There will be spoilers in this post, and likely in this thread, concerning the "A-Team" movie that recently came out. This is your only warning. 
Ok, in the A-Team movie after Hannibal and his team manage to break out of their prisons they get on a C-130 (or similar design) military plane and fly off, they're soon attacked by unmanned predator drones and the plane takes critical hits and is going down, it's quickly blown up by another drone.
The A-Team managed to escape the blown up-plane by hiding in a tank in the cargo hold and either driving out the plane or simply falling out of it after the plane blew up. The tank's parachutes open up and -for now- the team is safe. Soon the predator drones take target on the tank, Face uses the tank's guns to take out some of the drones (as the tank is falling but at breathable atmospheric level) but in the process two of the three chutes are destroyed and the remaining chute isn't sufficient enough to cause it, and the team, to land safely.
Hannibal gets the idea to use the tank's main turret as a "thruster." He has it pointed in a direction, fires it, to "push" the plane in the air so that it's over a large lake on the ground. (This part, obviously, would work "in theory" due to equal and opposite reactions.) When the tank is over the lake he points the gun toward the ground and fires it some more to "slow" the plane to a more suitable "landing" speed in the lake.
"On paper" moving the plane in the air like that, and to slow it, "should work." But in practice would it work? The Mythbusters have to test this. I don't care how, but they have to do it.
Things we need to answer:
The force of the gun being fired as a "thruster" isn't going to more than the force it takes to expel the cannon's shell. Is this enough to push the tank through the air enough to move it any significant distance?
Would the same force be enough to "slow" the tank down before it crashed into the lake?
Would getting the tank "over" the lake be enough? Would it fall straight down or would it float, shift, and shuffle in the air and need constant adjustment to keep it over even a very large lake?
Do tanks have enough shells on-hand to allow all of this to happen?
Would the passengers inside the tank survive the violent movements and the crash into the lake?
Would the tank survive the crash into the lake, the submersion and be able to drive out of the lake (as what happens in the movie and assuming it landed right-side up.)
There's other questions about this scene too, but it's just begging to be tested and it's right up the Mythbusters' alley!

Ok, in the A-Team movie after Hannibal and his team manage to break out of their prisons they get on a C-130 (or similar design) military plane and fly off, they're soon attacked by unmanned predator drones and the plane takes critical hits and is going down, it's quickly blown up by another drone.
The A-Team managed to escape the blown up-plane by hiding in a tank in the cargo hold and either driving out the plane or simply falling out of it after the plane blew up. The tank's parachutes open up and -for now- the team is safe. Soon the predator drones take target on the tank, Face uses the tank's guns to take out some of the drones (as the tank is falling but at breathable atmospheric level) but in the process two of the three chutes are destroyed and the remaining chute isn't sufficient enough to cause it, and the team, to land safely.
Hannibal gets the idea to use the tank's main turret as a "thruster." He has it pointed in a direction, fires it, to "push" the plane in the air so that it's over a large lake on the ground. (This part, obviously, would work "in theory" due to equal and opposite reactions.) When the tank is over the lake he points the gun toward the ground and fires it some more to "slow" the plane to a more suitable "landing" speed in the lake.
"On paper" moving the plane in the air like that, and to slow it, "should work." But in practice would it work? The Mythbusters have to test this. I don't care how, but they have to do it.
Things we need to answer:
The force of the gun being fired as a "thruster" isn't going to more than the force it takes to expel the cannon's shell. Is this enough to push the tank through the air enough to move it any significant distance?
Would the same force be enough to "slow" the tank down before it crashed into the lake?
Would getting the tank "over" the lake be enough? Would it fall straight down or would it float, shift, and shuffle in the air and need constant adjustment to keep it over even a very large lake?
Do tanks have enough shells on-hand to allow all of this to happen?
Would the passengers inside the tank survive the violent movements and the crash into the lake?
Would the tank survive the crash into the lake, the submersion and be able to drive out of the lake (as what happens in the movie and assuming it landed right-side up.)
There's other questions about this scene too, but it's just begging to be tested and it's right up the Mythbusters' alley!
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