British FV721 Fox CVR (Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance). A 4x4 Armored Reconnaissance Vehicle.
This one is a runner at the Museum of American Armor in Old Bethpage, NY. Photos by USABOT brother Bryan Whalen. (June 2019)
seen from Türkiye

seen from Norway
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Kazakhstan

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Kazakhstan

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Spain

seen from Pakistan
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from China
British FV721 Fox CVR (Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance). A 4x4 Armored Reconnaissance Vehicle.
This one is a runner at the Museum of American Armor in Old Bethpage, NY. Photos by USABOT brother Bryan Whalen. (June 2019)
M4A3 (75) at the New Jersey National Guard Militia Museum in Sea Girt, NJ, USA. (Oct 2016)
US Army T95 Medium Tank (modified) Test Rigs. Several modified T95 test rigs were built in the late 1950's and early 1960's and had various prototype turrets and suspensions tested on them. Both of the ones shown here have prototype M60A2 turrets installed. The green one with a prototype hydropneumatic suspension is now at the US Armor and Cavalry Collection at Ft. Benning, GA (it was previously at Aberdeen, MD). That is the same one from the US Army publications shown in the black and white photo). The rusty brown one is at Anniston Army Depot in Alabama.
I took the pics of the green one at Ft.Benning in May 2018 and Jon Bernstein took the pics of the rusty one at Anniston in July 2017.
M4A1 HST (High Speed Tractor) at the Museum of American Armor in Old Bethpage, NY on Long Island. (March 2019)
M3 Stuart Light Tanks at the 1st CAV Division Museum at Fort Hood, Texas (Oct 2016). The one with the Japanese markings represents one of the captured Stuarts in the Philippines in April 1942 used by Japanese Army 3rd Company 7th Tank Regiment.
The Stuart with the US markings is an M3A1.
Russian T-55 ARV captured in Iraq in 1991 and on display at the 1st Cavalry Division Museum at Fort Hood, Texas.
Please comment if you know the correct designation for this exact model (BST2, BTS4 ?)
US Army M728 Combat Engineering Vehicle (CEV)
The tan one is at the 1st Cav Div Museum at Ft. Hood, TX (Oct 2016)
The OD green one is at the NewJersey National Guard Militia Museum in Sea Girt, NJ (Oct 2016)
The semi-tarped camo one is in the restoration yard of the US Armor and Cavalry Collection at Ft. Benning, GA (May 2018)
Based on an M60, M60A1, and M60A2 chassis and M60A1 turret, it sports a 165mm demolition gun and a boom crane for assisting construction and demolition missions as well as a plow for mine clearing. Only 312 were built between 1965 to 1987 and they remained in service in the US military until 2000.