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http://www.achtungpanzer.com/pz5.htm
Better than any mass-produced piece-of-**** Sherman (except the Firefly British conversion). Russian T-34/85s and JS-2 tanks were even better than American ones and even they didn't fare well in engagements with the King Tiger. Key weakness for the Tiger series was engine hp and transmission problems; even so, they were introduced at at time of round-the-clock Allied bombing, fuel shortages, lack of properly trained crews, and outnumbered 11-to-1 in armor. Only around 1,800 of the Tigers were produced (489 King Tigers) yet they took a tremendous toll on the enemy armor engaged. There is NO DOUBT that if they had sufficient numbers even at that late stage of the war the Tigers (along with the equally impressive Panther) would have decimated Allied armor. You guys that keep attacking German technology conveniently "forget" how one nation layed Europe and Russia to waste and built incredible machines under the harshest conditions at a time when everyone knew the war was lost. You criticize the King Tiger when historically the Allies that actually met it in combat gave it the name "Royal Tiger" out of fear AND respect. It WAS a formidible machine. IMO, Germany has continued the fine tradition with the Leo I and II series. They are highly successful and increasingly the choice as Europe's premiere MBT. Get over it. And anyone who says Russian tanks are garbage outta have his ass shipped out in an M-1A2 and land on the outskirts of Moscow in 50 degree below zero weather with Mils, Migs, and Sukhois flying about and Russian troops armed with ATGWs. No takers?... didn't think so since the M-1A2 is confined to attacking puny nations with poor import stripped armor of the FSU crewed by sand-dwelling conscripts. Most impressive- NOT! You guys are pathetic. Guess it will take ANOTHER 9/11 incident to temporarily shut you up. Rob |
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No takers?... didn't think so since the M-1A2 is confined to attacking
puny nations with poor import stripped armor of the FSU crewed by sand-dwelling conscripts. Most impressive- NOT! Do you mean "historical" US victories in Grenada,Panama,Iraq,Somalia,Serbia,Afghanistan and Nowhereistan? |
#4
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In message , robert
arndt writes http://www.achtungpanzer.com/pz5.htm Better than any mass-produced piece-of-**** Sherman (except the Firefly British conversion). Hence the way it won the war...? If it's too heavy, too unreliable, too thirsty and too hard to produce, it's a loser even if the handful that make it into combat are individually dangerous. Key weakness for the Tiger series was engine hp and transmission problems; even so, they were introduced at at time of round-the-clock Allied bombing, fuel shortages, lack of properly trained crews, and outnumbered 11-to-1 in armor. A *good* design would have taken more account of those problems, rather than merely wishing them away. Indeed, the Tiger II comes under the heading of "losing" or "failed" designs precisely because it failed to cope with the reality of its situation. There is NO DOUBT that if they had sufficient numbers even at that late stage of the war the Tigers (along with the equally impressive Panther) would have decimated Allied armor. And if a bull had an udder it would be a cow. But precisely because the Tiger II was a heavy, complex, expensive and thirsty beast, it couldn't be built in numbers, moved to the fight, or kept in fuel and ammo while fighting. You guys that keep attacking German technology conveniently "forget" how one nation layed Europe and Russia to waste and built incredible machines under the harshest conditions at a time when everyone knew the war was lost. And despite those incredible machines, they still lost the war. Funny, that. IMO, Germany has continued the fine tradition with the Leo I and II series. They are highly successful and increasingly the choice as Europe's premiere MBT. Get over it. Oh, please. Your next paragraph suggests that these German tanks are barely superior to Soviet-era armour. And anyone who says Russian tanks are garbage outta have his ass shipped out in an M-1A2 and land on the outskirts of Moscow in 50 degree below zero weather with Mils, Migs, and Sukhois flying about and Russian troops armed with ATGWs. I'll take that fight if I have to. I'll certainly take proven equipment in experienced hands over a force that can't afford to buy new kit, can't afford to pay its troops and can't maintain what it has. And if you want a real test of Russian armour, send them to take Washington DC and see if *that* passes the giggle test. If you rely on "well, the Russian tanks might be okay when they're on home ground fighting outside their capital city with total air supremacy" then they aren't really that good, are they? -- When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite. W S Churchill Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#5
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Robert, you win the award for starting the "Most OT post" today. What's next?
