As the story goes the Swiss once tuned one to do 140km/h, made a break test, and had to send the crew to hospital. Without messing with the transmission to get higher ratios, well-maintained, optimally tensioned tracks etc. the maximum is about 90, more typically 80, the official maximum is 70. Soldiers are generally told to keep it under 60. Don’t underestimate the centrifugal force of the tracks they’re getting hard to control at high speeds.
From what i know it can go faster theoretically but has a limiter to not break down fast.
As the story goes the Swiss once tuned one to do 140km/h, made a break test, and had to send the crew to hospital. Without messing with the transmission to get higher ratios, well-maintained, optimally tensioned tracks etc. the maximum is about 90, more typically 80, the official maximum is 70. Soldiers are generally told to keep it under 60. Don’t underestimate the centrifugal force of the tracks they’re getting hard to control at high speeds.
They could have taken that off, I suppose.
Limits are for peacetime I bet.
Thats not as easy as it sounds probably, that tank is going 60km/h from what i looks.
Which is about right. I, personally, wouldn’t really fancy getting that bad boy up much higher.
I mean the limiter is there for a reason…