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- #41
There are 3 ways to make 'better' AP ammo.
1. Make better AP shot (better heat treatment, add piercing cap, add ballistic cap, change weight)
2. Increase velocity (new powder, higher pressure, larger chamber/more powder)
3. Change type of projectile (HEAT, APCR, etc)
Some of these are somewhat time dependent. When do the better powders show up? When did HEAT (shaped charges show up).
HEAT will probably feature more in the later guns, and it didn't amounted much for the British. Italians and Germans made a wider use of the HEAT, and after 1940?
For the kE (kinetic energy) projectiles that obviously everyone used, indeed all the 3 suggestions are valid. Specifically for the British, earlier experimenting with the APC, APCBC and APCR ammo would've yielded handsome returns. See also how much the cartridges can be hotter loaded for the legacy guns to be still on the safe side. At any rate, the hotter ammo will not represent more than 10-15% of what the tank ammo count. 'Hotter' being a result of either the increased propellant charge in the existing casing, or the introduction of more modern propellants.
The 6pdr 10cwt is already a thing before 1935. Every ammo development carried out for the earlier gun can be used for it.Sometimes you can make a better new gun/ammo than trying to up grade an old gun to do about the same thing. Both steel and powder technology were advancing in the 20s and 30s. Picking an older gun with the idea it can be modified or upgraded at a later date instead of designing a new gun that pretty much does what you want (velocity for weight of gun)
may not have been a good idea.
Fitting of the 12-13 pdr guns was suggested many times. Either of these bigger guns will be an easier and better fit to the tanks/turrets designed for the early 6pdr guns, than on the tanks/turrets designed for the 3pdr, let alone for the 2pdr.
British actually did pretty good with the light tanks
Pretty much the King of the 5 ton tanks. 3 man crew. Commander was not the gunner. It had a radio (2 way!) it was zippy. It had a fair chance of killing other 5 ton and smaller tanks.
Something that could not be said of many other 5 ton tanks. Almost 1700 of them built which was the big mistake. It doesn't matter how good a light weight boxer you are when you come up against even just a competent middleweight.
The Vickers light tank would've been great as a waffentraeger - carry the AA guns (hoefully the pintle-mounted 15mm or an Oerlikon can fit), or a good mortar, or howitzer, or an anit-tank gun. Also an APC.
Be it as-is, or stretched by one half bogie.