Jonathan Ware Profile picture
Apr 3 25 tweets 10 min read Read on X
So when it first appeared in Normandy, the Sherman Firefly and it's meaty 17 pounder represented an ideal combo of reliable chassis, great gun and devastating firepower right?

Ummm...

Truth is a bit more complex. /1
#WW2 #SWW #History #DDay80 Image
Deliveries of Firefly to units only commenced in April 1944,
just a few weeks before Overlord & left minimal time for familiarisation.

Armoured Regiments mostly utilised Fireflies on a basis of 1 per troop of 4 tanks. /2 Image
Finally each armoured regiment troop had access to integral, meaty, anti-tank firepower capable of dealing serious damage to any German AFV likely to be encountered. /3 Image
The dual purpose 75mm gun was quite capable of laying down an effective HE shell or AP round for dealing with Panzer III or IV.

Firefly's 17 Pounder had.... problems with HE, but excelled at tank killing. So Tigers and Panthers would need to be wary. /4 Image
Firefly's design history dates back to March 1943 when the General Staff published "Policy on Tanks" which effectively stated the majority of tanks should have a good HE weapon and... well let's look at the quote below! /5 Image
This spurred development of the A30 Challenger from Cromwell chassis, but that's something best looked at on a later date.

tldr it encounters serious problems and between August and October concurrent work begins to investigate if you can bodge a 17 pounder into a Sherman. /6 Image
In Mark Haywood's excellent study exploring Firefly he queries nomenclature, noting that Firefly tends to be uniformly adopted by units after issue (bar 24th Lancers who love Mayfly), hinting this nickname was attached much earlier during development & caught on with units. /7 Image
Getting a 17 pounder into a Sherman proves hard enough and the development story is pretty amazing, another case study that modern militaries should consider.

I half-fixed the popular meme on this. End needs to be first...

Dear INTERNET,
You are, as always,
WELCOME. /8 Image
I waffle about it here on an astonishingly crap, ancient Periscope vid from Bovvy. /9
It's also worth bearing in mind that Tank Regiments, armed with Churchills, had not been forgotten and would operate closely with Corps Anti-Tank Regiments whose M10 (or M10 17 Pdr) provided similarly impressive firepower on the basis of about one SP AT Tp per Tank Squadron. /10
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Churchills were already being fitted with brand new ARV cupolas, improving visibility, but there were currently no suitable ARV cupolas for Firefly which limited tank commander's observation to M4 periscopes with negligible magnification or unbuttoning and using binocs. /11 Image
This was a problem.

But there was a much bigger one for Firefly crews. The gunner relied on the No. 43 Telescope with 3x magnification, but this was no better than the standard Sherman's offering.

You know, for a long ranged heavy tank killer. /12 Image
So the gunner has, to start with, a shit scope to try and discern targets - then actually nail them in a spot to inflict maximum damage.

Also if you are using APDS, SABOT, rounds then this sight isn't graduated to that at all.

Nope.

Good fuckin' luck. /13 Image
And like the ferocious muzzle blast, even with the muzzle break, could easily obscure observation of the shot's flight, meaning correcting trajectory of APDS rounds was all but impossible.

Good fuckin' luck. /14 Image
This was a real ballache when you could only get five ready rounds stored in the turret basket. These reloads took 6 to 7 seconds, but when exhausted... rounds from the hull bin took about ten seconds to handle up.

Weighing up to 17 kg. /15 Image
The 17 pounder's 15" recoil was also a right shitbag to deal with, and still maintain concentration, in what was a very cosy, I mean horribly cramped three man turret.

A core reason they cut a hole in the back of the turret to shove the radio out of to start with! /16 Image
How much better was 17 pounder than the Sherman's standard 75mm Gun M3 at penetrating armour firing APC?

75mm
1,000 yds: 62mm pen
1,600: 55mm
2k: 50mm

17 pdr
1,000 yds: 111mm pen
1,600: 95mm
2k: 87mm

17 pdr APDS was even better
1,000 yds: 172mm pen
1,600: 155mm
2k: 153mm /17 Image
Unfortunately, there was another catch when firing APDS, that accuracy in ranges over 900 yds plummetted, with SABOT only guaranteed accurate to 450 yards

At 1,000 yds APC had a 45.3% chance of hitting the target versus APDS at 14.9%.

However... /18 Image
This was really attributed to myriad causes, the much faster/flatter trajectory of SABOT, clipping the muzzle break on firing...

And let's not forget the human element, as just firing APDS placed radically different demands on the gunner since the sight was shit. /19 Image
This all means that good gunners on Fireflies were basically running impressive trig, as despite having access to a phenomenal weapons system the optics were just no where near up to scratch, observation of shot... umm, tricky to say the least, and firing rather disconcerting./20 Image
A good number of units didn't even receive theirs until May, and it was only on 6 April that regiments sent cadres to witness Kirkcudbright before having a couple of days on the range to hone their skills.

Yup, just two months before 6 June.

Two whole months. /21 Image
For all the problems in then training crews to a state of competence with the new weapon... they managed to achieve it and ultimately as most tank on tank engagements in Normandy were <1,000 yds it could easily KO a Tiger at such range. /22 Image
But long range kills were achieved in during the campaign, one Firefly from 4 Armoured Brigade destroyed a German tank at a crazy 2,400 yards.

