M4s & Shermans

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JagdpanzerIV
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

JaM2013 wrote:do you guys read this one?

http://www.operationbarbarossa.net/the- ... rformance/

it assesses the performance of T34 each year, and must say, some data is incredible.. like for example Soviets losing 15000 T34/76 tanks in 1942, or the fact that over 50% losses of T34/76 were caused by long 50mm gun.. At the same time Flak88, is credited with only 3.4% of all kills, while 37mm and short 75mm got both 10% (not combined!)

Author's conclusion is that T34 was extremely bad in acquiring targets, and being able to observe whats happening around the tank, so Germans were capable engaging it from sides and rear without problem.. Author mentions one example where 37mm PaK 36 managed to fire 23 shots at T34/76, until crew abandoned the tank.. only effect was jammed turret. And while some would be pointing the T34 resistance to 37mm fire, important is the fact antitank gun managed to score 23 hits and T34 was unable to locate from where fire is coming and respond with fire... and now imagine what happened when Germans got the 50mm PaK39 or later 75mm Pak40... T34 crew would be lucky to survive 2-3 hits from those...
Overall, i think T34 initiative in Panzer Corps is most likely exaggerated, and should be even below PzIVD (short 75mm), as these apparently managed to fight the T34 and hit them before T34 could respond.. overall, during years 1941-1944, Soviets lost 4 tanks for each german tank destroyed...
main problem of t34s:

1) it had no radio...how do you coordinate tank actions with no radio? they tried with flags, problems is when a battle starts, dust and smoke and what not fill the surrounding, and you can't see what other commanders are signaling anymore.

2) it did not have the 3 man turret. the Pz III did.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

True, yet 42 model introduced larger 3-man hexagonal turret yet performance of that tank was still far from desired.. amount of losses was even higher than in 1941
Last edited by JaM2013 on Tue May 23, 2017 7:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by Yrfin »

JaM2013 wrote:
Too many words.
What about transfer this words into PzC Game Stats ?
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by Yrfin »

JagdpanzerIV wrote: main problem of t34s:
1) it had no radio...how do you coordinate tank actions with no radio? they tried with flags, problems is when a battle starts, dust and smoke and what not fill the surrounding, and you can't see what other commanders are signaling anymore.
Pz I-IV don't have total radio-equipments too.
And how it can be implementent in PzC Rulez ? Spot decrease ? Ini decrease ?
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

Yfrin: i think PzIV early models with short 75mm guns should be at least 1 point above T34/76.. currently these tanks in last versions are one point below the PzIV with long 75gun..

Overall, i think short 75mm gun is quite underrated. Yes, it was not as accurate as 37mm, but it had definitely better penetration in normal combat situations (combat up to 500m) of early war years. 37mm PaK36 was able to penetrate around 34mm at 500m, while 75mm kwk37 had 50mm at 500m, and short 50mm L42 got 59mm at 500m..

So if 37mm is HA 6-7, and 50mm is HA 9, then short 75mm, should be HA 8, not 6. (yes, 50L42 and 37L46 get a bonus for APCR, but 75L24 used HEAT rounds, with quite good penetration too - Gr38HI had 52mm, Gr38HI/A 81mm,Gr38Hi/B 87mm and Gr38HI/C 115mm penetration of RHAe - in any case HEAT ammo was not useable at long ranges due to issues with projectile stability, therefore max range was typically 500m. At the same time ignition would have problem with sloped armors, so this ammo would be only useable against T34 turret, but not the hull)


edit:

i think it should have definitely lower initiative, and spotting.. and PzIVD,E and F, should get HA 8.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

HEAT projectiles were developed before war, but were fielded to units during 1940 (Gr38HI). By 1941 Gr38HI/A was fielded to units, and version B came in 1942. These projectiles were always depicted as "special rounds" and crews were instructed to destroy them when abandoning the tank to not fall into enemy hands. For the same reason, HEAT rounds were withdrawn from North Africa, where the chance for this was higher (and Western allies were more likely to copy them)
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

IMHO,

giving Pz IV D,E,F HA 8 would make them op, and besides it only could be achieved using HEAT, which is a special ammo, and the HA of tanks should not be calculated with APCR, HVAP, ADPS or HEAT.

