Good afternoon all,
It's been a while, but I've been busy creating NSWE's answer to the
Maus, the
Säbelzahntiger (Sabre-toothed tiger). Like the
Maus, NSWE's super-heavy tank is necessarily intended for low volume production, the initial production run is for twelve hulls only, only half of those destined to become tanks, but after NSWE's surrender, one of the
Säbelzahntiger is ceded to Denton as a part of NSWE's war reparations, requiring NSWE to build another to keep the same numbers. Due to the tank's immense size and weight cementing it's fundamentally defensive purposes, NSWE is permitted to finish one more, bringing the total production run to 13. In addition to six of the
Säbelzahntiger pictured here, NSWE also created three ammunition carriers \ recovery vehicles and three heavy mobile AA, the
Gabelblitzschlags, equipped with
Wasserfall missiles and a 37mm rotary cannon for close-in defence. The twelve vehicles are split across NSWE's three main island groups (Pepys, Thompson and the Falklands), two
Säbelzahntiger, one ammunition carrier and a
Gabelblitzschlags each.
Given the immense costs of running these vehicles, they were generally intended for use in environments too hostile for even other tanks to survive - the fuel necessary to move one of these monsters would suffice to move 7
Tiger IIs a similar distance - generally limiting their participation in combat to a last line of defence or to engage the main body of an enemy's force - when designing the
Säbelzahntiger, the
Heer Bau Amt, having just witnessed the destruction of the joint Argentinian \ NSWE expeditionary force by Denton 17-pdr-equipped tanks, specified the machine to not only survive fire from the capable guns they had already seen, but also the next generation of guns sure to be in development. In fact, they overstepped the mark somewhat, as
Säbelzahntiger's armour was sufficient to survive - just - a hit from it's own 128mm APDS shells (the designs for these were shipped to Germany, but weren't used, Germany lacking both the materials, which NSWE consistently struggled to get through, and the requirement, as the PaK 44 with standard APCBC-HE ammunition was more than a match for the tanks fielded in the ETO). Until such time as an enemy breakthrough to counter developed or the enemy's main body was identified, the
Säbelzahntiger's role was intended to be that of a self-propelled gun, using the 24km range of it's twin KwK 44, it's radio-location equipment (located at the rear of the turret) and it's cut-down Naval gunfire director (located at the front right of the turret, across from the gunner), the "Einzel Tachymetrische Lösung Berechnung Kanone Ausblick" to land shells accurately on target. The gunfire director was also designed to accept inputs from the gunner's sights and rangefinder, allowing the gunner to hold a target in focus and centred in the reticule, which the director would then move to provide accurate offsets for range, elevation and target motion, allowing for approximately 90% accuracy at 1,500-2,000m range on the first shot in exercises (although this was anticipated to be lower in combat). The director, a product of NSWE's naval engineering, was inherently designed to hold a target vector and concurrently calculate gunnery solutions for all specified weaponry, allowing it to serve for the twin KwK 44 in both indirect and direct fire modes, for HE, APCBC-HE and APDS ammunition, the KwK 42 with
it's varied ammunition load - this gun in particular excelled in testing, fed by a five-round autoloading drum generally loaded with mixture of APDS and APCBC-HE, the sheer mass of the tank meant that even firing rapidly, the gun's aim was stable enough to riddle anything that closed inside the KwK 44's preferred range with holes - and even the co-axial MG131 13mm machine gun, though the gunnery director wasn't able to perform a similar role for the cupola-mounted two MG131 that were expected to perform most of the AA work in practice.
Statistics:
- Length: 13.95m;
Width: 5.73m;
Height: 4.1m;
Weight: 491.8 tonnes;
Crew: 11
- Bow Compartment:
- Driver
Engineer
Assistant Engineer / Bow Gunner
Turret:
- Commander
Gunner
Radio Operator
Left Cartridge Loader
Left Shell Loader
Right Cartridge Loader
Right Shell Loader
Centre Loader
Armour:
- 240mm (turret front) (+internal mantlet, 240mm + 120mm turret armour over mantlet) - partial 360mm effective;
240mm (lower glacis) (30 degree slope) - 280mm effective;
190mm (upper glacis) (60 degree slope) - 380mm effective;
190mm (turret sides and rear) - (partial 12 degree slope) (partial 30 degree slope) - 195 - 220mm effective
165mm (hull sides) (partial 30 degree slope) - 165 - 190mm effective;
160mm (hull rear) (partial 35 degree slope) (partial 30 degree slope) - 185 - 195 mm effective.
Main armament:
- 2 x 128mm KwK 44 L/55 (140 rounds);
1 x 75mm KwK 42 L/70 (150 rounds);
Secondary armament:
4 x 13mm MG131 (4,000 rounds);
Engine: 4 x Modula-9D-3, 7,366hp (5.49MW);
Power-to-weight: 14.98 hp/tonne (11.17 kW/t);
Suspension: Torsion bar;
Ground Clearance: 0.4m;
Fuel Capacity: 12,800L (3,380 US Gal) (including 1975L (520 US Gal) in external tank);
Operational Range: 270km (170 miles);
Speed: 28mph.
This is largely finished, but I thought I'd get any final comments (apart from "this is monstrously impractical", which I already know
) - what do we all think?
Regards,
Adam
EDIT: PS, I'm an idiot - many thanks to Ezgo once again for his help on what turned out to be a real grind of a spec.