 | Saving Private Ryan - Tank Busters| Old Threads Discuss Saving Private Ryan - Tank Busters in the Old Stuff forums; Originally Posted by lesofprimus
GrG, ur avatar is Kaputz.....
Thanks for the heads-up.
New one now put in.... |
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05-15-2005, 05:06 PM
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#46 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 2,043
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Originally Posted by lesofprimus GrG, ur avatar is Kaputz..... | Thanks for the heads-up.
New one now put in.  |
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05-15-2005, 05:14 PM
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#47 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 2,043
| ...Or not.
The server is being strange and not letting me use the image. 
That one, to be exact.  |
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05-15-2005, 05:54 PM
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#48 | | Minister of Whoopass
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Long Island Native in Mississippi
Posts: 13,739
Country: | Maybe too big in size or dimensions... Ive had that problem before...
Guys, I will not rule out that there could be indentification problems... That happened.... Not always, but it did... And sometimes, armor plating that was defective and not up to manufactures specifications was installed into new and battle damaged repairs...
Sometimes there were flaws in the armor plating... Imperfections... A carbide deposit where there shouldnt be one... Maybe even alittle espionage took place in Bracktoven, or wherever... Maybe a workers sister was rpaed by the regimental commandant and he was getting his revenge by weaking the armor consistency......
Maybe some guys were smart enough to try and skip 20mm shells under the bellies of Tigers hoping that these special few tanks had some of these flaws........
We'll never know for sure, but some pilots believe that they did destroy a Tiger by using this method....
__________________ "After That Second Kill, I Knew It Was Time To Get The Hell Outta There..."-- Lt. William Northrop Case
To See My IL2 Sturmovik Video Tribute to My Grandfather, Click Here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtzN5RuNNJk |
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05-15-2005, 07:34 PM
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#49 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 12,061
Country: | A ricocheted round is extremely unpredictable, it could have bounced up at a 0 degree angle. Everyone knows when a round ricochets you cannot predict which direction it is going to reflect at.
If the rounds are landing just behind the tank though the law of physics are obvious enough to say that it will bounce forward or up, if landing just below the tank (possible because the aircraft is shooting down at the tank), the rounds will bounce up into the confines of the space under the tank. The small area made by the surrounding tracks and low ground clearance of the tank (I'm not talking actually low but you get what I mean) would mean that the rounds would be hitting in basically the same place when hitting the tank. They were be diverted by the small area into the tank.
This barrage would make the tanks armour collapse after the armour has been weakened enough.
Now, I will not try and deny that Pz.IVs were often mistaken for Tigers. Allied air and tank crews would rather state they destroyed a Tiger than a Pz.IV along with honest misidentification (from a distance they do look mildly alike). I am not talking just Tigers though, I am refering to Panthers, Jagdpanthers, Jagdpanzers, King Tigers, Jagdtigers as well.
It was well known that rounds could be bounced up underneath enemy armour and cause considerable damage.
I would like to see the source of that, only 9 - 10 Tigers lost to Allied air power? First the source and also, is it talking about Western Allied only or the Soviets included in that too?
__________________ "When you go home tomorrow, don't expect anyone to know what you have been through. Even if they did know, most people probably wouldn't care anyway. Some of you may get the medals you deserve, many more of you will not. But remember this, all of you are now members of the front-line club, and that is the most exclusive club in the world." - Lt. Col. Matthew Maer CO 1st Battalion, the Princess of Wale's Royal Regiment. Camp Abu Naji, Oct. 2004  To those in that club. |
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05-15-2005, 09:50 PM
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#50 | | Banned
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 795
| Quote: |
Originally Posted by plan_D A ricocheted round is extremely unpredictable, it could have bounced up at a 0 degree angle. Everyone knows when a round ricochets you cannot predict which direction it is going to reflect at.
If the rounds are landing just behind the tank though the law of physics are obvious enough to say that it will bounce forward or up, if landing just below the tank (possible because the aircraft is shooting down at the tank), the rounds will bounce up into the confines of the space under the tank. The small area made by the surrounding tracks and low ground clearance of the tank (I'm not talking actually low but you get what I mean) would mean that the rounds would be hitting in basically the same place when hitting the tank. They were be diverted by the small area into the tank.
This barrage would make the tanks armour collapse after the armour has been weakened enough.
Now, I will not try and deny that Pz.IVs were often mistaken for Tigers. Allied air and tank crews would rather state they destroyed a Tiger than a Pz.IV along with honest misidentification (from a distance they do look mildly alike). I am not talking just Tigers though, I am refering to Panthers, Jagdpanthers, Jagdpanzers, King Tigers, Jagdtigers as well.
It was well known that rounds could be bounced up underneath enemy armour and cause considerable damage.
