M1 TTB

The M1 TTB is a tier 9 main battle tank originating from the United States, and is sold by Oscar Faraday. It can be unlocked from the M1A2 Abrams, and leads to M48 GAU-8.

Features

 * Heavy armor : This vehicle's armor bounces more shots and takes more hits
 * High Caliber : the high-caliber weaponry deals an increased damage.
 * Uninhabited Module : the uninhabited turret (battle module) receives reduced damage
 * Advanced Dynamic Suspension V2 : allows you to adjust frontal, rear, and side clearance independently.
 * Gas Turbine : provides a smoother acceleration, compared to an ordinary diesel.

Special Ability
Note: the top speed ability isn't free you have to pay reputation and after that you have to pay 1,130,000 credits for this ability.

History
Class: Main Battle Tank (Experimental) Developed: 1980 Service: N/A Vehicles Built: 1 Operators: N/A The TTB is not a prototype but, as its name suggests, an American test bed for the latest tank development technologies. It was an initial base of the Block III Abrams project, designed to replace the existing Abrams tanks with something capable of defeating any future Soviet tank that was predicted to appear in the 1990s. In its modified Abrams hull, the entire crew of three sat in front (where only the driver would normally be), quite safely hidden behind the thickest armor. Fuel tanks were removed to make place for the extended crew compartment. The crew would use advanced cameras to aim the tank’s weapon systems that were installed in an unmanned turret, located where the standard Abrams turret would normally be. This unmanned turret would be armed with the standard Abrams weapon (although quite modern at that time), the M256 L/44 smoothbore cannon. The gun would be fed automatically from a 44-round carousel magazine under it. The development of the Block III Abrams ceased after the breakup of the Soviet Union and the entire Block III Abrams program was cancelled. One thing to note about the TTB in Armored Warfare is that it’s not going to be strictly realistic – more like our take on how a Block III Abrams would have looked like if it was produced in the 1980s and upgraded today to match the needs of modern battlefields the same way the Americans are upgrading the existing M1A2 series.