This is a list of
armoured fighting vehicles, sorted by country of origin. The information in round brackets ( ) indicates the number of AFVs produced and the period of use. Prototypes are marked as such.
In the case of multi-national projects, the vehicle may be listed under all applicable countries.
ACEC Cobra Tracked armoured personnel carrier with diesel electric drive. Five prototypes built by 1985.[4] Cobra Armoured Fighting Vehicle (i.e. light tank) variant built 1987.[5]
Cockerill
SIBMAS Wheeled armoured personnel carrier family. Operated by Malaysia from 1983.[6]
LT vz. 34 – CKD/Praga P-11 light tank. Fifty built for Czechoslovakia.[19]
LT vz. 35 – Škoda S-IIa light tank built for Czechoslovak army. Captured examples used by Germany as
Panzer 35(t).[19]
LT vz. 38 – CKD/Praga TNH light tank built for Czechoslovakia and export. Adopted by German army as
Panzer 38(t) and continued in production until 1942.[20]
A7VU heavy tank. Prototype World War I heavy tank, with similar layout (all-round tracks and armament mounted in sponsons) to British tanks. One completed.[43]
VCC-1 Camillino – Tracked Infantry Armoured Fighting Vehicle based on
M113 with additional sloped armour. Similar to
AIFV. Built for Italy and Saudi Arabia.[58]
VCC-2 – Italian version of M-113 with additional armour and firing ports for passengers.[59]
Poplavko-Jeffery – An oddly shaped design, built on chassis of a
Thomas B. Jeffery Company truck. It had a good service record and was used after the war by Poland.
Zuzana - wheeled self-propelled artillery (self-propelled howitzer, first generation, derived from
DANA)
Himalaya - tracked self-propelled artillery prototype (Zuzana howitzer turret on
T-72 chassis), evaluated but did not enter production
BRAMS - wheeled self-propelled anti-aircraft system prototype (anti-aircraft turret on Tatra 815 chassis), not in production
Zuzana 2 - wheeled self-propelled artillery (self-propelled howitzer, second generation)
EVA - wheeled self-propelled artillery prototypes (self-propelled howitzer, lighter and smaller than the Zuzana series, designed for easy airlift and transport), currently not in production
The M4 Sherman was produced in greater numbers than any other U.S. tank in
World War II.M1A2 Abrams with prototype
TUSK equipment and Common Remotely Operated Weapons Station (CROWS),[98] with 0.50-inch caliber machine gun at the commander's station Front·RearA preserved M5 Half-track.
Armoured fighting vehicles produced in the
United States
^Bonhardt, Attila (2019). 40 M. Nimród páncélvadász és páncélozott légvédelmi gépágyú: A Magyar Királyi Honvédség páncélosai (in Hungarian). Keszthely: PeKo Publishing Kft. p. 120.
ISBN9786155583155.
^Baggonkar, Swaraj (28 February 2013).
"Tata entering Defence with FICV". Business Standard India (in Spanish). Business Standard.
Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
This is a list of
armoured fighting vehicles, sorted by country of origin. The information in round brackets ( ) indicates the number of AFVs produced and the period of use. Prototypes are marked as such.
In the case of multi-national projects, the vehicle may be listed under all applicable countries.
ACEC Cobra Tracked armoured personnel carrier with diesel electric drive. Five prototypes built by 1985.[4] Cobra Armoured Fighting Vehicle (i.e. light tank) variant built 1987.[5]
Cockerill
SIBMAS Wheeled armoured personnel carrier family. Operated by Malaysia from 1983.[6]
LT vz. 34 – CKD/Praga P-11 light tank. Fifty built for Czechoslovakia.[19]
LT vz. 35 – Škoda S-IIa light tank built for Czechoslovak army. Captured examples used by Germany as
Panzer 35(t).[19]
LT vz. 38 – CKD/Praga TNH light tank built for Czechoslovakia and export. Adopted by German army as
Panzer 38(t) and continued in production until 1942.[20]
A7VU heavy tank. Prototype World War I heavy tank, with similar layout (all-round tracks and armament mounted in sponsons) to British tanks. One completed.[43]
VCC-1 Camillino – Tracked Infantry Armoured Fighting Vehicle based on
M113 with additional sloped armour. Similar to
AIFV. Built for Italy and Saudi Arabia.[58]
VCC-2 – Italian version of M-113 with additional armour and firing ports for passengers.[59]
Poplavko-Jeffery – An oddly shaped design, built on chassis of a
Thomas B. Jeffery Company truck. It had a good service record and was used after the war by Poland.
Zuzana - wheeled self-propelled artillery (self-propelled howitzer, first generation, derived from
DANA)
Himalaya - tracked self-propelled artillery prototype (Zuzana howitzer turret on
T-72 chassis), evaluated but did not enter production
BRAMS - wheeled self-propelled anti-aircraft system prototype (anti-aircraft turret on Tatra 815 chassis), not in production
Zuzana 2 - wheeled self-propelled artillery (self-propelled howitzer, second generation)
EVA - wheeled self-propelled artillery prototypes (self-propelled howitzer, lighter and smaller than the Zuzana series, designed for easy airlift and transport), currently not in production
The M4 Sherman was produced in greater numbers than any other U.S. tank in
World War II.M1A2 Abrams with prototype
TUSK equipment and Common Remotely Operated Weapons Station (CROWS),[98] with 0.50-inch caliber machine gun at the commander's station Front·RearA preserved M5 Half-track.
Armoured fighting vehicles produced in the
United States
^Bonhardt, Attila (2019). 40 M. Nimród páncélvadász és páncélozott légvédelmi gépágyú: A Magyar Királyi Honvédség páncélosai (in Hungarian). Keszthely: PeKo Publishing Kft. p. 120.
ISBN9786155583155.
^Baggonkar, Swaraj (28 February 2013).
"Tata entering Defence with FICV". Business Standard India (in Spanish). Business Standard.
Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2014.