Ares de Borg
Norman Knight
Did you spot the T-72B and the T-90 on the 1st pic, btw? Wyrm's units are sporting camoflage that actually works! 

The soldier is Navy Dawg's Russian Infantry. The BTR-152 will be released soon.
BTR-152 and BTR-40 was officialy decommisioned in Russia 1993 year only =) They had replacing from mids 1960s by BRDM-1, BTR-50 and 60 and so on, but Officials sign decommisionning onl at 1993 year. Still in service or reserve in some countries.
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About BTR-50, I hears that it was in use by Iraq forces at 1991 or even 2003 year. Still in use by many countries. It uses a modified chassis of PT-76 Soviet light amphibious tank.
Gotta love these "Schweinewürfel".
("pig cube", Bundeswehr slang for the M113)
Indeed loveable - best animated and crispest incarnations !!! They dwarf the MBTs quite a bit, though, which a bit of a bummer. Also when one compares the MBT sizes with Wyrmshadow's excellent WWII tanks. Definitely going to use the APC vehicles in any case.
Indeed, most WWII ones would be tiny next to the MBTs. Just that the MBTs also came out a bit small when compared to the APC scale. As tanks are harder to scale given the gun may get to overlap the tiles and given your previous WWII tanks had also been up-scaled relative to your novel MBTs, I just wasn't sure whether that had been intended.All my 20th century tanks are made to the same scale, which should tell you how small the old tanks actually were.
Ironic remarks noted, btw.You'd probably get a much better result using
(X*6.151142)+35.93498=Pixels in length
read carefullyWhere X is the OVERALL length of the tank, barrel included in meters.
The BRDM-2 (Boyevaya Razvedyvatelnaya Dozornaya Mashina, Боевая Разведывательная Дозорная Машина, literally "Combat Reconnaissance/Patrol Vehicle") is an amphibious armoured patrol car used by Russia and the former Soviet Union. It was also known under designations BTR-40PB, BTR-40P-2 and GAZ 41-08. This vehicle, like many other Soviet designs, has been exported extensively and is in use in at least 38 countries. It was intended to replace the earlier BRDM-1 with a vehicle that had improved amphibious capabilities and better armament.
BRDM-2M - Modernised version. There are actually several upgrades with this designator. All of them have the original gasoline engine replaced by a diesel engine (GAZ-562 of 175 hp or Steyr D.245-9 of 136 hp), six MB smoke grenade dischargers on the back of the turret and some are additionally fitted with a BTR-80 style turret, new wheels, GPS etc. The version that was selected by the Russian armed forces is made by Arzamas. Other models have a new turret MA3 or MA4 that is also mounted on the MT-LBM series. All models have engine exhaust on the right-hand-side of the vehicle only. Some have raised horizontal engine decks to fit the new engines.
9P122 "Malyutka" - ATGM launcher vehicle with 6x9M14M "Malyutka-M" (AT-3B Sagger B) on an elevatable mount with overhead cover. A total of 14 missiles are carried on board. This model is found in regimental and divisional anti-tank units of MRDs, the anti-tank regiments of combined arms armies (CAA), and in the anti-tank regiment or brigade in the artillery division of a front. It has a crew of 2.
9P133 "Malyutka" - this is an improved model with bigger sight 9S446 instead of the original 9S414. The 9P133 can launch the more capable 9M14P "Malyutka-P" (AT-3C Sagger C) and 9M14P1 missiles of which it carries from 16 to 18. It uses SACLOS guidance system. The vehicle also has additional windscreen on the front between the drivers windscreen and the sight mounting.
The 9K31 Strela-1 (Russian: 9К31 «Стрела-1»; English: arrow) is a highly mobile, short-range, low altitude infra-red guided surface-to-air missile system. Originally developed by the Soviet Union under the GRAU designation 9K31, it is commonly known by its NATO reporting name, SA-9 "Gaskin" . The system consists of a BRDM-2 amphibious vehicle, mounting two pairs of ready-to-fire 9M31 missiles.
While the 9M31 was accepted to service after state trials in 1968, the trials committee also suggested improvements that should be incorporated into the weapon as soon as possible. As a result of these improvements the 9M31M "Strela-1M" (US DoD designation SA-9B "Gaskin-Mod0") entered service in 1970.
The new version introduced many slight improvements in performance characteristics of the missile: it had a slightly heavier warhead, more accurate guidance system to increase the probability of direct impacts, and extended range. Range is again reported to be as high as 8000 m (0.35 to 5 miles) in a number of western and also a few Russian sources, whereas for example Petukhov & Shestov, Lappi, and a number Russian web sources give much more modest performance figures; considering the performance of similar systems, at least an intercept range of 8000 m seems unlikely for such a small, high-drag missile design.