One exception to this could be the Pz.IIIN HA 8. this one came up late, and i don't think it would create unbalance in the game to give it HA 8 (it already have 9) it could only achieve HA 8-9 with HEAT.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

Yrfin wrote:
JaM2013 wrote:
Too many words.
What about transfer this words into PzC Game Stats ?
you give t34s less initiative because it had no radio nor 3 man turret vs the Pz.III which had both.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

Actually standard AP ammo for 75mm L24 was able to penetrate 50mm at 500m, which is 10mm more than 37mm gun could do.. so it was definitely superior in penetration, and practically had same penetration potential as British 2pdr gun.

Its not about making it OP, as that gun was perfectly in the middle between 37mm and 50mm penetration ability, therefore should be in the middle with stats as well..

Anyway, if its too much, then i think HA 7, would be ok, but 50L42 gun should be only HA 8, as it was just 10mm improvement at the same distance. 37mm would be then HA 6.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

overall, i think 75mm L24 would be superior gun vs early war tanks, comparing it even to 2pdr gun, as firing 75mm projectile, it would get additional benefit from over-matching typical early war armor plates (L/D), therefore negating any possible sloping these tanks might use.. of course, it would not help against T34, but any tank with just 30mm armor plates, would be in big trouble vs 75mm L24

Similar effect was true for Soviet 122mm tank guns, whose AP rounds should on paper be unable to penetrate Panther's front hull, yet due to 122mm ammo over-match over 80mm plate, they effectively negated the slope effect to some degree and penetrated.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

Personally, in my mod, i calculate all HA like this, pen@500m X 1.14
so for the L24, 50mm give 57, so HA 6
2pdr gets HA 7
50L42 gets HA 7
50L60 gets HA 9
early 6pdr HA 10
late 6pdr HA 11-12

we have to keep in mind that the 75L24 is a howitzer gun, therefore not as accurate as AT guns.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

JaM2013 wrote:...
Similar effect was true for Soviet 122mm tank guns, whose AP rounds should on paper be unable to penetrate Panther's front hull, yet due to 122mm ammo over-match over 80mm plate, they effectively negated the slope effect to some degree and penetrated.
at 500m, a 122mm AP shell could easily go thru a panther front plate.
Overmatch does not guarantee autopen tho, it means it will penetrate but the extent depends on the velocity and kinetic energy, in other words, its penetration value.
Many late war panthers had weak armor and bad welds, so many shells even tho they did not penetrate, cracked the armor and caused spalling inside.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by McGuba »

Some interesting discussion is going on here :D
JaM2013 wrote: anyway back to Shermans, its very strange how they are perceived by people, yet T34 is never criticized, anyway if you do the direct comparative between models, T34 draws the shorter straw..
True, but one must note that while the T-34 appeared in June 1941, the Sherman only at El Alamein and Torch - one and a half year later. By which time the Germans had better guns and aromour protection on their tanks. Thus the Sherman's effect was not so shocking even though it was indeed somewhat better than the early T-34. When the T-34 made its debut the US was still equipped with M3 Lee and Stuart tanks, which were clearly inferior to it.
JaM2013 wrote: M4 Sherman when it came, had very comparable armor protection vs T34, except for side armor, where T34 had an edge. Anyway, 75mm M2 and later 75mm M3 were superior guns to T34's F32 and F34 guns, having better penetration. Optics and overall ergonomics benefited Sherman, where only significant advantageT34 had in bogged terrain due to wider tracks.

Technically, neither tank would destroy the other frontally through hull, while T34 with F34 gun would need to use APCR to penetrate the Sherman's Turret below 500m. Sherman using M3 gun (L40) could penetrate T34's turret at 1000m though..

Mobility wise, T34 would have a bonus, but its reliability was much worse than with Sherman. So i think stats wise, Initial M4 Sherman should be at least equal to T34/76, but have higher initiative, higher HA and more fuel range ( best way how to simulate reliability in PC i think)
Yes I was thinking in a very similar way and finally got to the same conclusion when it comes to the early models. In the current v1.8 version of my mod the T-34/41 has Fuel: 32, Ini: 6, HA: 11, GD: 14, whereas the (US) Sherman M1A1 has Fuel: 59, Ini: 8, HA: 13, GD: 14. But the T-34 is obviously faster, has movement 6 as opposed to 5, and in the next coming version of my mod I intend to make the mobility difference even more significant as I will add a new movement type "wide tracked', which will allow tanks with it to move faster on soft ground like snow or mud. The T-34 (and some other tanks) will have it, but the Sherman will not.
JaM2013 wrote: Later models of Sherman got thicker armor, especially on turret, which was a weak spot on T34/76 (60mm rounded, which means max protection of 70mm), while Sherman had 76mm rounded turret (80mm RHAe)..
True as well, but it is not fair to compare the later Sherman to the early T-34/76. The later version of the T-34 (the one with the 85 mm gun) had 90 mm front turret armour (rounded, which means over 100 mm effective armour).

