Hi tomo,
True, but I'd much rather have an ignition, if possible (unless I was low on tanks myself, or they were all obsolete). Still, if the only things that will penetrate are tungsten rods or HESH - then there's no choice, right? So HESH would be the best option beteen those 2 choices then?
With any properly stowaged ammo, you're odds are pretty long if you bet on ignition. Killed crew is always bigger loss for enemy.
Because it was designed mainly as an anti-tank gun (?) - not a gun-howitzer (?).
A-19 was cannon, not gun-howitzer.
For that 'it was designed for something, therefore it's better than some all-rounder' you'd have to throw some really good arguments - designing a dedicated AT gun order to be a towed piece is/was pretty faulty decision IMO.
Why is that? The Rheinmetal on the Abrams is one? (supposedly dual-purpose, but it's HE abilities were apparently neglected - leaving the 105mm on the M60 to do that).
When you say AT gun, it's a towed AT gun in my eyes, not a tank gun
True on modern MBTs (but not so much in WW2, @ long distances), but apparently old fashioned AP is good for breaking up modern composite armour - so it's coming full-circle?
Don't mix steel-cored APFSDS with steel full-bore AP
They had similar, but couldn't get it to work in the D-10T 100mm - hence the adoption of the less-than desireable 115mm in the T-62, and the variety of ammo types in the D-10T. There was an attempt to make a 100mm firing this round though. It did stellar work in the 76mm gun on the PT-76 apparently though in Vietnam.
That 'less than desireable' point need some explanation IMO.
True, but I think the Germans went too far - does a tank really need to hold around 90 rounds?
25 rounds is pretty low, more so if you have numerical disadvantage.
The Panther chassis was too flawed IMO, but one of a similar weight maybe?
Panther's chassis was available, but anything similar would've do.
I was just wondering if it would be better to do away with the 128mm and just make 150mm's?
105 150 combo
The 105mm always had advantages though - and was also used as a deperation heavy ATG early in the war when the 37mm couldn't cope, like the 88mm Flak was (though at shorter ranges).
i'd venture to say that a handful of 10,5cm field guns were more likely to fire at tanks than 10,5cm Flak
What was the difference between the 'Stub' 'Special's projectile weights? Necking up is good, but the PzIV's KwK 40 was necked up anyway (the PaK 39 on the Hetzer wasn't). Necking up might have done the Soviets and Americans some good though - maybe the 3in gun married up to the 105mm M2 breech? (Which happened anyway IIRC? - but wasn't that popular, for some silly reason - forgets the guns designation, sorry).
Necking-up is connected to frontal part of a cartridge, not the aft part. Brits have necked-up 57mm to 75mm, but size of breech remained the same; Russkies have necked-up 12,7mm to 20mm, and 14,5mm to 23mm (don't confuse that one with VYa-23 ammo). They all have doubled/tripled shell (projectile) weights, at cost of 1/4 of muzzle velocity.
True, and it also doesn't matter so much on HV guns, but the 75mm M3 was a reasonably low-velocity gun (though that's debatable).
Nothing was wrong with that gun