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Tigers vs Shermans
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Re: Tigers vs Shermans
Thanks for the interesting video clip.
For those of you who might be interested about the development of the Sherman tank, Steven Zaloga's book "Armored Thunderbolt" has plenty of data for you to ponder. A very even handed ( IMO ) account of the development of the Sherman and why it turned out the way it did. There's also some good info about other tanks as well and how they compared to the Sherman. |
Re: Tigers vs Shermans
Interesting clip mostly for the veteran interviews and "tank porn" (despite the T-55 based "Tiger" on action shots). Some sloppiness typical to documentaries for general audience such as the Tiger's "gun sight", which didn't look anything like real WW2 German tank gun sight picture. Only some Soviet pre-war tanks had such oversimple sights. Also the implication that the Tiger I was designed primarily as a tank killer is wrong; the specs called for a breakthrough tank rather than a defensive tank killer vehicle, which also explains why the Tiger had so thick side armor for its time (1942).
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Re: Tigers vs Shermans
I always thought the Tiger was the first tank designed specifically as a tank killer, not defensive mind. Added bonus of the 88 was it could also better defend itself vs infantry & ATGs as tank formations in WWII quite often acted independently as in outrunning their infantry support.
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Re: Tigers vs Shermans
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Re: Tigers vs Shermans
Okay the first tank designed that came to fruition with the role of tank killing in mind, & yes breakthrough as in blitzkrieg. Other German tanks were like all designs then infantry support based.
Many people state it was designed as a tank killer in response to the T-34 & that is indeed wrong because it was conceived before the start of the war, the Panther was born from the T-34. Char B1bis & KV were infantry support tanks / breakthrough tanks with slightly improved guns to help deal with armour. Char B after all carried as its main gun what was basically a howitzer not a high velocity tank gun, it didn't even have an APC round to start with because its an infantry support tank. Both it & the KV were I think designed originally to take out heavy targets like bunkers |
Re: Tigers vs Shermans
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So, in my opinion there was at best quantitative difference between the Tiger I and the earlier heavy breakthrough tanks. |
Re: Tigers vs Shermans
Speaking of the Tiger's initial concept as a Breakthrough tank: were the S-mine dischargers fitted to early versions effective? Were they ever actually used?
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Re: Tigers vs Shermans
Okay & last we will say on it, Tiger was designed from the start for the role of taking on armour.
The others were upgraded to do so, it was not in their original design criteria. Made sense due to the fact they had good armour. Not even sure first models even had radios, needed tactically if you are going to take on armour. This is what happened to most early tanks, they were upgraded to take on armour not designed that way at the outset. German MkIII & MkVI for example. The Germans were the only ones that envisioned tank battles, I think it dawned on the French just before war started but everybody else was stuck in there ways. Infantry support & break through just like in WWI which is what the tank was originally conceived to do. |
Re: Tigers vs Shermans
I would say that in late 30's tank design, capability to take on enemy armour seems to have been well considered, since a lot of the tanks were armed with a weapon that was used as the main anti-tank gun in the respective armies. These certainly were quite capable of tackling most enemy armour of their era (though less capable once the armour levels started to go up during the war), while their HE content was rather restricted.
For example: - British 2 pounder gun was used as ATG and to arm early cruiser and infantry tanks - Soviet 45 mm gun was used as ATG and to arm later T-26 and BT tanks (and on smaller gun turrets on T-35) - German 37 mm gun was used as ATG and to arm early Panzer III (though these were designed with upgunning to 50 mm gun in mind) - US 37 mm gun was used as ATG and turret gun on Stuarts and M3 medium tanks There were also numerous tank designs that were armed with big, low-velocity weapons (usually around 75 mm caliber) mainly for the purpose of attacking enemy infantry. That said, many of the tank designs from Japan, Italy, Poland and France were designed less with tank combat in mind, being armed with lower velocity guns. |
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