Shortround6
Lieutenant General
The part about fitting into early war tanks is certainly up for debate. A lot depends on the armor penetration desired, the amount of ammo required (by doctrine, not experience until the summer of 1940 or later) and what sacrifices we are willing to make for crew size/ergonomics and wither better choices could have been made.Hence the suggestions presented earlier in this thread to adopt some kind of 6pdr gun with modest MV. About equal AP performance compared to the historical 2pdr, but can be provided with a half decent HE load too. Obviously not as good as a 75mm, but better than what they had historically (aka nothing). And still small and light enough to fit into early war tanks.
Given unlimited money (materials, labor, factory space, bridging equipment and tractor-trailers for road transport) the British could have done a lot of things different.
If the British won't even buy/build capped shot the chances of them buying larger APCR shot is pretty poor.
You do have to get around the NO HE for tanks thing no matter size you gun you are pushing. Once you get past that the 2pdr is no worse than every other 37-40mm gun in the world.
The British dug themselves a hole in 1930s concerning logistics and shell design. The US 105 was sort of star when it came to HE content but the British 25pdr was only slightly better than some 75mm guns. Problem is that the British divisions didn't often have anything better.Wikipedia mentions the Priest was more or less a stopgap solution in British service, replaced with the Sexton once those started showing up in order to simplify ammunition logistics. Sexton was a very Priest-like vehicle made in Canada based on M3/M4 chassis but mounting the 25pdr. So it used the same ammunition as the 25pdr the rest of the army was already using. The 105mm was probably a better gun with substantially more punch as you point out, but logistics matter, it seems.
American/French 75mm guns (and tank guns) held 1.5lbs of TNT or 1.36lbs of Amatol. The 25pdr fired a 10lb heaver shell that held 0.3lb more HE.
The German 10.5cm Howitzer fired a 32.66lb shell with 3.04lbs of HE for quick comparison.
The British, once production of guns/carriages gear up, were issuing 72 guns per division (24 guns per Regiment) but except in rare cases anything larger/heavier was in support units.
1940 France sometimes had mixes of guns but the 4.5in Howitzer was very short ranged and was there to make up numbers, especially in units that still had 18pdr guns.
A "Standard German division" (in quotes because non-standard probably out numbered standard) had 3 Battalions of 10.5 Howitzers (12 guns each) and one Battalion of 15cm Howitzers (some times one 4 gun battery was replaced by a 4 gun battery of 10.5cm long guns). British were trying to make up in numbers for the smaller "throw weight".
However this also does not give a good picture. The Germans issued 6 of the small 7.5mm infantry guns to each regiment of the Infantry division (sometimes split into 2 gun detachment per Battalion) and 2 of 15cm infantry guns per Regiment. This brought the total number of artillery tubes to 72 (?)for the German division.
Ability to control guns outside a particular command train changed during the war in many armies.
A British division could, at times, bring down a heavier volume of fire. But the Germans could, at times, bring down a more destructive fire against entrenchments.
If you needed smoke the 25pdr needed more shells.
If WW II had gone the way of WW I, Static warfare against the Germans just a few dozen miles from the English channel, perhaps using lots and lots of cheap shells might have been a smart choice. Once you start shipping hundreds of thousands (millions?) of shell around the Cape of Good Hope cheap shells don't look so good but it is too late.
To also show the difference between a decent SPG conversion and a SPG crappy conversion we can also look at the Bishop and the Sexton.
Unfortunately there was almost a 1 year delay between initial request and delivery (for a box mounted on top of a Valentine hull) and the need for the vehicle as either an assault vehicle or as a SP artillery had pretty much vanished. It showed up in NA within a few months of Grants and Shermans with 75mm guns so the need for direct fire 25dpr was a lot less and the Bishop was pretty poor SP gun.
Ability to fire the gun closed up was very limited.
3 man crew in the box even opened up is difficult, trying to fuse shells, set fuses and adjust charges in the cartridge cases is difficult, slowing rate of fire, limited elevation restricts range.
32 rounds was the official ammo capacity. Sometimes helped by towing a standard 25pdr ammunition limber behind the vehicle (towing fuel trailers was considered dangerous but 25pdr ammo?) and the slow speed meant it was only good for accompanying slow tank units.
The Sexton, when it showed up, had a 6 man crew or 5 not counting the driver. It could fire much further and traverse over a larger arc. It carried a huge (comparatively speaking ) amount of ammo. 75 rounds of HE or smoke and 18 rounds of AP with 96 cartridges. Adjust as needed. Still will not reach full elevation/range. Sexton, with it's greater speed, can reposition faster, keeping up better with the movements of the tanks, truck mounted infantry.
