Jeff wrote:
Could it be 7th Company 8th Squad 8th tank? Makes more sense that 788 Hiss tanks or 788 units of Hiss tanks.
Let's say there are many companies, each made up of ten squads of ten tanks.
780-789 would be one squad.
790-799 would be the next squad.
I kinda see this being the most plausible.
Just remember that just because a unit has a high number does not necessarily mean that there are actually that many units active. Take for instance, the U.S. Army. Currently there only a hand ful of active divisions, but their numbers differ wildly.
1st Cavalry Division ( first of one)
2nd Infantry Division
1st Armored Division . (first of one)
3rd Infantry Division .
4th Infantry Division
10th Mountain Division
25th Infantry Division Schofield Barracks, Hawaii ( 25th of FIVE?)
82nd Airborne Division (82nd of two)
101st Airborne Division (101st of two)
170th Infantry Brigade Baumholder, Germany (170th of two)
172nd Infantry Brigade Grafenwöhr, (172 of two)
173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team Vicenza, Italy (173rd of two)
2nd Cavalry Regiment Vilseck, Germany
3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment Fort Hood, Texas
11th Armored Cavalry Regiment Fort Irwin, California (only three of these)
See what I mean?
Also, tac signs (the Big numbers you see painted on the sides or backs of vehicles) might not have anything to do numerically with the unit's TO&E designations, i.e. during OIF 1, 2nd platoon, B troop 3-7 cavalry, 3ID's tac sign looked like :
92\ which meant 9th squadron (battalion) sized element, 2nd troop (company) sized element, then the slash meant second platoon. The same unit, which had been reassigned to another BCT in the interim, went back to Iraq for OIF 3 with this tac sign:
21B\ , which meant 2nd BCT, 1st squadron sized element, B troop, then the slash meant second platoon.
Basically, those numbers can mean whatever you want them to mean.