I was having a random look in the Bundesarchiv images and saw this and I'm unsure what to make of it:
The image reference details are on the slide and bundesarchiv are here http://www.bild.bundesarchiv.de/
Seems to be layouts for what I assume to be the A7V or roughly similar in two versions; one with cannon and the other with machine guns. So a Male and Female version situation with 8 and 9 crew respectively. There no other information on it as far as I know and I'v certainly never seen it before.
One A7V was originally built as a "Female". No 501 "Gretchen", but was rearmed with a 57mm later in 1918.
I don't know what vehicle your photo depicts, as it certainly isn't an A7V, but does bear some resemblance to an A7VU, so possibly a design produced for that?
Crew arrangement is very similar to the one found in Beute-Mk.IV. But Mk.IV had no doors ('Tür') front left and rear right, and no rear machine gun in the females. - This may be the configurations for the planned - but never built - German copies of the Mk.IV.
Really intriguing. The position of the doors indicates some A7V influence, but the sponsons are very A7Vu. I think it's a back-of-an-envelope design for a new tank. We must keep digging the Bundesarchiv for more info.
I wonder if Max Hundleby and Werner Strasheim know about these.
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Really intriguing. The position of the doors indicates some A7V influence, but the sponsons are very A7Vu. I think it's a back-of-an-envelope design for a new tank. We must keep digging the Bundesarchiv for more info.
I wonder if Max Hundleby and Werner Strasheim know about these.
Rainer Strasheim And he already posted in this thread
-- Edited by Albert on Friday 9th of September 2016 07:25:48 AM
Really intriguing. The position of the doors indicates some A7V influence, but the sponsons are very A7Vu. I think it's a back-of-an-envelope design for a new tank. We must keep digging the Bundesarchiv for more info.
I wonder if Max Hundleby and Werner Strasheim know about these.
Rainer Strasheim And he already posted in this thread
-- Edited by Albert on Friday 9th of September 2016 07:25:48 AM
Ah. Apologies for a) forgetting Rainer's Schriftstellername and b) confusing Rainer's name. This is entirely due to the following: we are on a small Greek island; it was midnight; we had just got back from the taverna. As Henry Blofeld once said, "My embarrassment is total."
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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.