Tony Williams said:
Kadija_Man said:
Tony Williams said:
Which means that you might as well go straight to making the Chieftain tank in the 1930s - there was little or nothing in it which couldn't have been made then.
Except of course there would be no need, nor could the armour, weapons, firecontrol systems, NBC protection system, optics or engine be produced because there was neither the metallurgy or industry supply train to build it.
Of course they could. They built large-calibre high-velocity guns in the 1930s, APDS was simply a matter of development, they had optical rangefinders and machine guns for ranging, they had thick armour (for warships), the engine was again a matter of development. The reason I mentioned the Chieftain is that it was arguably the last of the old-school technology tanks, before sophisticated armour, fire control and ammunition concepts came along. However, if the Chieftain is too much for you then compare the Centurion instead - that could most certainly be built using 1930s technology.
However, it would not be a Chieftain tank, as we know it. It may look like a Chieftain but it would not perform as well as a Chieftain. Which is why I mentioned such things as metallurgy and the fire control. The Chieftain evolved because of reasons. It did not spring into being in a revolutionary manner from no where.
The point I am suggesting is that from little acorns, mighty oaks doth grow. You want to change one parameter yet that parameter has influence on so many others. A larger calibre gun requires a larger shell case. A larger shell case means that more space must be allocated to ammunition stowage. The size of the crew must be allowed for, so therefore the size of the turret must increase to accommodate them and this new ammunition, and of course there has to be some room for the bigger gun, so trying to defeat the 3 dimensional needs of everything doesn't seem possible to me, so a bigger turret and more than likely fighting compartment will be required to accommodate this larger turret will have to be taken into account, which in turn necessitates a bigger hull, which means a larger armoured volume so stronger suspension is required and a larger, more powerful engine and stronger gearbox and transmission, etc, etc.
Nonsense. I deliberately chose the 57x308R cartridge because it was the same length as the 2pr, therefore the gun chamber was the same length (and those two dimensions were the critical ones in determining whether or not a gun would be usable in any given turret).
However, I would suggest that you need to store those cartridges somewhere so the volume of each cartridge is important to the total size of the turret and hull because you need to keep them somewhere when they aren't in the use. Your choice allowed you to show-horn (perhaps) a larger calibre gun but I'd suggest as well a larger calibre gun has (usually) a larger recoil. The force can either be absorbed by a greater mass, a longer run out or larger recoil recuperators. All three require a larger volume within the turret. So, then you require more volume for the ammunition and the gun. As the volume for the crew remains a constant, that cannot be given away, now cannot it. As was shown with the evolution of the Valentine's turrets. Something has to give.
The extra width of the cartridge would reduce the ammo capacity to some extent, but that would be a small price to pay for the much greater effectiveness.
Would it? Armoured users tend to disagree.
Of course, this still does not address the reason why such a bigger gun would be needed. As you've acknowledged, British Army battle "ethos" (as the concept of "doctrine" had yet to appear and was actively resisted until the 1970s) would have to undergo significant change in order to actually create a demand for such a new weapon. Without that, no one would see the need and therefore there would be no demand so it would never occur.
If that's the view you take, then I really don't know why you're bothering to contribute to alternative history threads, since they are all about providing answers to a wide range of "what if?" questions which, by definition, depart from what actually happened historically. All it would take in this case is someone in a position of influence to note that the army wanted close-support tanks to fire shells and other tanks with guns to penetrate armour, and to consider whether or not both needs might be met in the same tank with one gun.
I am acting as "Devil's advocate". I am putting the hard questions which in such discussions are all too often glossed over because either the advocate hasn't considered them or doesn't want to consider them because they would demolish their counter-factual thesis.
You mentioned hindsight. Its a wonderful thing and I'd suggest the only vision that is perfect. I agree such exercises are enjoyable but unless you acknowledge that you can't shoe-horn a bigger gun into a tiny turret, then it will go no where simply 'cause there isn't room in the turret. If you need an example of that, look at what happened when the Israelis tried to put first a longer barrelled 75mm, then 105mm into a Sherman turret. In the end, there really wasn't all that much left of the turret, was there?
You seem to find it hard to grasp that the long-barrelled 75mm and the 105mm both had ammunition and gun breeches which were much longer than the medium-velocity 75mm which the Sherman was designed for. So did the Sherman Firefly, equipped with the 17 pdr. Yet despite this they did manage to squeeze the guns in. There would have been no such difficulties in fitting the short 6pr gun and ammo into turrets designed for the 2pr - that was the whole point of choosing it.
I am well aware of the reasons why the Israeli had to butcher the turrets of their Shermans to shoe-horn in a larger calibre gun, however, what you don't seem to appreciate is that ultimate it was because the turret was simply too small to fit a larger gun. The length of breech and recoil was one factor, there were others, such as ammunition stowage, other equipment (such as radios) and of course, the poor squashed and all too often forgotten crew.
As I've pointed out above, some points have either been ignored because they are convenient or because they are not, at least in my opinion understood properly by yourself. I acknowledge that you have a great deal of expertise in the field of firearms but not so much in the actual history of tank development.
At the moment we have your proposal of "what if we changed the gun in British tanks from a 2 pdr?"
To which I have pointed out the following questions need to be answered:
* Why would it occur? What reason would make such a change happen.
* What change to doctrine would be required to create a demand for this change?
* When would such a change be necessary in order to come to fruitition by the date you desire?
* What effect would it have on tank design as a whole? You simply cannot change the gun without other attendant changes occurring as well.
I feel you're putting the cart before the horse to a degree. You want something to change without recognising that change would not occur without a reason. That reason would have to be either circumstance or personality and from that would flow changes in thinking and hence demand which would then see a change in the gun.