Is the 59 Patton good?

The 59-Patton looks decent on paper, but the profile is absolutely abysmal. Bad tank in the eyes of most higher level players. The Type 59 is a worse T-54 mod 1. These two are both are good tanks – they share the same role of a less mobile, armored medium.

How much was the Type 59 g?

$180
A golden variant of the famed Type 59, the Type 59 G had a long and fancied history in World of Tanks. First appeared in the Chinese server around 2010 as the “premium” counterpart of the original Type 59, it was sold for $180 and notable for generates 3 times more credits and XP than the original variant.

Who has the largest tank force?

Russia
In 2019 both the U.S. and Russian armies introduced new versions of their primary main battle tank, helping to enhance what is widely viewed as the world’s leading armored forces. But China, not the United States or Russia, possesses the planet’s biggest tank force, all-together possessing a whopping 6,900 tanks.

What kind of tank is a 59 Patton?

The 59-Patton is a Chinese tier 8 premium medium tank. After 1960, Chinese government launched the development of a new tank. The engineering experiments included a wide use of previously produced Type 59 tanks. One vehicle was equipped with the turret, gun, and fire control system of an American M48A3 tank.

When did the first Type 59 tank come out?

The Type 59 entered service in 1959. The first tanks manufactured had no gun stabilizer or night-vision device. Later the vehicle underwent several modernizations. Between 6,000 and 9,500 vehicles of all variants were manufactured from 1958 through 1987. This is a Premium vehicle.

How good is the 59-patton?

In every aspect, 59-Patton is a very good support tank, so never, but NEVER go rush alone, because you will be destroyed easily if you encounter any Tier 8 heavy tank alone, and even some Tier 8 medium tanks ( like the T26E4 Super Pershing which is hard to penetrate ).

Could a Type 59 take a T-62 turret?

Perhaps the Type 59 chassis could be, in some manner, modified to take the turret, perhaps by means of a small superstructure on top of the chassis, which would make the hull wide enough to fit the turret, as seen with the supposed “T-34/62” tanks, essentially a T-34 with a T-62 turret, which were used as bunkers, circa 1980.