ORIGINAL: Terminus
ORIGINAL: el cid again
ORIGINAL: Terminus
Far as I know, the Type 2 Ho-I mated a short barrel Type 99 75mm gun to a Type 97-Kai turret. It was a fire support vehicle rather than an anti-tank vehicle, and since the Type 99 refers to 1939, and the Germans had no 75mm anti-tank guns in 1939, I'd say it's somewhat unlikely that this was a German weapon. Could have been the German short-barrel 75mm gun as mounted on the Pz IV, but I doubt it...
31 Ho-I were built in real life starting in 1944, thanks to very low priority, but what-if's are always nice...[:)]
OK - where did 1939 come from? The gun in question was a PAK 40, 7.5 cm, 2600 fps with standard shot or 3250 fps with tungsten shot, 8.4 km range, 6.8 kg shell weigh, 132 mm penetration at 500 m with standard shot (154 mm with tungsten shot), weight in action (wheeled form) 1.425 metric tons (just the rifle itself would of course weigh less).
Sorry, Sid, but you'll have to prove that one. I simply don't believe it; I've seen pictures of both Ho-I and Ho-Ni tanks, and none feature the highly distinctive traits of the PaK 40, i.e. its long barrel length and muzzle brake arrangement.
Not sure I have to proove it? Ya gonna shoot me if I do not? I don't know where the original data came from (possibly the very weapon itself on that specific tank) - although I may well have it in one or several places - I didn't get it from some reference book or original document for use here: I took it from my own vehicle spreadsheet, built over about 40 or 50 years, from multiple sources. This is a vast sheet, and, believe it or not, I didn't feel the slightest need to document every field on the sheet. I have no idea where the original data came from - although since I lived in Japan and visited museums and the National Diet Library on many occasions it is very likely from Japanese materials (which may or may not be duplicated in the West in English). I am reporting that the comment field for this vehicle specifies that weapon. If there is a Western source, it is likely George Forty or Ian Hogg - British authorities whose materials I have also collected. It is my practice to record information of potential future interest - and I have more information of this sort than you would believe (at one time a librarian estimated it is the largest in the USA West of the Mississippi River). I organize it in electronic form - which is not to allege these collections are eratta free - just the best data I have at the current time (because, whenever something is found to be wrong, I correct it) - and unless there is some valid reason ( a scholar or intel agency needs formal documentation back to source - or I am being paid as a technical consultant ) I don't have the time to see if I can reconstruct where I found an item? Certainly not for someone who is impolite, and repeatedly alleges I don't tell the truth anyway, and also that my sources are unreliable because they are war criminals (which, indeed, some of them may be - but that is no excuse not to use the best data we have). Now if you have some real interest in these matters, I can probably tell you where to go looking yourself. In this case, I think we have an actual example of the vehicle you can climb around in and read the nomenclature stamped on the weapons. If you want to collaborate on correcting sheets (on aircraft, ships, vehicles, etc) - and you are prepared to behave in a civil way and apologize for past behaviors which are intellectually dishonest - I will send you all these materials - and incorporate into them corrections you point out based on something you have. I also will send some non-book tables and documents from a variety of sources that might help with such a review. But there is no point collaborating with someone not interested in the truth who does not recognize a kindred spirit - someone who will tell the truth regardless of if it is well known or unknown, popular or steps on long standing prejudice or belief.
A possible source of trouble is identification. I don't know why you are talking about Ho Ni ?? - that is a wholly different species of AFV - as I pointed out above - and all three versions mounted Japanese weapons (if I remember correctly). The tanks might or might not be well identified by nicknames - to such an extent I have devised an alphanumeric designation system for both vehicle and (separately) chassis (modeled on what we use in Detroit - I once worked for Chevrolet Engineering at the GM prooving grounds, and otherwise grew up in a family connected to the automotive industry - so I think in terms of body more than model - just as in Detroit professionals talk about bodies more often than models - identified by letters). I am talking about a tank in the standard tank series that came after the 47mm gun was introduced - the first upgrade to a 75mm weapon. A whole series of different 75 mm guns as main weapons followed, but the very first attempt was with an imported German AT gun. You can have very useful discussions about this with curators of the Mitsubishi Tank Museum, who are very proud of their history.



