back, one of the drivers cupolas is folded forward and rests on the roof vent. This is also to be seen in one of the other photos of Hedi. So, I think the cupolas were hinged at their front edge. I guess everybody else had already figured that out, right!?
The two Hedis together photo could have been taken before any markings were applied. Meaning just two Hedis, not four. Just another thought that occurs to my increasingly senile brain.
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Gosh! That person to whom Rainer Strasheim is replying seems like a very intelligent gentleman.
Just a lucky shot, I reckon.
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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
I believe that the drivers cupolas are hinged backwards. That means that the picture of the two Hedis shows their back.
I know of 11 Hedi pictures in total (today). Especially the ones with the "No 54" I have studied in detail. The ones with the number 54 and this special kind of free hand paintings have one advantage for us to watch carefully: because every painting, every skull, ervery letter is totaly unique.
What I am trying to say is: you can cleary identify left and right side, front and rear. For example: lets say the soldiers painted front and rear with the same writing and the same number, then there must be clearly visible differences.
The sides are also clearly different: the big skulls themself are very similar, but at one side the bones are crossed below ths skull (skull an bones don't touch) and at the other side a little bit behind the skull (skull touches bones an lays over them).
Coming back to front and rear: All pictures of Hedi (with number 54) I have seen, are showing the same side. The front side. Why do I think it is the front side?
a) some of the "No 54" pictures are showing open doors. Like the original A7V, all (!) doors are opened into front direction (because you can use them as a shield against bullets coming from front) b) some pictures shows "No 54" in "move". When you look at the people walking beside the tank: you never feel them walking away from the tank; allways walking with him. c) some pictures shows "No 54" at "rest" - usually the soldiers are taking pictures showing them in front of the tank not in front of his back. d) same as c) when they do appeal (appologies: I don't know if this word is used in British military but in German it is) cars or tank show their front to the commanding officer not their back, like the soldiers are looking to theier officer in front of them (btw: you can see this also at Hedi) e) when you can see it in "No 54" pictures: drivers cupolas are folded backwards. If cupolas are in use-position, then you never see their hinges.
Add all this and then again have a look at the picture with the two Hedis: where are the hinges? in wich direction do the doors open? It must show the rear sides.
Btw: "Hedi" has been painted in front and back the same way! ;o)
If someone now has a detailed look at "No 54" pictures: I have two riddles for you. 1. When you watch Hedi from the side: are the cuppolas exactly in the center or not? 2. Are the machine gun mountings all the same? Hint: Retrokits model is showing it correctly!
Cheers Chris
-- Edited by elbavaro on Thursday 19th of March 2009 07:51:19 PM
Elbavaro! I trust Russian archives and researches of my Russian friends - historians. If red captured one German tank its traces would be necessarily, such factum would not pass without attention. All documents are very well stored in Moscow on Civil and Polish war, all of them are whole, in archive RGVIA of fires was not. But it is good, I agree - 99,9999999% It is known that Poles used in war from red 120 tanks "Renault", about it tell also the Polish documents.