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stoat

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Posts posted by stoat

  1. Most of the vehicles have taken hits in the lower hull on the left side. This would imply that the units that destroyed them were also on the left side of the ditch. My new hypothesis is that the tanks were crossing unopposed, the leading vehicles stopped to wait for the trailing ones, and in the meantime were hit by an Israeli counterattack. Most of the Syrians did not have enough time to traverse out of the traveling position, or bailed when contact was established. Which raises the question, why were tanks taking part in an attack traveling forward with turrets facing the rear?

  2. I can only guess, but here goes;

    1. It has something to do with the tanks having been caught in the flank, such as at strongpoint 109

    2. The photo was staged, perhaps after Isreal regained the cease-fire line.

    Like I said, those are just guesses, and they don't explain everything seen in the photo. Also, I don't know where the photo was taken.

  3. Originally posted by Dillweed:

    </font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Michael Emrys:

    Yeah, in the '73 war they lost a whole regiment of T-62s trying to cross the AT ditch.

    Michael

    So those actually work? I had read some (german I believe) civilian from WW2 say that for all the work they did digging AT ditches she never saw a tank get stuck in one... </font>
  4. Originally posted by JasonC:

    They were used for direct fire on defense, all guns were. 122 longs and 152 gun-howitzers were incorporated into gun lines as "animal killers" when necessary, much as the Germans used their 88mm Flak and their 105mm cannons (as opposed to howitzers) against Russian KVs in 1941.

    I agree completely. What I was saying was if you have a 500m x 500m QB, what do you do with a battery of 152mm artillery? Especially if your enemy has mortars or FOs. They're just shell magnets, after the first round.
  5. I have no idea about the AT guns, but I do know why the large caliber artillery pieces aren't included. They weren't used for direct fire. There is no reason to set up your artillery within a kilometer of the enemy. You keep it behind the lines, or in this case off of the map, and send spotters forward to identify targets. This keeps your guns safe and prevents you from having to continually move them farther back away from the battle.

  6. Sergei:

    And Saint Attila raised the Holy Hand Grenade up on high saying, "Oh Lord, Bless us this Holy Hand Grenade, and with it smash our enemies to tiny bits." And the Lord did grin, and the people did feast upon the lambs, and stoats, and orangutans, and breakfast cereals, and lima beans-

  7. We're knights of the Round Table.

    We dance when'er we're able.

    We do routines and chorus scenes,

    with foot work impecc-able.

    We dine well here in Camelot.

    We eat ham and jam and spam a lot.

    "On second thought, let us not go to Camelot. It is a silly place."

  8. In the demo (Fruhlingswind), the Germans start out with a 105mm (radio) spotter for off-board artillery. Try placing him on the rise with "rough" terrain on the left flank. This is probably the best overwatch position for the Germans. The HQ does nothing for spotting, it just reduces the amount of time it takes for the spotter to execute movement orders. I also wouldn't use it to target vehicles. You will not destroy any tanks, and your armored cars and halftracks can take care of anything lighter.

    [when Zalgiris 1410 says "2 guys" he means the two men of the spotter team]

  9. No 1: Chandra Iusedtobeghandi shows his frustration over the announcement of CM:SF. "Syria?! WTF were those infidelic designers thinking?"

    No 2: Sir Machtild ****shisbritches of the Deutsche Merry Soldaten, SS Division 49, nocks his arrow before attempting a rear penetration on a ISU-152.

    [ October 15, 2005, 04:40 PM: Message edited by: stoat ]

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