OK, on with the engines (and transmissions):
Tank engine selection is a compromise between several factors. In no particular order:
Absolute power;
Power-to-weight ratio;
Economy (for tanks and other combat vehicles this is normally expressed as a function of range on a given fuel load rather than the actual cost of the fuel);
Physical size;
Survivability;
Maintainability;
Of these, the first, absolute power, is probably easiest to address - the more the better, until it's not better
- that is, given that we're generally discussing 20+ tonne fighting vehicles, the power delivered by the engine is probably going to provide the limiting factor in terms of manoeuvrability, with the caveat that "delivered" includes having a transmission that will withstand the power generated by the engine.
An example design that emphasised the power-to-weight ratio would be the M3 Lee and M4 Sherman tanks, with their Continental R-975 radial engines - these were selected, as with aircraft, for their superior power-to-weight ratio, however, physical size constraints - or rather, the placement of the drive shaft, which, unlike a more normal V-engine, is in the middle of a radial - dictated that the drive shaft took a quite high line through the fighting compartment, which in turn necessitated a high turret in order for the turret basket to clear this drive shaft.
Economic measures are valid concerns but a discussion of these turns into a complex discussion about the operating nation's logistical train. It's worth noting, however, that modern tank engines are generally "multi-fuel" and, for instance, the US runs their M1 Abrahams on JP8 jet fuel for logistical commonality. In the WWII timeframe, multifuel engines were not widely available, if at all.
Physical size, for tanks particularly, is a quite significant constraint. Engines of sufficient power to move armoured vehicles have a significant size and given the hostile operating environment, the engine bay must be armoured, in turn feeding into the power-to-weight ratio as the physical size of the engine (and therefore the size of the armoured box necessary to protect it) increases. An example of an engine that prioritised physical size over other factors would be the Maybach HL210 and HL 230 engines, as used on the
Panther and
Tiger tanks, with their compact cylinder layout, which required a complex and more fragile crankshaft layout, reducing the reliability of the engine.
Survivablity in the WWII timeframe is largely going to be determined by the engine's fuel, with diesel engines as used on the Russian T-34 and the Japanese Type 97 providing a significant benefit compared to petrol engines in the event of the tank being hit, either by anti-tank fire or by more unconventional munitions such as Molotov cocktails.
Maintainability on tanks engines is generally going to be a concern, as whether it's petrol or diesel you're taking about a powerful heat engine that's confined in a steel box and getting shot at (or dunked in a river) from time to time. In addition to concerns fundamental to the engine, the tank design itself can negatively affect maintainability, either through causing issues more frequently through poor cooling systems design, such as on the
Panther tank, or through poorly-implemented dust filters allowing dust into the engine, shortening it's service life, as on early T-34 tanks, or through complicating access to the engine to effect repairs.
With regards to transmissions there are a couple of major concerns:
Function;
Reliability.
Function, for instance, would cover the dual-radius steering on the
Tiger (and the cheaper, simple single-radius steering on the
Panther and a similar system present on the Churchill tank) or the more traditional differential braking seen on the M3 Lee and the M4 Sherman.
Reliability itself would consist of several factors:
The quality of the materials used - tank transmissions are subjected to significant forces, requiring special grades of steel to retain function for a long length of time. Substitute materials, such as those used in the
Panther's transmission, will wear and deform quickly, resulting in poor service life.
The design of the transmission - US tanks, with the vast American industrial machine behind them, used herringbone gears, which required specialist gear-cutting machinery to create, to reduce the forces applied to the transmission internally. By the time that the
Panther tank was being produced, Germany's industrial infrastructure could not produce these gears in sufficient quantity, nor the epicyclic gearing that the
Tiger used, requiring the use of spur gears instead, compounding the metallurgy problems already experienced (herringbone and epicyclic gears both apply the applied power across several gear teeth at any one time. Spur gears apply the power one tooth at a time.)
I think that's it for this one ... it turned quite technical, so there's an increased risk I simply got something wrong, and a significantly increased risk that what I've written, correct or not, is simple incomprehensible. Any comment?
Regards,
Adam