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I would have made the Sherman so it would run off Diesel, not gasoline....I would also make the Sherman so that it had sloped armor.Thank goodness doughboy was not a strategist for the US. If human lives were deemed more valuable than the strategic accomplishment, we likely would have lost the war.
On average, it took ...
... 1.2 hits and 1.2 pens to KO a Pz IV. It also took 1.5 hits and 1.5 pens to brew a Pz IV.
... 2.55 hits and 1.9 pens to KO a Pz V. It also took 4.0 hits and 3.24 pens to brew a Pz V.
... 4.2 hits and 2.6 pens to KO a Pz VI. It also took 5.25 hits and 3.25 pens to brew a Pz VI.
... 1.63 hits and 1.55 pens to KO a Sherman. It also took 1.97 hits and 1.89 pens to brew a Sherman.
Pz IV gets the booby prize.
You are confusing Shermans with the 'aviation' radial engine.
I'm quite sure those figures can't be trusted much at all. I for one, having read about a lot of actions on both the Western Easterin front, wouldn't put as much as a dime on their trustworthiness.
Take for example all the times that Allied tankers in vain spended as much as 10 rounds at a German tank only to observe all their rounds just bounce off German armour and then be blown to smithereens by the first return shot fired.
Such instances could never be recorded in a statistic like that as there was no'one left to record it.
Only the German could record that he'd used a single shot to knock out the Sherman,
while the poor guys in the sherman were likely all dead and didn't live to tell how they expended maybe 10 shots or more in vain on the German tank.
Hence why such statistics are worth absolutely nothing really.
I would have made the Sherman so it would run off Diesel, not gasoline....I would also make the Sherman so that it had sloped armor.
Sure m_kenny, suuure...
You calmed down now?
Ok, I'll tell you what, you can make all the fairytale conclusions you want, but I don't have to do the same. alright?
If you believe that every single AP round fired was a perfectly aimed one, or that it was used against only tanks, then be my guest,
but you're the one believing in myths and fairytales then my friend, not me.
I'm curious, why is it that the US have enough nukes to blow the entire planet to pieces 10 times ? Are they planning on bombing themselves as-well ?
Oh I see how your logic works M_kenny! According to you it took 4.26 hits exactly from 6 pdr to knock out a Pzkpfw.VI at any range from any angle.
Also every round manufactured was according to you fired and perfectly aimed
Oh and ofcourse every shot ever made was done under ideal conditions were the target was clearly visible, with no obstructions in the way and the target didn't move and no wind was present.
So therefore we can safely assume from knowing the number of rounds produced vs the amount enemy tanks knocked out, that a tank gun had exactly a 1 in 16,127th of chance of hitting anything it aimed at. Yes ofcourse that makes perfect sense!
And again I feel so sorry for that guy with the pencil clipboard, tough job for sure. I wonder how he found out which hit knocked out the tank and which started the fire...
Allied tankers in vain spended as much as 10 rounds at a German tank only to observe all their rounds just bounce off German armour and then be blown to smithereens by the first return shot fired
I didnt know that the British used OR to analyse anti-tank defences....but it is entirely plausible.
I do know about Blacketts research into convoys. He explained his findings to a sceptical admiralty in the following terms.....(more or less)...."imagine the convoy is a flock of ducks and the U-Boat a duckhunter with a shotgun.....if the flock flys past the duckhunter and the duckhunter fires, he will kill a certain amount of those ducks. But he will only get one shot at the flock....now imagine the flock breaks up into four or five smaller flocks, separated by a few minutes. now the duckhunter gets four or five shots at the ducks, each shot does less damage, than the single shot into the big flock, but overall, the number of ducks shot is far less". Blacketts research was tested, and found to be chillingly accurate.....
There's simply no way a statistic like that can be anywhere near accurate.....blah blah blah blah....................So to sum it all up the stastic is sadly worthless and a waste of time and it doesn't take much of a logical sense to figure that one out either.
I thougtht the fundamental statistic that MK had brought forward was not so much which shot had caused the "kill" rather the number of shots, on average needed to achieve that kill.
What i dont understand is what benfit the alleged OR into AT statistics would yield? Did the British determine the types of shots most likley to brew a given type of tank????
But I just cant get my head around how it might help devise the right tactics to employ in a tank versus tank engagement.
Perhaps the research was trying to determine the optimum range with which to engage the target. But I would have thought that sort of information could be much more accurately deduced from an analysis of the gun and armour chacteristics.
I thougtht the fundamental statistic that MK had brought forward was not so much which shot had caused the "kill" rather the number of shots, on average needed to achieve that kill.
I also would not think it that difficult to determine which hit did the most damage or which hit was likley to be the lethal one. Ballistics does that sort of analysis all the time, so why would tank ballistics be so very different to just about every other field of ballistics?
m kenny said:You fail to understand the nature of the statistics. They were many other OR Reports listing such things as location of hits and size of shell holes ect. You should consult them before you burst another blood vessel
Nothing can change the fact that the broken hulls of Pz IV's, Panther and Tigers were examined in detail. You simply do not like the result. Now there is a suprise!
then for goodness sake why weren't they applied to the statistic ?? I'll tell you why: