![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#101
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Eunometic
writes Chad Irby wrote in message news:5XCnc.137 ... Especially when that mean ground pressure can be *twice* that of lighter tanks, or similar tanks with wider tracks. As I recollect it was not quite that big a difference: maybe 30%. The T34 was champion of all tanks. Nonsense: the Panther was designed tracks-up as a T-34 killer and one-for-one was much superior. Trouble was, the Soviets could produce, field, maintain and supply many more T-34s than the Germans could Panthers. And in terms of armour and firepower the T-34 was utterly outmatched by the Tigers... it was an excellent if austere medium tank, but even the Soviets felt the need to augment it with the KVs and then the Josef Stalins. For shorter distances, due to (once again) higher fuel consumption. High speed doesn't help if you end up parked waiting for the fuel trucks. With the lousy German fuel situation by 1945, higher consumption was the *last* thing they needed. The Germans were massively outnumbered. In that situation quality is usually your only hope. They were outnumbered from choice - they dug the hole and kept on digging. A sherman would have been roast chicken to the Soviet armour despite its relibility since it only approximated the Pzkfw IV. Which explains why the Soviets rejected the large numbers of Shermans they were supplied...? For that matter, they accepted and used significant supplies of Valentines, which were no great shakes in the armour or armament shakes but were at least agile and reliable. In fact the shermans absurd shape was a result of it having been designed for a horizontal radial engine: itself a signe of neglecting engine development. You realise the Sherman was four inches lower-slung than the Panther? AFAIK see the air superiority spared the allies lighter armour from having to deal with the German armour. Air superiority was hugely overrated as a tank-killer (though effective at denying them supply and scaring crews into flight). German armour died when it met Allied armour, or when it met Allied anti-tank guns. Sometimes it gave good account of itself, occasionally it managed spectacular results, but mostly the recollection of an Achilles commander held for stopping counterattacks: you got into position covering the approaches and camouflaged properly, you let the Germans get within a thousand yards so the 17pdr was firing battlesight, and then you could be sure that the first or second shot would be enough: and you displaced quickly not for fear of return fire, but because they'd be calling artillery on you. Defence is always easier than attack and the Germans spent most of the war being pushed out of defensive position after defensive position. Their few counterattacks were generally disasters. Higher reliability with simpler and lower-performing engines gave them a much more effective force than they would have been able to field. Really neat tanks that don't work will generally lose to "good" tanks that run under most conditions and are easier to fix. Most of the problems the German tanks had related to either teething problems that would be overcome, teething problems in manufacture and often simply inferior materials due to quality and shortages. In other words, yet again failure to cope with the reality of their situation. If you're short of key strategic materials, do *not* design vehicles dependent on them. If you're short of POL, don't design gas-guzzling tanks. If you're outnumbered, remember that quantity is as important as quality and make sure you have *enough* tanks as well as *better* tanks. I don't know how mobile the Sherman was compared to a Tiger or Panther in rougth tersin. Better than the Tiger, slightly outmatched by the Panther. -- 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 |
#102
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In fact the
shermans absurd shape was a result of it having been designed for a horizontal radial engine: itself a signe of neglecting engine development. You realise the Sherman was four inches lower-slung than the Panther? Damn, Paul, that's just plain low - how dare you toss facts into this argument??? G |
#103
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "robert arndt" wrote in message m... 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. But the SU-152 "Animal Killer" did quite well against them. -- Zamboni |
#104
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Brett" wrote in message
... "mut head" Mullen wrote: "Brett" wrote in message In March of 1991 it took Saddam's post Gulf War reduced forces, who ignored any of the "collateral damage" they were inflicting less than 4 days to put down the insurgents contained in the Holy City of Karbala. It doesn't that much effort to destroy a city and the poorly supplied insurgents contained within it. I think you'll find they were operating without the constraints of democracy or a free press. Would you suggest we get rid of those? btw. One of the answers to a BBC poll indicated that less than 10% of those polled even knew that US and UK troops were in Iraq. http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/bsp...iraqsurvey.pdf Nice ref. I think you have misunderstood what the numbers mean on that example though. I think the 98.5 % figure is the one to look at there. All I did was expand Mullen's view of what can be considered an insurgent. I would suggest YOU read what you are responding to before YOU post. And I would suggest you *think* before you post, mutt-head. I've already labeled you the mut head. I know. How childish of you. J |
#105
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"John Mullen" wrote:
"Brett" wrote in message ... "mut head" Mullen wrote: "Brett" wrote in message In March of 1991 it took Saddam's post Gulf War reduced forces, who ignored any of the "collateral damage" they were inflicting less than 4 days to put down the insurgents contained in the Holy City of Karbala. It doesn't that much effort to destroy a city and the poorly supplied insurgents contained within it. I think you'll find they were operating without the constraints of democracy or a free press. Would you suggest we get rid of those? Which is a constraint that is removed if the forces operate without concern for "collateral damage" and that lack of concern was the primary part of the original post by Paladino. btw. One of the answers to a BBC poll indicated that less than 10% of those polled even knew that US and UK troops were in Iraq. http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/bsp...iraqsurvey.pdf Nice ref. I think you have misunderstood what the numbers mean on that example though. I think the 98.5 % figure is the one to look at there. I guess that depends on how you look at it. A response from 98.5% of those polled found that less than 10% of them had even heard that US and UK troops were in the country and the answers to that question weeds out the responses to other questions they asked. Looking at the quoted numbers for recognition of local political figures the results probably match the level of recognition you would expect to find close to an election in the US and UK (damn low). btw. sorry about the original comment. |
#106
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"L'acrobat" wrote in message ...
