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Up-armouring a Sherman tank using telephone directories???
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06-07-2017 03:53 PM
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Several years ago I saw an episode of "Mythbusters" where they used phone books. It took a lot of paper to make a small difference, but....
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Sometimes if you believe enough the protection, you will be free to do amazing things. Knowing what we do today about the US WW2 tanks, I am amazed anyone wanted to go armor (join the rolling target assembly corps). We had guys putting sandbags and old flak jackets on the floors of their HMMWVs in DS2. Didn't help much (stay on the road), when it did hit them the medic said it put a lot more dirt into survivors' wounds. Would not say how many really survived with or without.
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How many phone books? How many people had a phone in Europe in the 1940s
I don't think the phone books would be as thick as they are today....... why collect all the towns phone books when they were already cutting add on armour from other brewed up tanks.
I would have thought filled sandbags on the floor would be better and readily available.... and a known technique for other vehicles (we were shown sandbagging soft skin vehicles for operations in the former Yugoslavia
in the 1990s
I saw the episode on the "unknown" Panther tank made in 1944 and used in Normandy ...... the full history of this, French
made, from recovered parts post war .. Panther is well known.
A large pinch of salt is required for this "made for TV" program
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I've heard of "primitive forms of armour" used during WW2 as being made up of sheet steel backed by thick oak planks (3" thick, I think), only really intended to stop a rifle bullet, but never telephone directories.
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Spose' if you broke down you had the local directory to ring up for assistance, I could not imagine it being sanctioned to fill the spaces with loose items that may impede the traversing of the turret or make it difficult to get to ammunition with all the gyrations the Sherman would be doing to dodge the 88mm or H V 75mm rounds that are trying to brew it up.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
sheet steel backed by thick oak planks (3" thick, I think)
Those are to detonate a HEAT round outside. It leaves the regular armor less damaged and the molten jet can't penetrate effectively.
Ammo bins are in the floor too...
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I was thinking of the Beaverette armoured car that had the oak on the inside and was used by the Home Guard and RAF Regiment for airfield protection.
They did say that only around 180 Shermans were built in Canada
and so the running example shown on the programme must be a rare vehicle.
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With the floor "tiled" with telephone directories it'd keep the fires burning. The things were called 'Ronsons' for a reason. I've heard of sand bags used on the floor. Never fire starters though.
"...only around 180 Shermans..." 188 Grizzly's(a copy of the M4A1) were made in the Montreal Locomotive Works. None sent out of the country. 2,122 Ram tanks(M4A5) made there between November 1941 – July 1943.
"...you had the local directory to..." Use as TP as well. snicker. Issue is where the guy got all the phone books in war time.
Spelling and Grammar count!
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There wasn't any suggestion in the programme that the Canadian
built Sherman that the dealer had was the same vehicle that the Veteran had driven during the war, only something similar, i.e. a Sherman tank.
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