PzKpfw VI Tiger I, "Tiger" - a German important tank during the Second World War, built in 1941-1942 by the company "Henschel" under the supervision of Erwin Aders. The leading classification of armored vehicles of the Nazi Germany was also known as the Sd Kfz 181. First, the Tiger I tanks took part in combat operations in the spring of 1942 at the MGA station near Leningrad, and they began to stagnate over the battle of the Kursk Duse, were victorious against the Wehrmacht and the SS right up to the end of the Other Light War. At the time of construction, the vehicle was the smallest and most armored among all tanks in the world; Thus the camp remained at least until the fall of leaves in 1943. The tank was originally called PzKpfw VI Ausf. H “Tiger”, after the commissioning of the new important tank PzKpfw VI Ausf. B, the Roman numeral “I” was added to the name to resemble the later machine, which was also called the “Tiger II”. Although minor changes were made to the design, the modification of the tank was only one, assigned to vehicles from the early and late production of the PzKpfw VI Ausf. H and PzKpfw VI Ausf. E entered the day with an administrative-provincial method. In Radyansky documents, the Tiger tank is designated as a T-6 (or T-VI).