I wasn't talking about a hypothetical armored version of Big Lizzie, I was talking about the real Big Lizzie "Effectively making its own roads."
And i specifically replied to the claims about land dreadnoughts in the style of the pictures linked.
Tractors are nothing new.
There is a point of diminishing returns in tank design where no bridge or road can take the load and power to weight ratios approaches Zero. That doesn't necessarily make steam tanks, or H G Wells "land dreadnaughts," impossible.
Land dreadnaughts, oh yes i would call them very impossible as shown.
You can build them sure. But it´s going to be completely useless for any kind of military action.
Terrain crossing ability is going to suck. It´s not going to come close to human walking speed. Turning is a chore that will take an hour, or a day if you´re not on flat open ground.
Steam tanks are possible yes, but not good.
They are however, part of the issue. Steam trucks, not to mention tanks, are going to be heavy and heavy vehicles require a lot of flotation in the suspension. A continuous track provides that flotation in modern tanks because they provide more flotation than dreadnaught wheels with less weight.
Yes i know. But with those land dreadnoughts, it´s already gone beyond the point where it matters.
*****
BTW Big Lizzie is very heavily built, it is almost twice the weight of a WWI tank empty (42 tons vs 28 tons), moved at 1/10 the speed (1 mile per hour) and its 1/2" to 1" steel plate chassis would be bullet proof to small arms fire (better if the mild steel was replaced with manganese steel) (she also carried 6 months of fuel in the chassis so its effectively a big fuel tank as are its trailers).
Wether it´s bulletproof or not is irrelevant when there isn´t enough of it to protect people using it.
This presents the possibility of tracked supply vehicles and engineer support vehicles (i.e. Bulldozers)if not tracked tanks (but it would be a brave infantry man who would stand in a firing line with a musket with an armored steam engine coming at him).
Oh yes, you have to extremely brave to wait half a day for it to arrive...
And of course no artillery will be aimed at it in the meantime.
Two of them with a wire rope or anchor chain between them would see to most Napoleonic military formations (and forests).
Guess why noone ever did that for real? Doesn´t work that way.