It's W00t!Atlan wrote:Whoot, first post!
Oh, and
POKE
Moderator: NecronLord
Maus was too big and clumsy. King Tiger was already pushing the limits of the technology.Sir Sirius wrote:The WW2 German Panzerkampfwagen VIII Maus had two cannons, 1 128mm KwK 44 L/55 und 1 75mm KwK 44 L/36.5.
Click here for more details about the Maus.
BattleTech for SilCoreStanley Hauerwas wrote:[W]hy is it that no one is angry at the inequality of income in this country? I mean, the inequality of income is unbelievable. Unbelievable. Why isn’t that ever an issue of politics? Because you don’t live in a democracy. You live in a plutocracy. Money rules.
What an inane design.Atlan wrote:Whoot, first post!
The Germans seriously considered a double barreled tank(destroyer) as a replacement for the Leopard-1.
http://www.panzerbaer.de/types/pix/vt1-2.jpg
Several prototypes were build, the one above having two autoloaded 120 mm cannons. OTOH, it would have been driven more like a jetfighter than a conventional tank: the driver aimed and fired the guns, and the commander looked for targets to relate to the driver.
The two cannons were there to ensure at least one (or two) hits during the swinging side to side motion the tank would have made while driving/aiming, and quite a intricate FCS was build in. This vehicle weighed less than a LEO-2, but still carried a1.5 times the armor over the frontal arc. It would have been, and would still be, virtually invulnerable to all current AT assets, apart from maybe a Maverick or a LOSAT missile. With it`s low weight ithad a 2000 HP engine. Performance would have been.... interesting, to say the least.
Ultimately the Germans went with the LEO-2 not because the tankdestroyer didn`t work, it did so very well, but because it would have been a primarily offensive weapon, whereas the bundeswehr has a mostly defensive duty.
Atlan.
Multi-turreted. It was massive, thinly armored, and got severely OWNED.Thunderfire wrote:The russian had a multi barreled tank in ww2.
The T-35 AFAIK.
Actually, the Lee was pretty good, with a long barrelled (at the time)Vympel wrote: America also had the M3 Lee- the Russians who got it for lend-lease called it a grave for six brothers. It had a crew of six.
Uhh...wouldn't the swinging motion make the crew VERY sick?Atlan wrote:Whoot, first post!
The Germans seriously considered a double barreled tank(destroyer) as a replacement for the Leopard-1.
Several prototypes were build, the one above having two autoloaded 120 mm cannons. OTOH, it would have been driven more like a jetfighter than a conventional tank: the driver aimed and fired the guns, and the commander looked for targets to relate to the driver.
The two cannons were there to ensure at least one (or two) hits during the swinging side to side motion the tank would have made while driving/aiming, and quite a intricate FCS was build in. This vehicle weighed less than a LEO-2, but still carried a1.5 times the armor over the frontal arc. It would have been, and would still be, virtually invulnerable to all current AT assets, apart from maybe a Maverick or a LOSAT missile. With it`s low weight ithad a 2000 HP engine. Performance would have been.... interesting, to say the least.
Ultimately the Germans went with the LEO-2 not because the tankdestroyer didn`t work, it did so very well, but because it would have been a primarily offensive weapon, whereas the bundeswehr has a mostly defensive duty.
Atlan.
Never saw combat to my knowledge, the only ones that tired to go into action ran out of fuel before they found anything to shoot at. The T-28 with three turrets did very poorly in Finland though.Vympel wrote:Multi-turreted. It was massive, thinly armored, and got severely OWNED.Thunderfire wrote:The russian had a multi barreled tank in ww2.
The T-35 AFAIK.
Actualy several tanks do have autoloaders. Many Soviet/Russian tanks...hmmm...at least the T-64, T-72, T-80 and T-90 have them. Also the French Leclerc is fitted with an autoloader and it is supposed to have the greatest rate of fire of any modern tank.Well, here's another question about tanks: Why do tanks have a loader, rather than reloading automatically from a magazine like a hand-held gun? Wouldn't that be more efficient?
Even a 16" gun is very small relative to an Iowa-class battleship. The ratio of gun to hull size is much greater for a tank, so there is a huge difference in the proportional impact of recoil. Moreover, the space issues we cited for tank turrets are not a problem with the huge turrets of a battleship.SWPIGWANG wrote:That makes me wonder, why do ships all have double or triple barreled turrets?
Actually the germans worked on something of similar in WW2The Yosemite Bear wrote:DD's & FF's do not
are you proposing that we start building tanks larger then the Iowa class?
Point? This a early 40's German project, purpose comes after construction...Admiral Piett wrote:Actually the germans worked on something of similar in WW2The Yosemite Bear wrote:DD's & FF's do not
are you proposing that we start building tanks larger then the Iowa class?
Ladies and gentlemen,the 1000 (actually more likely 2000) tons panzer.
http://members.tripod.com/~fingolfen/su ... p1000.html
I think however that the idea was to use it as a mobile coastal artillery emplacement.