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Monday, November 19, 2018

Germans and Shermans



Early production Lee tank and Sherman tank.

In 1940 the Germans invaded France and one of the strongest tanks in their army was the Panzer IV with the short barreled 75mm cannon. The US Army had sent observers to France to report back on the action and the 75mm guns were a big surprise to the US Army. American medium tanks only had 37mm guns so something had to be done. The American M2 and M2A1 medium tanks with 37mm guns in a fully rotating turret had been outclassed overnight. Over 1,000 were on order but were now obsolete. America needed a 75mm gun tank and right away.



Mock up Panzer IV used by US Army for training.

There had been a proposal to mount a 75mm gun in a sponson on one side. They had the blueprints and even made a mock up. It would take at least a year to design and draw the blueprints for a tank with a 75mm gun in a fully rotating turret. So they modified the self-propelled gun version into a tank with a 75mm gun in a sponson and called it the M3 Lee tank. It was intended only for training so the troops could get used to a 75mm gun while they waited for the production of the new tank.
In September the first prototype tank was completed with a fully rotating turret armed with a 75mm gun in American history, the T6. After a few modifications it was standardized as the M4 Sherman tank. So don't compare the Sherman to the Panther or the Tiger, they were years newer than the Sherman, compare it to the Panzer IV, the tank it was designed against.

2 comments:

Bob G. said...

Mike:
---A shame that the Sherman got a reputation and a nasty nickname during the war - RONSON.
(because it lit the first time)
Lost a lot of good men in those, but we had resources to keep filling the battlefields, unlike the Germans who were almost running on empty when it came to replenishing men and machines.

Good history on the 75mm.

Carry on.

Mike Bunkermeister Creek said...

The Sherman was developed to compete against the Panzer IV and it did a great job against that opponent. It had no flaws that were not common with other similar tanks of the era. As the flaws were revealed, the US Army got them fixed, like liquid ammo storage to prevent those fires, and an upgraded gun to take on enemy tanks.
The Sherman also did just fine in Korea against T-34 tanks.
Bunkermeister