Way to GO!!!!!!!!!Son of a gun-ner wrote:Well, I got over the conundrum by getting both styles lol.

Way to GO!!!!!!!!!Son of a gun-ner wrote:Well, I got over the conundrum by getting both styles lol.
l prefer the IS-2. It was rear engined but suffered very little oversteer and looked great with Cosworth stripes. My first car was a MD Phantom but the mpg was rubbish.Tiggr wrote:Son of a gun-ner wrote:How was it a design flaw? Before the latest electronic gizmos and 4wd, porche were trouncing the opposition, especially unpredictable mid engine cars on the track in production races, that's why so many were sold for racing, and why they ended up with so many different race classes, when I used to follow British touring car and production racing around the country, the 'design flawed' porche cornered astoundingly well (obviously wasn't in touring car races, support races and their own races on other weekends). One only has to look back at the stats of their old two wheel drive cars to see it. And now with 4wd, they're even better.Tiggr wrote: If you can keep the tail end on the road.........
Obviously later models with 4 wheel drive and controlled traction and added weight over the front wheels have overcome this serious design flaw.
Mick.
Yes Mick - they all had big lead weights over the front wheels to compensate for the huge pendulum effect the rear mounted engine had.
Like I said - flawed engineering.
then it wouldn't need a shot trap to sink one into the hull roof plate.Eastern Front wrote:Now if the opposing tank had the higher ground ...
Even the King Tiger and Tiger were vulnerable to plunging artillery fire; but especially to Rockets fired from Typhoons etc. Pilots even claimed some success with 20mm cannon shots on Tank upper hulls and engine compartments.Eastern Front wrote:Oh, Back on Topic,
Love the Porsche turret, most would think the rounded front of the turret created a shot trap, well yes and no..
If you look at other tanks that were fielded at the time, alot were shorter (not as high) as the main deck of the Tiger II, so no danger there of a round hitting the lower edge and projecting into the tanks hull. Read a article about this, even if a tank were to hit the lower edge of the turret and the round were deflected down it would not have penetrated the upper hull as the round would have lost alot of velocity from the initial strike and then the angle after impact would have been more than the front glacis plate angle, thus deflecting away harmlessly.. The real danger actually to the upper hull was the high angle of a projectile like from artillery.... Now if the opposing tank had the higher ground then that was definitely a possibility
Cheers!