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stoppos #158544 Lefordítani most lusta vagyok. A lényeg:
Normandában háromszoros veszteséget szenvedtek a szövetségesek a németekhez képest. Ez a 7-8 kering egy ideje a neten, de nem tudom ki találta ki és honnan jön. Egy ilyen számnak önmagában semmi értelme.
Terep/támadunk, vagy védekezünk/egyéb erők/páncéltörő ágyúk/repülők, stb. Marha sok mindent számításba kell venni, nem csak a tankokat. Prohorovka nem esett meg sűrűn.
Ráadásul a legénység képpzettsége is hatalmas súlyal esik a latba. Átlag Joe, kontra Wittman, vagy Átlag Hans kontra Lafayette Pool. Nagyon nem mindegy.
"The greatest deficiency of all was armament. Allied tankers repeatedly complained about the inability of their main armament to punch holes in the opposing armour. The most common gun that Allied tanks possessed, a short 75 mm, simply did not have enough punch to tackle a Panther frontally at anything but point blank range. A new longer and more powerful 76 mm gun that was being introduced was not much better. Neither gun was any comparison to the long 75 mm gun of the Panther, whose higher muzzle velocity gave it not only higher penetrating power, but also a flat trajectory and therefore excellent accuracy. Compounding these difficulties German sights had greater magnification and clearness, and the gunpowder used was lower in flash and smoke. Therefore Panthers and Tigers developed tactics in which they would often sit in open terrain, daring Allied tanks to show up, then knocking them out with accurate long-range gun fire that could not be replied to. Incidents would happen in which Allied tankers bounced numerous rounds off their German counterpart, only to be knocked out immediately if they were hit once.
The net result of all of these deficiencies was that advancing was much slower and more expensive in terms of tanks and infantry than it otherwise would have been. Five hundred burning British tanks at the end of the failed operation Goodwood made dramatic testimony to the disadvantages that inferior tanks brought on to the Allies. Total Allied armour causalities in Normandy were running at three times the German total. The tankers kept fighting but costs were extremely high and the men were losing confidence in their tanks, despite usually having superior numbers."