I would like to see the source of that, only 9 - 10 Tigers lost to Allied air power? First the source and also, is it talking about Western Allied only or the Soviets included in that too? | Yup, just get the ol' Ma Duece out and hammer away at the late war German tanks. No need for heavy calibre AT rounds since the multiple hits from those .50" would soon punch a hole through the armour. Better yet, use the H-S. Should be easier to get multiple hits in one small area from a ground mount than from an a/c, and at a better impact angle. |
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05-15-2005, 10:03 PM
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#51 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 5,124
| I'll respond to the rest of your post later Plan_D. Quote: |
I would like to see the source of that, only 9 - 10 Tigers lost to Allied air power? First the source and also, is it talking about Western Allied only or the Soviets included in that too?
| Sure, however I havent found anything yet mentioning the "Tiger-I's" losses alone due to allied air attacks, although I clearly remember reading it.
Thomas L. Jentz. describes that the Total amount of Tigers (both types) known to have been lost due to Allied air attack is 30. (USSR included)
I'll try and see if I can find the losses for the Tiger-I alone, but it is sure to be around the 9-10 maby 13 at the most. TigerII losses to air attacks were a little higher because of some only just making it out of the German assembly-lines before being pounded by allied bombers. (1945 was a cruel period for the Germans !)
__________________ We have built a total of about 1250 of this aircraft (Me-262), but only fifty were allowed to be used as fighters - as interceptors. And out of this fifty, there were never more than 25 operational. So we had only a very, very few.
- Adolf Galland |
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05-15-2005, 10:42 PM
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#52 | | Minister of Whoopass
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Long Island Native in Mississippi
Posts: 13,739
Country: | KK, we are referring to 20mm cannon damage, not .50 cal, so no need to get snotty......
One minute its 9-10 kills, then it's 30...... Maybe some claims that destroyed a Panther or Panzer were actually Tiger Tanks that were falsely identified......
The door swings both ways u know....... Mistaken identification happened all the time....
__________________ "After That Second Kill, I Knew It Was Time To Get The Hell Outta There..."-- Lt. William Northrop Case
To See My IL2 Sturmovik Video Tribute to My Grandfather, Click Here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtzN5RuNNJk |
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05-15-2005, 11:02 PM
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#53 | | Banned
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 795
| Quote: |
Originally Posted by lesofprimus KK, we are referring to 20mm cannon damage, not .50 cal, so no need to get snotty......
| H-S = 20mm Hispano cannon.
So why did the army not use 20mm automatic AT guns if it was so easy to punch through the armour of the Tiger, Tiger II, Panther, etc.....? |
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05-16-2005, 11:00 AM
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#54 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 12,061
Country: | KK the front armour of Tiger Ausf E was 100mm, the side armour was 80mm. That is why the Army wasn't using automatic 20mm cannons to destroy them. If you can find a cannon that can depress enough to bounce rounds off the floor and, while it's at it shock the crew enough not to shoot back then fine.
The aircraft doesn't have to worry about the Tiger shooting back, ground troops do.
__________________ "When you go home tomorrow, don't expect anyone to know what you have been through. Even if they did know, most people probably wouldn't care anyway. Some of you may get the medals you deserve, many more of you will not. But remember this, all of you are now members of the front-line club, and that is the most exclusive club in the world." - Lt. Col. Matthew Maer CO 1st Battalion, the Princess of Wale's Royal Regiment. Camp Abu Naji, Oct. 2004  To those in that club. |
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05-16-2005, 11:20 AM
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#55 | | Banned
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 795
| Plan_D
get your protractor and ruler out, draw some lines 25mm apart and tell me how thick that belly armour is now for different impact angles. You will find that that belly armour is as thick as that side and front armour which you're claiming a 20mm auto AT cannon could not penetrate. |
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05-16-2005, 11:23 AM
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#56 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 12,061
Country: | KK, use your brain.
Ricochet rounds can bounce straight up into the belly. A richochet is unpredictable, this isn't light we're talking about. It doesn't bounce out at the same angle it goes in.
__________________ "When you go home tomorrow, don't expect anyone to know what you have been through. Even if they did know, most people probably wouldn't care anyway. Some of you may get the medals you deserve, many more of you will not. But remember this, all of you are now members of the front-line club, and that is the most exclusive club in the world." - Lt. Col. Matthew Maer CO 1st Battalion, the Princess of Wale's Royal Regiment. Camp Abu Naji, Oct. 2004  To those in that club. |
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05-16-2005, 11:51 AM
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#57 | | Banned
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 795
| Quote: |
Originally Posted by plan_D KK, use your brain.