1.3 miles or 2.19 km.

Astonishing feat of gunnery. /23 Image
Ultimately the decision to race Firefly into service was undeniably the right one, but it would take several months for crews to receive upgraded sights & greatly improve effectiveness.

That said, it ultimately proved a massively upgraded triumph and gave Armoured Regts... /23 Image
serious integral anti-tank capability which they had previously lacked, and some confidence when dealing with heavier armour.

A fantastic case study on meshing a proven, modular chassis with dynamic weapons system, but also... what can be overlooked in the process. /thread
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More from @ReassessHistory

Apr 4
The Churchill Tank in Normandy: Part One 40-44

Ratty Relic or Bocage Buster?

How did it go from a hated, atrocious POS tank worthy only of the scrapheap to a reliable, trustworthy, survivable and popular gun tank in action?

Another pertinent tale. /1
#WW2 #SWW #History Image
At 38 tons the Churchill was clearly a beast but a manageable one, given concerns about railway loading gauge had informed development (even then you still had to remove the side air louvres for rail tpt).

As always, compromise & industrial limitations underpinned design. /2 Image
Early Mk I and Mk II were respectively armed with a 2 Pounder with coaxial Besa in the turret but with differing hull armament, I - 3" howitzer, II - Besa machine gun.

88.9mm of front armour provided excellent protection for the five man crew, and WS No. 19 provided comms. /3 Image
Read 23 tweets
Feb 11
So, here it is.

Can the IWM *really* claim © on Crown Copyright images etc where copyright has long expired?

Surely these images should be out of copyright & free to use, right?

Right? /1
#History #Heritage #Museums Image
So The National Archives guidance is pretty straight forward.

Out of ©

IWM was transferred all the Crown Copyright images of WW2 etc a few years ago, a vast amount of which were published during the war & over the following decades.

They became the core heritage custodian. /2 Image
Then... how come the IWM was claiming copyright on this image, long-expired, posted yesterday?

It's a bit strange really.

I've long believed they have had no legal basis to claim ownership, but we'll get to that later.../3 Image
Read 42 tweets
Feb 8
A quick look at 6 Pounder in Normandy

For those wondering, 1 Tyneside Scottish did use 6 Pounder APDS rounds to devastating effect at Rauray.

But why comment on the use of 6 Pounder Sabot rounds?

Surely they were common? /1
#WW2 #SWW #History
#DDay80
WO205/405 Image
APDS was new in Normandy, it was also a very rare round with (it may be as much as most) use requiring Corps authorisation, occasionally Army.

This meant 6 pdr sabot tended to be issued for specific engagements, and no we don't have tank allocation data easily to hand. /2 Image
6 Pounder remained a serious bane of Panther crews throughout the campaign.

APDS was bloody rare, but other rounds remained devastating.

Esp as many engagements were <1,000 yds. /3 Image
Read 9 tweets
Jan 25
So, let's look at societal mobilisation, conscription, strategic priorities, industrial strategy etc.

I'll be blunt, we are not even at a 1933/4 moment in terms of strategy. CERTAINLY not a 1937 or 1938 moment.

Britain was MUCH better prepared in the 30s. /1
#History



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Rearmament was tricky as an island UK had to try and juggle Imperial commitments around the world, over the big blue wet thing, concerns another World War would destroy all civilisation, the threat of bombers slaughtering millions of civilians, against a poor economic picture. /2 Image
Myriad emerging threats; a complex geopolitical background ranging from wars in Abyssinia, Manchuria, China, Spain etc all. Britain was struggling to recover from the Great Depression, aka the Slump.

Churchill also loved the Ten Year Rule, which hamstrung military spending. /3 Image
Read 26 tweets
Aug 16, 2023
A GREAT BRITISH VC IN NORMANDY
#OTD on 16 August 1944

Lieutenant Tasker Watkins leads B Company in an attempt to secure a railway crossing as Second Army battles for control of Falaise. /1
#WW2 #SWW #History


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B Company tried to seize the railway crossing by St. Vigor de Mieux, with C Coy advancing on the left, with the Churchill tanks of A Squadron n 147 RAC providing fire support. /2 Image
Aiming to pincer around German defences and compliment another unit's southwards advance.

The attack went in at 1930, but the infantry were too strung out and the wireless net collapsed. The battalion CO, Gibson, ordered the assault to halt but B Coy never got the message. /3 Image
Read 11 tweets
Aug 14, 2023
#OTD on14 August 1944
“PIAT! PIAT! PIAT!"
Lt Donald Harvey, 244 Field Company Royal Engineers, alongside D Coy 1 Oxf & Bucks.

Probably the best PIAT related quote of the Normandy campaign, said as a Waffen-SS battlegroup appeared behind a British battalion. /1
#WW2 #SWW #History


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I could go into this action in much more detail, but it's almost unbelievable - saving it for another day...

Genuinely ridiculous scrap.

Moving on... /2
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PIAT was the infantry platoon's principle manhandled anti-tank weapon. 1 per platoon. A real marmite weapon, most complaints stem from poor handling & faulty munitions.

Range: 350 yds.
Effective : 40 - 70 (mebbe 100) yds.
Weight: 32 Lbs (15 kg)
Pen: 75 – 100mm of armour /3
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Read 10 tweets

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