Also I think the Soviet 85 mm gun should have a bit higher HA, even though it had similar penetration as the 76 mm gun of the late Sherman. Why? The 85 mm gun fired a heavier shell than the 76 mm one (something like 9 kg as opposed to 7 kg) and thus it should have more destructive power if it does penetrate. In addition, in PzC "hard target" not only applies to tanks and other armoured vehicles, but to (concrete) fortifications and bunkers as well. And against these a heavier shell should be more effective than a lighter one with the same armour penetration.

Thus for the Sherman with 76mm I have Ini: 10, HA: 16, GD: 15-16, while the T-34/85 has Ini: 9, HA: 17, GD: 16 - meaning they are quite comparable, but the Sherman still has an edge in Ini due to better optics and stuff. From Wiki, on fighting in Korea:
The M4A3(76)W HVSS Sherman and T-34-85 were comparable and could destroy each other at normal combat ranges, although the use of High Velocity Armor Piercing ammunition, advanced optics, and better crew training gave the Sherman an advantage.

Which probably means that the US had better access to high velocity sub-caliber rounds than their Chinese/Korean enemies, even though there was such an APCR round theoretically availabale for the T-34/85 as well. But, if they were facing each other on equal terms i.e. like experienced US vs. SU crews, both well equipped with sub-caliber APCR/Sabot rounds, the results would have been more equal.

JagdpanzerIV wrote:as for Air Defense, i think if i were in a tank and saw a dive bomber coming at me, i would get inside close all hatches and wait for the bomb to drop and miss. no point at shooting aircrafts with an MG on a ww2 tank, i think its complete waste of ammo.
Quite true. The heavy machine guns were mainly used against ground targets. From a Soviet veteran:
- The Sherman had an antiaircraft machine gun Browning M2 .50 caliber. Did you use it often?

- I don't know why, but one shipment of tanks arrived with machine guns, and another without them. We used this machine gun against both aircraft and ground targets. We used it less frequently against air targets because the Germans were not fools. They bombed either from altitude or from a steep dive. The machine gun was good to 400-600 meters in the vertical. The Germans would drop their bombs from say, 800 meters or higher. He dropped his bomb and departed quickly. Try to shoot the bastard down! So yes, we used it, but it was not very effective. We even used our main gun against aircraft. We placed the tank on the upslope of a hill and fired. But our general impression of the machine gun was good.
http://iremember.ru/en/memoirs/tankers/dmitriy-loza/

By the way the above memoir is quite an interesting read as the writer provides some first hand experience with the wartime operation British, US and Soviet tanks and their characteristics.


As for air defense. On the one hand it is true that tanks per se hardly suffered from air attacks. Another Soviet veteran remembers like this:
The main source of tank losses was German artillery. Losses to aircraft were fairly small – maybe 10%. The tank could only be knocked out with a direct hit, otherwise the bomb fragments would just bounce off harmlessly. During the Kursk battles, 76% of our losses were due to enemy guns, the rest due to mines and aircraft.
http://iremember.ru/en/memoirs/tankers/ ... j-shvebig/

But, on the other hand, the supply column (munitions, fuel, food, repair trucks, signals, command, recovery tractors, etc.) of an armoured division mainly consisted of soft trucks, haltracks and tractors and an armoured division without its supply column is little more than scrap metal. Without those trucks it can function for a few days at max but after that they run out of just about everything. Needless to say, all these trucks were very vulnerable, even to machine gun fire. Since these are not modelled in PzC I regard them part of any "tank" class unit, which puts losses suffered due to air attacks in another context. So I would be careful to make tank units near invulnerable to air attaks, unless we are talking about a tactical level wargame, in which each tank unit only represent a single tank or a tank formation in a limited time scale. As soon as we move to a longer time scale at a larger area, which is typically the case in PzC, the vulnerable supply column has to be added to the equation IMO.
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JagdpanzerIV
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

McGuba wrote: (...)

