rexford Posted January 20, 2003 Share Posted January 20, 2003 Some time ago we had a discussion on German use of aimed fire, with the turret ring being a choice area, and someone discussed the subject with a relative who had been a 37mm PaK crewmen. He stated that his crew was trained to aim at the turret ring, because that area was very vulnerable and a hit on that location could immobilize a KV or T34 tank. I am looking for input with regard to showing that German crews did use turret ring aim, and were taught the procedure. Thanks for helping out on this. Lorrin [ January 20, 2003, 11:23 AM: Message edited by: rexford ] 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John D Salt Posted January 20, 2003 Share Posted January 20, 2003 Originally posted by rexford: Some time ago we had a discussion on German use of aimed fire, with the turret ring being a choice area, and someone discussed the subject with a relative who had been a 37mm PaK crewmen. He stated that his crew was trained to aim at the turret ring, because that area was very vulnerable and a hit on that location could immobilize a KV or T34 tank. Given that the bottom metre or so of a tank is likely to be masked by terrain at all but the closest ranges, what is the effective difference between aiming at the turret ring and aiming at the centre of mass? All the best, John. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andreas Posted January 21, 2003 Share Posted January 21, 2003 Lorrin, it was me who mentioned that. The relative is the dad of a friend of mine, but he never saw the east, instead sticking to hanging around Italy and France (smart move). The only thing I could think of that would help you is the actual training manuals, which you maybe able to get from the Bundesarchiv in Germany, or maybe the National Archives in the US. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rexford Posted January 22, 2003 Author Share Posted January 22, 2003 Originally posted by Andreas: Lorrin, it was me who mentioned that. The relative is the dad of a friend of mine, but he never saw the east, instead sticking to hanging around Italy and France (smart move). The only thing I could think of that would help you is the actual training manuals, which you maybe able to get from the Bundesarchiv in Germany, or maybe the National Archives in the US.Did the person state that he was trained to aim at the turret ring? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Dorosh Posted January 22, 2003 Share Posted January 22, 2003 Wouldn't Herr Hofbauer be able answer this? I thought he has had extensive handling of original manuals. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andreas Posted January 22, 2003 Share Posted January 22, 2003 Originally posted by rexford: Did the person state that he was trained to aim at the turret ring?Yes, in response to my question along the lines of: 'Why were you still training on the door-knocker (3,7cm) in 1942/3, when it was clear that you could not harm enemy tanks with it?' He also said they got quite good at it - but that was training, mind you, I wonder what it would have looked like under fire. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SgtMuhammed Posted January 22, 2003 Share Posted January 22, 2003 Remember also that the turret ring is pretty nearly center mass for most tank targets. It is standard proceedure to train to aim center mass. If that happens to also be a weak point then that is gravy. [ January 22, 2003, 04:43 AM: Message edited by: Sgtgoody ] 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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