... ist the german navy no "military"?! ???Kadija_Man said:They were military barbettes for naval guns. As such, they were more lightly armoured than naval barbettes (relying on concrete and earth berms for most of their defence). If they were to be mounted onto a land vehicle, they'd need serious up-armouring even beyond that of the naval barbettes.
Jemiba said:I thought, we were speaking about the heavy artillery ? The naval turrets had up
to 340 mm armour, I don't think, that this would have been necessary for use on
those vehicles, apart from the fact, that it would have added far too much weight,
The 12.8, or maybe 10.5 cm twin mountings would have had just protection against
splinters and that would have been enough for the task, that those vehicles could
have fulfilled: Selfpropelled heavy artillery.
athpilot said:... ist the german navy no "military"?! ???Kadija_Man said:They were military barbettes for naval guns. As such, they were more lightly armoured than naval barbettes (relying on concrete and earth berms for most of their defence). If they were to be mounted onto a land vehicle, they'd need serious up-armouring even beyond that of the naval barbettes.
@ Michel Van:
The Wehrmacht has never built anything. The german Industry has built the turrets (most likely Thyssen-Krupp). But I d´ont know for sure if the Kriegsmarine was the client. I guess they were.
Kadija_Man said:athpilot said:... ist the german navy no "military"?! ???Kadija_Man said:They were military barbettes for naval guns. As such, they were more lightly armoured than naval barbettes (relying on concrete and earth berms for most of their defence). If they were to be mounted onto a land vehicle, they'd need serious up-armouring even beyond that of the naval barbettes.
@ Michel Van:
The Wehrmacht has never built anything. The german Industry has built the turrets (most likely Thyssen-Krupp). But I d´ont know for sure if the Kriegsmarine was the client. I guess they were.
"Military" generally refers to the Army in most English speaking nations. "Naval" refers specifically to the Navy, which interestingly enough is also a military force but not considered the Military.
Isn't English fun? I suspect we make it deliberately confusing just to annoy non-English speakers! ;D
Not sure how terms are used in other countries
Early 3 Turret model of the Ratte, was to be 800 tons, armed with likely 305mm guns as they were the only ones Grotte had received blueprints of from the Kriegsmarine at this time.
The secondary turrets were armed with twin 128mm guns.
There were quite a few different designs for the Ratte, including one that is fairly similar to the one commonly depicted in media.
Tank Archives/Archive Awareness has done a quite good article on it.
Steel Sarcophagus
A blog about World War II era archive documents, primarily dealing with armoured warfare.tankarchives.blogspot.com
I'm mostly just shocked that it turns out to have been real!
I think, Tiny Tim with heavier AP warhead would be more practical)Lovely Tallboy target ---
To be fair, Dipl. Ing Grothe, tasked with the development of a 1000 t tank was described by Karl Otto Saur as
a mixture of a technician and a daydreamer, so the "worth" of such designs seems to have been clear to at least
some people on the higher levels. Just a pity, if the decision makers weren't part of that community ...
As mentioned by someone else he previously worked for the USSR, and designed similarly impractical things.I'm mostly just shocked that it turns out to have been real!
Indeed ! Imaging the "mobility" such vehicles would have had, maybe our discussion about German
projects, that were just kept alive to keep the designers busy should have been more focussed on
army projects, than on Luftwaffe projects !
To be fair, Dipl. Ing Grothe, tasked with the development of a 1000 t tank was described by Karl Otto Saur as
a mixture of a technician and a daydreamer, so the "worth" of such designs seems to have been clear to at least
some people on the higher levels. Just a pity, if the decision makers weren't part of that community ...
Yes, and the original design for the Ratte was essentially a modified version of a vehicle he designed for the USSR.That's why USSR did not want to re-hire him)
Tank Archives/Archive Awareness has done a quite good article on it.
Steel Sarcophagus
A blog about World War II era archive documents, primarily dealing with armoured warfare.tankarchives.blogspot.com
Yes, you did a very good job. Unfortunately I do not speak Russian and so cannot really use Warspot itself.Tank Archives/Archive Awareness has done a quite good article on it.
Steel Sarcophagus
A blog about World War II era archive documents, primarily dealing with armoured warfare.tankarchives.blogspot.com
Yep, it's translated version of my artilce from Warspot.
Where do you individuals do research, Spielberg center or something... the P1000 and P1500 HAVE NEVER BEEN PROVEN TO HAVE BEEN AUTHENTIC IN ANY WAY.KnightTemplar said:
what precisely is the text on that picture supposed to mean? .. the orginal is supposedly german, but i (as german native speaker) have been trying to translate it back into german for some time now and have been unable to produce any meaningful "orignal version"
ice pics of soviet models3-turret version
Those are models made IN THE SOVIET UNION not in GermanyTaranov, can you please show us the second version?