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| My Royal Enfield motorcycle with M60 tank. |
Royal Enfield's long connection to military service naturally inspires owners to pose their motorcycles in front of military hardware. These opportunities usually involve war memorials.
So, yes, that's my Royal Enfield Bullet, posed next to a tank. It's not the first time I've managed to photograph my motorcycle close to a war memorial.
It is, however, the closest I've ever gotten to one.
In 2021 the Royal Enfield Owners Club (UK) created a calendar for 2022, with the months illustrated with photos submitted by members. Several of the months showed Royal Enfields in front of military objects, including a superb shot with a Spitfire airplane!
I'm jealous. Not many Spitfires or Sopwith Camels are on display near my home in Florida.
I did manage to get a photo of my Bullet with a Korean War era Sabre jet; but the jet was mounted on a pylon, so it wasn't easy.
Other times I got a photo with a cannon.
Then, recently, I became aware of a tank on display in a nearby park, as a memorial to Purple Heart (wounded-in-action) veterans. Photos of it suggested it might be close enough to the street for me to get a photo with my Royal Enfield.
The tank is described as an M60A3TTS. It's the kind of tank usually referred to as a Patton tank, although the M60 was not officially named that. The name sticks because it shares a general appearance with U.S. tanks since the M46 Patton, which fought in the Korean War.
A prominent feature of the M60 (and the M48 before it) is the cupola atop the turret, giving the tank commander a miniature turret of his own, armed with a machine gun.
It's a distinctive look, making the tank popular with model builders, although in practice it was often criticized for making the tank taller and thus harder to hide on the battlefield.
In 1989 the US Army had a total of 5,400 model M60A3TTS tanks. The last of these left service with the National Guard in 1997, leaving plenty available for displays. (Some ended up in the ocean, as artificial reefs.)
The Military Order of the Purple Heart Chapter 674 received Oakland Park city permission to place a surplus M60 on display in Veterans Park, 3805 NW 21st Ave., in 1996.
Interestingly, it was expected to be not only a solemn memorial, but an active playground for children. And why not? It's impervious to damage. There are no "Keep Off" signs here.
But this meant that it eventually was positioned on a (safer) sand pad, not concrete.
In practice, the scale of the tank makes it uninviting to children — it's hard to get up onto it. But the loose sand makes the tank almost impervious to anyone trying to maneuver a motorcycle into position for a photo!
So, after riding the motorcycle to the tank on the sidewalk (no one was looking) I had to huff and puff to get the ideal picture.
There was no good way to get the long barrel of the big gun entirely in the photo. Also the size of the tank reduced my motorcycle to insignificance in comparison.
So compromise was necessary. How did I do?
(By the way, the tank appears white. It actually is a very faded desert sand in color. The machine gun originally in the cupola is not fitted.)