Planning on posting something on Rec.Arts.Needlepoint about nebelwerfers? |
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In article ,
(robert arndt) wrote: http://www.achtungpanzer.com/pz5.htm Better than any mass-produced piece-of-**** Sherman (except the Firefly British conversion). ....as long as you didn't mind that it had to pretty much sit there and not go very far, due to high ground pressure and very high fuel consumption (a King Tiger in mud became a landmark). Add in the very high maintenance problems, and you had a really tough, sorta-mobile fortress. The Allies did the obvious and ran around the KTs, destroying their support structure, then captured and destroyed a lot of them after they ran out of gas. Definitely follows on the German habit in WWII of coming up with a really cool design that turned out to be a problem to build and support. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
#7
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hahahaha That was a good one!
"Krztalizer" wrote in message ... Robert, you win the award for starting the "Most OT post" today. What's next? Planning on posting something on Rec.Arts.Needlepoint about nebelwerfers? |
#8
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From: Chad Irby
Date: 5/7/2004 6:36 PM Central Daylight Time Message-id: In article , (robert arndt) wrote: http://www.achtungpanzer.com/pz5.htm Better than any mass-produced piece-of-**** Sherman (except the Firefly British conversion). ...as long as you didn't mind that it had to pretty much sit there and not go very far, due to high ground pressure and very high fuel consumption (a King Tiger in mud became a landmark). Add in the very high maintenance problems, and you had a really tough, sorta-mobile fortress. The Allies did the obvious and ran around the KTs, destroying their support structure, then captured and destroyed a lot of them after they ran out of gas. Definitely follows on the German habit in WWII of coming up with a really cool design that turned out to be a problem to build and support. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Did you happen to notice the article teuton offered as proof of what a wonder weapon King Tiger was actually describes what a flop it really was? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#9
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First of all, are you insane?
What is with you? Do you sit up at night and wish Hitler had won or something? Anyway.... http://www.achtungpanzer.com/pz5.htm Better than any mass-produced piece-of-**** Sherman (except the Firefly British conversion). Russian T-34/85s and JS-2 tanks were even better than American ones and even they didn't fare well in engagements with the King Tiger. And yet, at the end of the day, all those mass-produced-pieces-of-**** managed to beat the crap out of just about anything that was thrown at them. What does that say about Germany? Key weakness for the Tiger series was engine hp and transmission problems; even so, they were introduced at at time of round-the-clock Allied bombing, fuel shortages, lack of properly trained crews, and outnumbered 11-to-1 in armor. Isn't that an indication of the overwhelming stupidity of the German war planners? Here they were, using limited time and resources building an enormously thirsty, complex and maintenence-intensive piece of equipment while in the midst of a fuel shortage and lack of crewmen to operate and fix these beasts properly; thus ensuring that whatever few made it out of the factory would not be used to their full operational potential, then promptly break down with no hope of repair. Yep, it sure was a recipe for success. Perhaps the Germans would have been far better advised at that point to build smaller, cheaper and easier to operate tanks in greater quantities, so that maybe they would actually be around for more than one fight. I'm sure that with their obvious technical prowess, they would have been able to construct a simple, light tank that would have been slightly better than the Sherman (which is really all it had to be), and could be produced in good enough numbers to close the tank gap to maybe 5-to-1, and be user friendly enough that inexperienced tank crews could effectively operate it. Now that could have made a real difference. Then again, that is just not the German style. Simplicity and user-friendly-ness are not exactly on the top of their list; why build something semi-practical when you can build a crazy, over-engineered behemouth for the world to marvel at? As the owner of three Mercedes-Benz auto's I can personally attest to this philosophy. Only a german would design a car that has the power doorlocks somehow routed through the transmission. Or make it so that if you want to replace a gearshift knob, you have to take the entire transmission out. Only around 1,800 of the Tigers were produced (489 King Tigers) yet they took a tremendous toll on the enemy armor engaged. And exactly how much Allied armor, percentage-wise, did 1,800 tanks engage? My guess is that it's in the single digits. There is NO DOUBT that if they had sufficient numbers even at that late stage of the war the Tigers (along with the equally impressive Panther) would have decimated Allied armor. But that's the point; they were a hopeless endevor. They were certainly fine machines for the time; nobody really denies that. And given a few more years of development to work out all of the bugs, and a larger industrial base to produce more of them, and a better infrastructure and resupply system to keep them fueled, and more trained specialist mechanics to keep them repaired, and more trained crews to operate them, and a better rail system to get them around, and an overall better tactical doctorine, then yes, they would