But, on the other hand, the supply column (munitions, fuel, food, repair trucks, signals, command, recovery tractors, etc.) of an armoured division mainly consisted of soft trucks, haltracks and tractors and an armoured division without its supply column is little more than scrap metal. Without those trucks it can function for a few days at max but after that they run out of just about everything. Needless to say, all these trucks were very vulnerable, even to machine gun fire. Since these are not modelled in PzC I regard them part of any "tank" class unit, which puts losses suffered due to air attacks in another context. So I would be careful to make tank units near invulnerable to air attaks, unless we are talking about a tactical level wargame, in which each tank unit only represent a single tank or a tank formation in a limited time scale. As soon as we move to a longer time scale at a larger area, which is typically the case in PzC, the vulnerable supply column has to be added to the equation IMO.
you can change halftracks to soft targets and thus, only tanks remain as hard targets. Arty, infantry, Carriers, At-guns all remains very vulnerable to aircrafts. Tanks also remain vulnerable if you use strategic bombers on them, almost useless if you hit them with a 2 stars+ strategic bombers. They loose their fuel and their ammo.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

JagdpanzerIV wrote:
JaM2013 wrote:...
Similar effect was true for Soviet 122mm tank guns, whose AP rounds should on paper be unable to penetrate Panther's front hull, yet due to 122mm ammo over-match over 80mm plate, they effectively negated the slope effect to some degree and penetrated.
at 500m, a 122mm AP shell could easily go thru a panther front plate.
Overmatch does not guarantee autopen tho, it means it will penetrate but the extent depends on the velocity and kinetic energy, in other words, its penetration value.
Many late war panthers had weak armor and bad welds, so many shells even tho they did not penetrate, cracked the armor and caused spalling inside.

of course at 500m it would penetrate, but tests show it would also penetrate at 1500m, where penetration was around 110mm, and 80mm@55 should be around 135mm RHAe.


And regarding 75mm L24, it was actually not a howitzer, it was a gun, but short barreled, therefore some might call it "howitzer-like", but it was not used in this way. Germans called it KampfwagenKannone (KwK), if it was howitzer, they would call it haubitze. (similarly, StuG B would be not called StuG, but StuH) And for accuracy, it actually had quite good dispersion up to 500m, which was typical range for early war tanks anyway.. (lighter guns had mediocre penetration behind 500m)
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

JaM2013 wrote: of course at 500m it would penetrate, but tests show it would also penetrate at 1500m, where penetration was around 110mm, and 80mm@55 should be around 135mm RHAe.
you cannot use the penetration@30 angle when you are also counting the total protection from a slope armor.
youi have to either use one - without angle - or the other with angle
The easiest way is to use effective armor of a tank, which we calculate this way:
80@55 (panther front) 80 / 55cos = 140mm.
once you get that number you have to use the penetration of the 122mm shell without angle @90d, which is (wiki) 135mm@1500m

with overmatch, the shell was almost sure to penetrate to a certain extent, if not entirely (depending of the meet angle) and since the quality of the panther armor varied greatly, even tho one shell did not penetrate all thru, it cracked the armor, the weld and lot of spalling occurred inside (which can be lethal for the crew)
JaM2013 wrote: And regarding 75mm L24, it was actually not a howitzer, it was a gun, but short barreled, therefore some might call it "howitzer-like", but it was not used in this way. Germans called it KampfwagenKannone (KwK), if it was howitzer, they would call it haubitze. (similarly, StuG B would be not called StuG, but StuH) And for accuracy, it actually had quite good dispersion up to 500m, which was typical range for early war tanks anyway.. (lighter guns had mediocre penetration behind 500m)
well, this gun was used on StuGIIIA-F for infantry support as an 'howitzer-like' or artillery close support, this was a low velocity gun, not ideal for destroying tanks, the penetration lacked to face T34s and KV1s. That's why i think HA 6 is ok. to get a HA higher, we need to use the Pz.III until the PzIVF2 arrives.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

Thing is that 75mm gun was much more powerful than what PzIII used initially.. As i stated before, 50L42 is HA 9, 37L46 is HA 7, therefore 75L24 cannot be HA 6, it should be HA 8, because its performance was exactly in the middle of 50L42 and 37L46. And btw, StuGIIIB was actually first vehicle Michael Wittman served in 1941, and he was credited to destroy several T34 tanks in it. (technically speaking PzIV could at least destroy T34 with side hits, but 37mm equipped PzIII couldnt)