Ricochet rounds can bounce straight up into the belly. A richochet is unpredictable, this isn't light we're talking about. It doesn't bounce out at the same angle it goes in. |  Sure a round that hits the ground at a 30* angle is going to bounce straight up to hit the belly perpendicular, never mind that it could be deflected to either side as well.  Not enough times, if ever, will this happen to do what you're claiming a 20mm will do to a tank's belly armour.
Yup, richochets are so predicatable that they will hit in that very small area enough times so that "this barrage would make the tanks armour collapse after the armour has been weakened enough.".
Not me that needs to use their brain! |
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05-16-2005, 12:37 PM
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#58 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 12,061
Country: | I think it is you.
A ricochet round is unpredictable, it is not light. The rounds will not be going in at 30 degrees and coming out at 30 degrees. If you had any clue about guns you would know that a ricochet is unpredictable.
The under-side of a tank is a small area. The tracks on either side of the area I am refering to make sure that all rounds will hit the tank in some place.
Who ever stated that the round would always be hitting the ground at 30 degrees anyway. It depends on the angle the aircraft is coming in at and also that he is spraying as he goes down and pulls up.
I never stated that it would happen in one single pass, armour doesn't heal itself. On the field of battle any damage sustained will be there until the end.
Now, calm that red face down, straighten your ponytail and push up your glasses and use your grey matter.
__________________ "When you go home tomorrow, don't expect anyone to know what you have been through. Even if they did know, most people probably wouldn't care anyway. Some of you may get the medals you deserve, many more of you will not. But remember this, all of you are now members of the front-line club, and that is the most exclusive club in the world." - Lt. Col. Matthew Maer CO 1st Battalion, the Princess of Wale's Royal Regiment. Camp Abu Naji, Oct. 2004  To those in that club. |
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05-16-2005, 02:10 PM
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#59 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 5,124
| Quote: |
Originally Posted by lesofprimus
One minute its 9-10 kills, then it's 30.... | As I said I clearly remember reading it, however I havent found the reference for the Tiger-I alone just yet. What I have found though, is that only 30 Tigers of both types (Wich means the TigerII included), have been destroyed by Allied air-attacks.
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Plan_D what your suggesting is impossible, simple as that.
A 20mm H-S AP round hitting hard pavement and bouncing off would need atleast a 40-45 degree impact angle, or it will just dig itself in. Now considdering this, the projectile would hit the belly of the tank as a bullet hitting sloped armor, a whole 25mm of it, wich means in the case of the 20mm H-S that a penetration is impossible.
Also take into considderation that after hitting the hard pavement, atleast 80% of the rounds KE has been used up, plus the fact that the shape of the projectile is now badly mangled= almost flat. (An AP round needs atleast some shape to be effective, and as we know, a 'flat' projectile wont do much good against armor  )
Even with a 'direct' hit against 0 degree armor at 200y, the H-S AP round will only penetrate 27mm of armor ! Now what do think its chances of penetration would be after bouncing off hard pavement and hitting 25mm of sloped armor is ?  (Now do you see how far out your claim is ?) 
__________________ We have built a total of about 1250 of this aircraft (Me-262), but only fifty were allowed to be used as fighters - as interceptors. And out of this fifty, there were never more than 25 operational. So we had only a very, very few.
- Adolf Galland |
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05-16-2005, 02:22 PM
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#60 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 12,061
Country: | First off, 25mm isn't a lot of armour. The T-34 had 40mm angled at 60 degrees to make it equal to 75mm flat.
Secondly, it doesn't lose 80% of it's energy. At most it loses around 50 - 60% of it's energy.
Thirdly, depending on the angle the round has it, it wouldn't always be flat.
Fourthly, both of you are basing your penertration values off one hit. You're both failing to realise that armour weakens with every hit. The RoF of a Hispano Mk.II is 600 rounds per minute. One pass would allow the plane to squeeze off around 20-30 rounds, hitting behind the tank would confine the rounds to bounce up and, no matter what, hit the tank.
At 880 m/s with a 50% decrease in energy it would be around 400 m/s when hitting the tank. With around ten rounds weighing 130 grams a piece. By the third or fourth pass, with continuous damage in that small area the tanks belly armour, which isn't thick, is going to be sheared and dented. The structure of the armour is weakened, like a dented can, it would then start to fail.
You both, obviously, believe that 25mm is thick. Even at an angle it's not very strong because it needs structure. You dent anything it weakens.
__________________ "When you go home tomorrow, don't expect anyone to know what you have been through. Even if they did know, most people probably wouldn't care anyway. Some of you may get the medals you deserve, many more of you will not. But remember this, all of you are now members of the front-line club, and that is the most exclusive club in the world." - Lt. Col. Matthew Maer CO 1st Battalion, the Princess of Wale's Royal Regiment. Camp Abu Naji, Oct. 2004  To those in that club. |
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