CMplayer Posted January 27, 2001 Share Posted January 27, 2001 Just for fun I put a greyhound behind a no-ammo King tiger at let it fire away from about 10-15 meters. I wanted to see if an unlucky ricochet might penetrate the greyhound doing the firing. Anyway, the King Tiger's turret was turned away from the greyhound the whole time and it never rotated the slightest. (I had put some halftracks out front at long range to occupy its attention). Imagine my surprise when i hit the KT's gun! That must have been one heck of a shot, like when beetle baily does cannon firing practice. Up, around, loop da loop, and back down again or something. Is there some realistic explanation for this? regards, --Rett Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruno Weiss Posted January 27, 2001 Share Posted January 27, 2001 Hmm, I've read about such things. Perhaps the shell penetrated the back of the KT's neck, and traveled down its arm, making a left turn at its third rib and passing through its galbladder, then ricocheting off its pelvis whereupon it traversed the length of its spine back to its right arm traveling down to its elbow and exited out its right wrist, to lay in its lap. Perhaps, or you just didn't see that other Greyhound on the grassy knoll? I've seen quite a few gun hits, and watched at least twice as rounds fired from opposing tanks which both hit and exploded, passed each other in mid-air. I've always wondered, and am waiting to see, what would happen if they collided mid-way between the target. ------------------ "Gentlemen, you may be sure that of the three courses open to the enemy, he will always choose the fourth." -Field Marshal Count Helmuth von Moltke, (1848-1916) (edited 01-27-2001).] [This message has been edited by Bruno Weiss (edited 01-27-2001).] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Poppa Pump Posted January 27, 2001 Share Posted January 27, 2001 I think a "gun hit" can mean anything that renders the gun useless. The impact may have damaged optics or other mechanisms required to fire the gun. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CMplayer Posted January 27, 2001 Author Share Posted January 27, 2001 Originally posted by Big Poppa Pump: I think a "gun hit" can mean anything that renders the gun useless. The impact may have damaged optics or other mechanisms required to fire the gun. You mean that a 37mm AP shell, hitting the back of the turret was able to damage the optics? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Aitken Posted January 27, 2001 Share Posted January 27, 2001 CMplayer wrote: > You mean that a 37mm AP shell, hitting the back of the turret was able to damage the optics? With all the supposed invulnerability of Royal Tigers and such, you tend to forget that even a ricochet is a matter of a dense chunk of metal being smacked off another metal object at high velocity. That may not penetrate, may not kill any of the crew, but it's still likely to cause trouble in any number of ways. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
:USERNAME: Posted January 27, 2001 Share Posted January 27, 2001 I take gun hits to also represent damage to traverse mechanisms, ring hits, etc. Now if it were a JagdTiger then somethings up. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
M Hofbauer Posted January 27, 2001 Share Posted January 27, 2001 David, you are reverting to your former uneducated ego. I thought we had put the "Royal Tiger" common misperceptuion behind us :-p ------------------ "Im off to NZ police collage" (GAZ_NZ) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CMplayer Posted January 27, 2001 Author Share Posted January 27, 2001 Originally posted by :USERNAME:: I take gun hits to also represent damage to traverse mechanisms, ring hits, etc. Now if it were a JagdTiger then somethings up. Okay, but then the turret wouldn't be able to rotate. The gun could still shoot, right? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CMplayer Posted January 27, 2001 Author Share Posted January 27, 2001 Originally posted by David Aitken: CMplayer wrote: > You mean that a 37mm AP shell, hitting the back of the turret was able to damage the optics? With all the supposed invulnerability of Royal Tigers and such, you tend to forget that even a ricochet is a matter of a dense chunk of metal being smacked off another metal object at high velocity. That may not penetrate, may not kill any of the crew, but it's still likely to cause trouble in any number of ways. I can buy that explanation. But I did another test where i let a bunch of american tanks fire 75mm HE at the front of a tiger. They got one hit after another, up to 20 hits per turn, BANG BANG BANG, on the front of that tiger, doing 'no significant damage'. What I was trying to discern was whether all that noise, and impact would shake up the Tiger crew so much as to make them less effective at returning fire. I didn't get a conclusive answer, but those optics seemed pretty tough. regards, --Rett Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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