Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
HealzDevo said:I said the Panzerfaust because I see it as a true revolution in the battlefield. It also led to the idea of Stingers, for personnel in the 1950s, which changed the relationship between troops and aircraft/helicopters significantly by giving troops an effective hand-held weapon that could lock-on to an aircraft's exhaust system and blow up the aircraft/helicopter. That is why aircraft are forced to fly high and fast over the battlefield unless they have modern heat suppression technology built in.
Yeomanz said:Yep the panzerfaust was a good weapon but you'd be pretty vunerable id say
Adolf Galland said:Panzers, 10 votes because itz suberb effective agaist all targets when properly helped w/ infantrys
Medvedya said:Depend what you mean by better. The German tanks were far superior as the engineering went, but it was this in itself which caused problems. If something broke (as it surely did) you needed specialist tools, parts, and skills to make running repairs.
In the case of Russian tanks, a strategically placed whack from a sledgehammer would often do the trick! Also, Hitler took the view that since sloping armour was used on Russian tanks, to copy it would be saying that the Bolsheviks could produce something useful - completely potty? Quite.
So the Tigers were forced to have flat angular armour everywhere, which added much more weight, and thus gobbled up more fuel, which leads on to the fact that German engines were petrol injection, rather than Diesel ones as was the case on the Russian tanks. It's much harder to start a petrol engine in extreme cold weather, and German tankers had to light fires under their vehicles to warm them enough to start! Again, the Russians had no such problems.
But outside of all of those practical considerations, the German tanks were much more sophisticated bits of kit.
Medvedya said:Not at all! They have an English language service. They love getting letters, so if you have any questions about Russian/Soviet military history, they're guaranteed to answer them for you on the radio!
http://www.vor.ru/world.html
You can write to any of the shows, but 'Moscow Mailbag' is the best one in my opinion. They reply to you personally by letter too, to tell you when your question is going to be broadcast.
RG_Lunatic said:As German armor got thicker, it got softer. Armor quality on the Tiger and especially the Tiger II was poor, relying on sheer mass rather than quality to provide protection. Mass has to be moved, and these tanks were relatively immobile as a result. Russian thick armor on tanks like the JS-II was of much better quality than that on the Tigers.
=S=
Lunatic
Medvedya said:The trouble is, the harder the armour, the more brittle it gets. The British who evaluated the T34 found the armour to be of a reasonably high quality (even with roughness of castings) and put it on par with some of the better German armour.
But while armour hardness is relevant, it is by no means the only important factor.
While high face hardness will help the armour defeat glancing impacts from soft-steel slugs, it also will tend to face-crack on heavy impact. Under these conditions, the strength and ductility of the metal behind the point of impact will determine whether the shock wave progressing through the metal thickness will break metal away from the inner face.
So, whilst the 45 mm front armour of the T-34 gives it a protection equivalent of about 140 mm, making it immune to the Tigers 88 mm gun, this was often offset by the nasty tendency of the brittle Russian armour to collapse when hit by a large round.
RG_Lunatic said:Russian armor was not really brittle (unless it was defective which some was). There is an ideal hardness. When tested, Tiger II armor was found to have a very high hardness on the face, up near a brinell of 700, but in just a few mm this dropped down to around 200. Most German late war armor lacked the face hardening. Russian armor was found to have a face hardness of something around 450 and was pretty consistantly 350-375 or so thereafter.
You are right, very hard armor tends to be brittle, but soft armor is also bad. When armor like on the Tiger II is hit, it does not need to be fully penetrated to kill the crew. Spalling (liqified steel) off the opposing face from the hit can easily do the job. The best armor is hard but not too hard on the face but is not soft underneath. Russian armor, especially near the end of WWII, was nearly ideal for the tech of the time.
=S=
Lunatic
RG_Lunatic said:German WWII armor became soft because they had very limited supplies of tungston for machine tools. 375 brinnel is about the hardest that could be machined with a tungston bit, and without such a bit it really drops dramatically. There was a huge political battle within the German war machine as to whether the available tungston should be used for making armor, or as penetators to defeat enemy armor.
=S=
Lunatic