Quote:
Originally Posted by gila
How does one ever get a well trained AT team?
The only way i found to use them is in ambush or after the tank is suppressed or runs out fire turns.
Then it's shoot and pray!
Even if you do get a KO, still have to scoot and live to tell the tale,that's the hardest part.
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usually some PTRS are a standard in my Soviet cores.
1) They may be size 0, but
don't use them as scouts!
2) Deploy 1-2 hexes
behind the rifle line. That way, the enemy tends to fire at the rifles, who can take casualties. Try not to fire them voluntarily as riflemen at enemy grunts, but leave their shots for op-fire to support the rifle line.
3) Don't zoom around if under indirect fire, as highly vulnerable to a few stray mortar bombs. Hunker down and hope they survive the bombardment.
4) Any with a casualty, leave behind or retire to the rear. You want them to survive and grow experience.
5) Do
not get into voluntary hand to hand combat at 1 hex or less. In woods, consider stacking them with a rifle section in case an enemy rifleman stumbles onto them.
Shooting AFV:
Use the riflemen to suppress any frisky enemy rifles before shooting at the AFV with the ATR!
If the enemy AFV are
not buttoned yet, make them so by firing any remaining rifle shots and perhaps HMG at them.
Try to make sure that you have a retreat hex where the ATR can go if spotted. Run away if spotted, brave Sir Robin!. (or at least, stop firing and attracting opfires).
Try to fire only 1 or 2 shots in an engagement so you don't get spotted. Bug out if spotted.
Try to fire from cover (rough, building rubble, woods etc) at 90 degrees to the flank of the Nazi armour.
When shooting at AFV, only do so from 1-3 hexes.
Don't bother if the armour is class 3 or more. But later P3 and P4 are merely class 3 sides.
Figure one formation of 4 or so of these things to support each rifle coy. Cheap and cheerful
if used cautiously. But don't go mad on the things unless you have a regular opponent who always goes hog-wild on panzer grenadiers and little tin-can scout cars.
Andy