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Hello Messy
A34 Comet
Plusses
Excellent gun (almost as good in A/T work as the Panthers 7,5cm KwK 42) with APCBC ammo, with shorter ranges with APDS even better than 7,5cm KwK 42 with APCR shot.
Fast
Very good power weight ratio
Reliable
Reasonable good armour protection
Minusses
old-fasioned boxlike hull
narrow tracks
Juha
The Matilda along with several other early British desgns was for Infantry support. That was why it was slow - it was firew support for attacking infantry to call upon. It had heavy armour protection and a gun that was usually used to fire high explosive shells at enemy strong points. So it was not supposed to be used against other tanks where speed and mobility are advantageous. It is worth ointing out that a counter attack by several Matildas frightenend the German army at Dunkirk. It was the use of the anti aircraft 88mm gun on them that was the only effective weapon the Germans had at the time all other calibres bounced off it. Pretty impressive for a tank that was desgned for other functions!
matilda have not HE shells... (88 was not the only effective weapon, also 105 howitzer were effective (and all larger artillery), and there are ever other not guns weapons)
Your right to correct Vinnye Vincenzo. The Matilda did not have an HE capability. However, it was impervious to just about all the early war AT weapons except the 88, and would use its MGs to suppress the enemy Infantry, ir CS tanks which were fitted with HE firing weaponary.
Matildas were extremely effective in breaking the Italian defences during O'Connors conquest of Cyrenaica in 1940-41
Your right to correct Vinnye Vincenzo. The Matilda did not have an HE capability.
Hey Freebird! Welcome back! Been missing you mate
hi Freebird
Welcome back, we have missed you, hope everything is well for you.
Indeed the Ram tank series were a missed opportunity, and the design was a very fine one indeed. But whilst the British Tanks of the period had their faults, they were not failures per se. What caused the repeated British defeats was not the inferiority of their equipment, it was their atrocious tactics and total misuse of their armour.
Contrary to what most people think, Tanks are not the best weapons sytem to engage other tanks, and you dont use ones tanks to chargee, cavalry style, the enmies position. Rommel had this type of madness completely covered ....he would use his limited tank numbers to lure the British tanks out, and draw them over his AT screen of 88s and 50mm guns. That British Taanks would oblige and generall attack, unsupported just made the whole thing an even bigger slaughter. British Armoured Divisions had far too little in the way of indigenous support, and this continued until the latter part of 1942. Once the British realized how to support their armoured formations properly, the superior numbers, and massive artillery advantages within the division, made a British armoured Division a very potent weapon.
RAM Tanks were not actively deployed, but the hull was used to build the Sexton SPG, which I think was far superior to the M7 Priest that it supplanted. Rams were also used in a turretless form as Kangaroo APCs, which offered far better protection to the Infantry than any other APC that I know of for the period. RAMs also were used as ARVs and as mobile observation posts with a turret but a dummy gun. These were attached to the Sexton Batteries in Europe.
I seem to remember the Aussies learned that lesson and used it to good use at Tobruk.
The US 7.5cm M1 L/31 gun's performance against vertical 240 BHN RHA armour for comparison:
APCBC projectile:
100m = 78mm
500m = 72mm
1,000m = 65mm
1,500m = 58mm
2,000m = 52mm
2,500m = 47mm
3,000m = 42mm
On top of that an effective HE round.
When one takes into account that the Sherman was designed to combat tanks like the Pz.III one suddenly realizes that the Sherman was no bad tank at all and that it had this role covered. That the Germans came up with the upgunned Pz.IV as quickly as they did no'one involved in designing the Sherman could've predicted.
vinnye,
The 8.8cm FlaK18/36 could punch a hole in the Matilda II frontally at ranges well exceeding 2.5km, some were knocked out at nearly 4km range by FlaK18/36's in Africa. And the 7.5cm KwK40 was able to the same out to 2km range. The 5cm KwK39 L/60 was also quite capable out to around 500 to 600m.
At 600metre, the 50mm gun could not be guarateed a sufficient margin of safety as to ensure a kill with every hit.
Moreover, at that range the matildas could call in their CS guns or even use their MGs to neutralis the targets.
I accept the lethality of the 88mm, but whilst engagements at 2.5 km did occur Rommel would more often only enagements to occur at closer ranges. I strongly suspect this had something to do with conserving ammunition,and the low probability of scoring a hit. The most extreme range for an 88 to engage British tanks was a little over 1200 metres, with the more usual range for firing to commence. Usually the Germans had predetermined the ranging requirements at those ranges. They would use covering Infantry or their own armour to engage the Charging British Tanks to stop their advance and return fire to the covering forces. Once so halted, they became an easy target for a first round kill from the 88s