"Eunometic" wrote in message om... Most of the problems the German tanks had related to either teething problems that would be overcome, teething problems in manufacture and often simply inferior materials due to quality and shortages. You mean "Most of the problems the German tanks had related to reality". You also seem to be forgetting just how much the Germans were expecting from an already maxed out engine in most of their tanks, overstress it and it dies. There was no problem with the engines reliablity. Reliabillity problems related mainly to gearboxes and steering mechanisms on these Tanks and possibly the use of inferior raw materials. In anycase these are issues that are usually solved over 12 months. Nor were they underpowered. A Panther at about 45 tons with over 600hp engine compared well with a Sherman in terms of power to weight ratio. Using that engine in a heavier tank starts to slow them down but they were never as slow as a churchill for instance. The use of fuel injection is unlikely to overstress the engine. |
#107
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
nt (Krztalizer) wrote in message ...
In fact the shermans absurd shape was a result of it having been designed for a horizontal radial engine: itself a signe of neglecting engine development. You realise the Sherman was four inches lower-slung than the Panther? Damn, Paul, that's just plain low - how dare you toss facts into this argument??? G It was a "disproportionatly" tall tank. "According to statistics of the American army, destroying a Panther costed five Shermans or about nine T-34's." Q: If you only have 45 tons of steel and the necesary chromite, vanadium and manganese to make it into armour do you build 1.5 shermans or 1 panther? http://www.wargamer.com/Hosted/Panzer/pantherc.html "The Panther became one of the finest medium tanks of WW2, with a growing increase in the number of operational Panthers and a drop in the number of Panthers lost. Overheating was overcome by fitting a second cooling pump and modifying the cooling distribution. Later Panthers proved very much more reliable than the vehicles involved in the Kursk debacle. Many of Germany's top panzer aces achieved their finest victories with this vehicle. Soldiers like SS-Oberscharfuhrer Ernst Barkmann, who in an exposed spot with his sole Panther knocked out nine American M4 Shermans before withdrawing, were quick to prove the outstanding qualities of this tank. According to statistics of the American army, destroying a Panther costed five Shermans or about nine T-34's. It was undoubtedly Germany's best tank design, giving the almost ideal balance between armor, speed, weight and firepower." "During the Ardennes offensive several Shermans were knocked out in the middle of the night by Panthers using IR night-scopes. After locating US tanks with the IR scope, the Germans fired flares at the Shermans to light the target completely, and knocked them out." |
#109
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#110
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
on 10 May 2004 05:16:45 GMT, Denyav attempted to say ..... Fat Man (last year he explained to us the uranium used in Little Boy was captured from the Nazis) Not uranium,but Little boy itself ( check out for German markings) some proof please. -- When dealing with propaganda terminology one sometimes always speaks in variable absolutes. This is not to be mistaken for an unbiased slant. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Some new photos of the 2003 Tiger Meet (Cambrai) | Franck | Military Aviation | 0 | January 2nd 04 10:55 PM |
Airman tells of grandfather's Flying Tiger days | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | October 11th 03 04:55 AM |
1979 Tiger for Sale | Flynn | Aviation Marketplace | 65 | September 11th 03 08:06 PM |
P-47/51 deflection shots into the belly of the German tanks,reality | ArtKramr | Military Aviation | 131 | September 7th 03 09:02 PM |