Overall, i see great unbalance with short 75mm gun, which was effective gun in 1939-1940 period.. It was capable penetrating French Souma S35 tank frontally at 500m through the turret, which was way too thick for 37mm tank gun (40-42mm armor, 75L24 penetrated 50mm at 500m and 46mm at 1000m; 37L46 did just 35mm at 500m) So meeting Souma, you would rather be in PzIV than PzIII... (Souma has small one-man turret, therefore its initiative would suffer greatly, which means PzIV would be able to get multiple shots on target without issues)
Front hull on Souma S35 was 47mm thick, where upper hull had 21 degrees, and lower hull was rounded. so technically, upper hull had 50mm RHAe, and lower hull 54mm RHAe. Which means PzIV could penetrate the upper hull at 500m, but not the lower hull except for point blank.

btw, PzIIIN got same gun in 1943, but better ammo (not just better HEAT, but also better APCBC (PzGr 39/2 with 55mm at 500m, and 50mm at 1000m. so penetration wise, this gun got on pair with 50L42)


and regarding 122mm AP, i was using Soviet test resuts, not wikipedia. There is specifically mentioned 122mm AP is able to penetrate the Panther at long range (1500m and higher) because of big overmatch 122mm projectile had over 80mm plate. (ill try to find the report and post it here)


-----

Personally, i'm getting sick and tired of typical view of WW2 tanks where people tend to compare parameters but fail to see other aspects that were even more important.. (im not suggesting people here are like this, just my experience while trying to find some articles on the internet)
everybody compares gun penetration vs tank armor, but many fail to understand how turret ergonomics could play a huge factor in tank battle. Tank is not a robot, its a machine controlled by people, therefore most important thing about tank is its crew.. Tanks that allow crew function optimally will have a huge advantage over tanks that were constructed with bad ergonomics, like T34 or Souma S35.. It really doesn't matter how powerful gun tank carries, if gun is controlled by commander, who is also a loader and gunner (S35), while he also must command the tank and also command other tanks within his platoon... so practically, it makes no real impact having superior 47mm gun, and be able theoretically destroy any German tank at 1000+ meters, when that single person cannot even locate enemy tanks properly, because he is doing something else at the moment... and even if he is looking through the sights,engaging one target, at the same time he would have no idea about the wider area and would easily miss other targets that might be dangerous to him.
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

JaM2013 wrote: Personally, i'm getting sick and tired of typical view of WW2 tanks where people tend to compare parameters but fail to see other aspects that were even more important.. (im not suggesting people here are like this, just my experience while trying to find some articles on the internet)
everybody compares gun penetration vs tank armor, but many fail to understand how turret ergonomics could play a huge factor in tank battle. Tank is not a robot, its a machine controlled by people, therefore most important thing about tank is its crew.. Tanks that allow crew function optimally will have a huge advantage over tanks that were constructed with bad ergonomics, like T34 or Souma S35.. It really doesn't matter how powerful gun tank carries, if gun is controlled by commander, who is also a loader and gunner (S35), while he also must command the tank and also command other tanks within his platoon... so practically, it makes no real impact having superior 47mm gun, and be able theoretically destroy any German tank at 1000+ meters, when that single person cannot even locate enemy tanks properly, because he is doing something else at the moment... and even if he is looking through the sights,engaging one target, at the same time he would have no idea about the wider area and would easily miss other targets that might be dangerous to him.
it's quite simple, you adjust the initiative parameter. armor thickness is armor thickness and gun penetration is gun penetration....
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JaM2013 »

JagdpanzerIV wrote:Personally, in my mod, i calculate all HA like this, pen@500m X 1.14
so for the L24, 50mm give 57, so HA 6
2pdr gets HA 7
50L42 gets HA 7
50L60 gets HA 9
early 6pdr HA 10
late 6pdr HA 11-12

we have to keep in mind that the 75L24 is a howitzer gun, therefore not as accurate as AT guns.

so you have HA 4 for 37mm?

My only problem with such small scale is that hero's abilities then dis-balance the units quite a lot. Getting a hero with +2 Attack will change the weapon performance way too dramatically... Personally, i think due to heroes bonuses, base stats should be done with much wider scale.. instead of 1-30 typically used, i think it would be best to go into 1-60 scale instead (doubling everything) This way, heroes impact will be still significant, but not too powerful.. (gun with HA 12, even if increased with 2 points is much less impacted than gun with 6 getting bonus 2 points..)
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Re: M4s & Shermans

Post by JagdpanzerIV »

You can test it and tell us what your conclusion is from doubling the HA value. You would also have to double the GD value. you would then have to check if you have to adjust infantry HA value as well and so on...lots of testing.

That being said, if you are worried about getting a hero with +2 attack, you could tell yourself that you have a well trained elite crew, and because of that, your unit perform way better than the standard units.
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