have kicked some serious ass. But they didn't. You guys that keep attacking German technology conveniently "forget" how one nation layed Europe and Russia to waste and built incredible machines under the harshest conditions at a time when everyone knew the war was lost. Yep, they kept fighting...for Hitler...even when they knew it was over. How admirable. You criticize the King Tiger when historically the Allies that actually met it in combat gave it the name "Royal Tiger" out of fear AND respect. It WAS a formidible machine. Absolutely. But it was a fools errand. The Germans wasted time and resources just so they could have bragging rights on the baddest tank around. IMO, Germany has continued the fine tradition with the Leo I and II series. They are highly successful and increasingly the choice as Europe's premiere MBT. Get over it. LOL.... nobody is saying that the Leo's are bad tanks. I haven't heard one person say that at all. They are fine tanks. German's are great (if somewhat overzealous) engineers. What we are saying, however, is that the Leo's are totally unproven in combat, and that all final judgements regarding any weapons system is contingent upon actual combat experience. The M1 series has plenty of combat time under it's belt, and has performed, by all measures, splendidly. It is a combat proven system and is a better tank than the Leopard. It has better armor, excellent targeting systems, and it fires a better round. Period. You need to get over it. As for it being 'Europe's premere MBT', what do you expect? It is probably better than the LeClerc (another parade ground princess), and pigs will fly before the protectionist European governments buy big-ticket items from the USA (and they don't need to; their domestic defense industries are adequate), but you have to understand that the military just isn't a priority there in Europe. The military is in fact on the bottom of their list. So you cannot expect a nation which takes a 'military-last' attitude to produce equipment superior to the USA, which actually may need to use the stuff at some point. And anyone who says Russian tanks are garbage outta have his ass shipped out in an M-1A2 and land on the outskirts of Moscow in 50 degree below zero weather with Mils, Migs, and Sukhois flying about and Russian troops armed with ATGWs. One tank against the entire russian armed forces? Sure, what the hell.... But seriously, you are just being an idiot now (moreso). The scenario you just described is pretty much EXACTLY what the M1 tank was designed for. And you are also assuming that we would not have achieved air superiority before sending our armor in; which we would havem being that it is the US tactical doctorine to only send in ground forces after the air is secured. And the only bigger joke than the Russian army is the Russian air force (well maybe it's tied with their navy). We don't fight wars with just tanks. No takers?... didn't think so since the M-1A2 is confined to attacking puny nations with poor import stripped armor of the FSU crewed by sand-dwelling conscripts. LOL... 'confined'... whatever you say. And I'm not so sure that the modern Russian tank crews are any better trained than the Iraqi's were. Our armed forces are a total and complete overmatch for any other armed force on the globe. Period. It's not even close. Whom do you suggest we attack next? Germany? LOL...... Most impressive- NOT! You guys are pathetic. Guess it will take ANOTHER 9/11 incident to temporarily shut you up. Hahaaa.... so what's it like feeling so inadequate and bitter that you need make crazy and inflammatory posts on usenet just so that people pay attention to you? |
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In article ,
(B2431) wrote: From: Chad Irby Date: 5/7/2004 6:36 PM Central Daylight Time Message-id: In article , (robert arndt) wrote: http://www.achtungpanzer.com/pz5.htm Better than any mass-produced piece-of-**** Sherman (except the Firefly British conversion). ...as long as you didn't mind that it had to pretty much sit there and not go very far, due to high ground pressure and very high fuel consumption (a King Tiger in mud became a landmark). Add in the very high maintenance problems, and you had a really tough, sorta-mobile fortress. The Allies did the obvious and ran around the KTs, destroying their support structure, then captured and destroyed a lot of them after they ran out of gas. Definitely follows on the German habit in WWII of coming up with a really cool design that turned out to be a problem to build and support. Did you happen to notice the article teuton offered as proof of what a wonder weapon King Tiger was actually describes what a flop it really was? Yeah, but I've known about the weaknesses of the King Tiger since some time in the early 1970s, when I started getting interested in WWII. You might note that the problems with the King Tiger were mirrored quite often with most of the things the Germans tried to build in the 1940-45 time period. Too expensive, hard to maintain, and used up too much time and resources that they needed in other places. A lot of the Ballantine War Books covered the problems the Germans had with overengineering their machines. The Maus was one of my favorites (the coaxial 128mm and 75mm guns were a bit much, not to mention the 188 tons of weight in the damned thing. Then there was the seldom-mentioned Krupp P1000 Rat. One THOUSAND tons. Two 280mm main guns. Or the P1500 variant with an 800mm mortar(!) and a couple of 150mm cannons... (I still have trouble believing that they were really thinking of building something like this, even early in the war). http://www.achtungpanzer.com/p1000.htm -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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