syscom3
Pacific Historian
Didnt the Pershing have a turret transverse rate of 24 degrees/sec, almost 4 times faster than the Panther or Tiger?
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I still believe 90 tons to be too heavy, Soren. The Panther F would have been more than good enough against the new Allied and Soviet armour and it certainly would have been the most practical. I think the modern development of the tank speaks for itself on this issue.
On the Pershing vs. ? issue, it was a good tank for development but I don't believe it was on par with the Tiger or Panther - and in a straight shooting match certainly not the King Tiger. The Super Pershing is a completely different machine (in my opinion) because the increased firepower gave the German AFVs something to fear as it was perfectly capable of destroying the Panther and Tiger at combat ranges. The King Tiger was still above the Super Pershing in a straight shooting match despite the fact a King was the Super Pershings first victim; bad handling on the Kings crew.
The optical equipment on the German armour was exceptional - it was THE best in the world, there should be no doubt. The optical equipment gave accurate ranging up to 5km; something the Allies could only dream of. Unfortunately for the Allies the German guns that accompanied these optics were powerful enough to inflict damage 5km away - I believe the longest kill in World War II was an Elefant vs. T-34/76 at 4.8km away ? I'm open to corrections on that. sys, while 4.8 certainly was extreme and 'bizarre' I wouldn't discount long distance kills (2 - 3km) being unique so much so that they should be discounted as luck and not worth mentioning in a discussion.
The reason combat ranges were 400 - 600 metres was simply because both Soviet and Allied armour were closing on the German armour in an attempt to inflict damage ! The ranges would have been further out if the Allies had something capable of doing serious damage that far out. You say there was no line of sight for those ranges - open Pontic steppes, desert (Pz.IV F/2 Tiger), fields of [parts of] France... all wide open spaces - Tigers were inflicting damage while the enemy was closing in to "combat" range.
That said, I must admit that the Sherman was not a 'bad' tank. It was no worse than the T-34 ... which is funny because everyone loves the T-34 (best tank in WWII blah, blah, blah) while hating the Sherman... fact of the matter is there's some numbers out there that claim for every Panther there were 15 T-34s destroyed ... or 9 Shermans. The T-34 and Sherman were 'medium' tanks , or best put by the British 'cruiser' tanks - (best 'cruiser' was the A34 Comet !) the idea was to rush through the gaps of the enemy line and wreck the rear echelons - simple ! Guderian wrote that idea in Achtung! Panzer! ... so the Allies and Soviets had the right idea...what they failed to grasp was "the main enemy of the tank is another tank" - the Allies and Soviets forgot that the enemy (Germany) was going to have a mobile ARMOURED reserve... terrible shock when they were more capable armour vs. armour. And also upsetting to discover that the Germans used this magical thing called a 'heavy' tank that was used to punch the original hole, and allow the 'cruiser' (Pz.IV in Germanys case around '43, Pz.III before then) to wreck the rear lines. The heavy tanks in Germany were also used to engage the enemy armour ... which effectively eradicated the T-34s and Shermans ... which did not have such support. Tank destroyers were a good thought, but really - one hit wonders... any infantry around and they're in trouble.
The Allies could , and SHOULD, have used heavy tanks. With the Pershing punching the original hole and aiding the 'cruiser' (sherman) in the battle against the enemies armoured counter- attack ... the Allies would have had an easier time (and the Sherman would have had a better name for itself). The British idea of the breakthrough tank was the 'infantry' tank ...matilda II unfortunately showed this idea to be a good one by being a great tank and only stoppable by the dreaded '88' FlaK 36 in '40 - '41. That led to the Churchill ... being a 'good idea'. It was a good idea in cities ... but certainly no good in open ground. Given a year or so on top of the war and Britain would have been splitting lines apart with Centurions and chewing up the supply lines with Comets. Much praise for the British armoured corps then ! But no...
D25T's penetration 0 degree
0m 500m 1000m 1500m 2000m
AP (162mm) 152mm 142mm 132mm 122mm
α=30
88mm PaK 43 L / 71
PzGr.39 / 43 ( APCBC)
weight velocity 100 m 500 m 1000 m 1500 m 2000 m
10.2 kg 1000 m/s 202 mm 185mm 165mm 148mm 132mm
That the penetration figures are close to linear is completely normal, infact it would be rather strange if they were not, since a projectile has a certain ballistic coefficient the drop in speed and thus energy will always be linear.
Look at the Soviet penetration figures, they're linear as-well, so are these fake according to you as-well glen ???
α=30
88mm PaK 43 L / 71
PzGr.39 / 43 ( APCBC)
weight velocity 100 m 500 m 1000 m 1500 m 2000 m
10.2 kg 1000 m/s 202 mm 185mm 165mm 148mm 132mm
I admit that Kinetic Energy pr. cm^2 of kwk43 is the highest( L70/90mm is another), but the issue is not so simple, Energy pr. cm^2 is NOT direct proportional to penetration for same projectile and this factor shouldn't abused among different cailiber projectiles.
1)I need the velocity of kwk43's projectile of 0m,500m,1000m,1500m....
2) There is one strange thing about 88mm KwK43/122mm D-25T. According to your data, the velocity retain ability of kwk43's projectile(apcbc 10.2kg) is BETTER than D25T's(APBC 25kg):
at close range, 232/206=113%, and then 196/152=129%, at last, @3000m, 153/108=142%
10.2kg projectile's penetration advantage over 25kg projectile INCREASES with distant. Very strange!
α=30
PzGr.39 / 43 ( APCBC)
weight velocity 100 m 500 m 1000 m 1500 m 2000 m
10.2 kg 1000 m/s 202 mm 185mm 165mm 148mm 132mm
0m 500m 1000m 1500m 2000m
AP (162mm) 152mm 142mm 132mm 122mm
α=30
PzGr.39 / 43 ( APCBC)
weight velocity 100 m 500 m 1000 m 1500 m 2000 m
10.2 kg 1000 m/s 202 mm 185mm 165mm 148mm 132mm
α=0
PzGr.39 / 43 ( APCBC)
weight velocity 100 m 500 m 1000 m 1500 m 2000 m
10.2 kg 1000 m/s 404 mm 370mm 330mm 296mm 264mm
α=0
0m 500m 1000m 1500m 2000m
D15T/AP (162mm) 152mm 142mm 132mm 122mm
Kwk43/apcbc (173mm) 154mm 138mm 124mm 110mm
The reason is that it's very unconvenient to produce unregular thickness plate such as 123mm....360m 743m 1048m 1380m 1476m
Kwk** 150mm 140mm 130mm 120mm 110mm
It's said that german techinichers deliberately used thick/low quality plates to get higher pen. in order to get through Gestapo's check in late period.