| Year | Weight | Primary Armament | Second Armament | Indirect Fire | Self Aware? | ||
| Mark VII | 2163 | 348 | 40/40 | 1 200mm railgun | 14 75mm gatling InfRpt VLS missile system | Strategic | no |
BOLO MK VII
The Mark VII was a "heavy" Bolo, whose introduction inspired the first use-though still unofficially-of the term "siege unit." It had the same electronics fit as Marks V and VI, but its main direct-fire armament was one 200mm railgun backed by fourteen heavier (75mm) infinite repeaters. The Mark VII's heavy missile load was biased towards the bombardment function, but it was equally capable of operating SAMs in the area defense role. This vehicle has a very heavy layered durachrome war hull (120 millimeter) and required a two-man crew, rather than the Mark V's and VI's one-man crew, but in the VII/B the second crewman served solely to control the indirect fire armament. In the later models, the second position was upgraded to a dedicated air-defense/missile intercept function. Weight was approximately 348 tons in the Model B, with a maximum road speed of 40 kph and a maximum cross-country speed of 30 kph. (The Mark VII was never very fast, but its sheer mass meant most terrain features tended to crumble when it hit them and so did not slow it as severely.)