A mine plow (plough in British English) is a device designed to clear a lane through a minefield, allowing other vehicles to follow. A mine plow is typically mounted to a tank or military engineering vehicle. Buried land mines are plowed up and pushed outside the tank's track path or tipped over. Since modern anti-tank mines rely on a focused explosion to destroy armored vehicles, they are useless when turned upside-down; as the tank runs over the mine, it will expend its blast down instead of upwards, causing insignificant damage, if any.
Towards the end of the First World War, the French mounted a plow on their Renault FT tank.
The British started work on plow designs in 1937, and a successful design was introduced for the Matilda Mk I tank though it was not used.
The first recorded combat use is by a "Bullshorn" plow on a Churchill tank of the British 79th Armoured Division, on Sword Beach during the Allied invasion of Normandy (this was one of "Hobart's Funnies" specialized vehicles). The "Bullshorn" was one of a number of plow designs which were tested and used by the British Army.
The mine plow is still in use by many combat engineering units. The Royal Engineers have deployed the Trojan to Afghanistan where it was usually fitted with a plow on the front, which enables it to clear mines, either detonating them on contact, or pushing them out of the way to clear a safe channel for following vehicles.
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A mine flail is a vehicle-mounted device that makes a safe path through a minefield by deliberately detonating land mines in front of the vehicle that carries it. They were first used by the British during World War II. The mine flail consists of a number of heavy chains ending in fist-sized steel balls (flails) that are attached to a horizontal, rapidly rotating rotor mounted on two arms in front of the vehicle. The rotor's rotation makes the flails spin wildly and violently pound the ground.
Le déminage est un ensemble d'actions visant à l'élimination des mines terrestres ou navales d'une zone. Au sens large et par extension, il s'agit de la recherche, neutralisation, enlèvement et stockage ou destruction des munitions, mines, pièges, engins et explosifs susceptibles de poser des problèmes pour la sécurité ou l'environnement. On distingue deux types de déminage, celui militaire et celui du déminage humanitaire. Dans le cadre de la reconstruction qui a suivi la Première Guerre mondiale, on parlait plutôt de « désobusage ».
thumb|Char de dépannage Buffle allemand, sa grue peut être engagée dans des missions du génie thumb|char Kodiak Un char du génie est un véhicule blindé servant au sein d'unités de génie militaire. Parmi les chars du génie, on dénombre : les chars de déminage, les chars de minage (comme le Shielder vehicle launched scatterable mine system), les chars lanceurs de pont/pontonnier et les chars engins de chantier en version grue, tractopelle, etc.