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Tanque Crucero Pesado Británico A.27 Cromwell, Cruiser Tank Mk. VIII
The Cromwell tank, named after the English Civil War leader Oliver Cromwell, was designed to replace the Crusader, Cruiser Tank Mk. VI, which was fast becoming obsolete. Designs of the new cruiser tank were submitted in early 1941, and rushed into production as the A.24 Cavalier, Cruiser Tank Mk. VII. The Cavalier was an unsuccesful tank design, which suffered primarily from its underpowered Liberty engine. A more powerful engine was designed, based on the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine used in Spitfire fighter aircraft, and the cruiser tank design was modified to accommodate it. Since Rolls-Royce was fully committed to the production of its Merlin aircraft engine, the manufacture of the Meteor tank engine passed to the Rover Car Company. The initial A.27 tanks, designated A.27L Centaur, received the antiquated Liberty engine, until the production lines at Rover were made ready to produce the Meteor engine. Production of the A.27M Cromwell began in Enero 1943, and the vehicle first saw action in Junio 1944 during Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Normandy. Modelos Disponibles
The Cromwell was faster and had a lower profile than the Sherman tank. However, while the Cromwell’s armour plate was of equivalent thickness to that of the Sherman, the plate was aligned vertically and provided less effective armour protection as a result. Because of its great speed, the Cromwell was used in divisional armoured reconnaissance regiments. The 7a División Blindada was fully equipped with Cromwell tanks. The Cromwell’s 75 mm tank gun was an adaptation of the 6 pdr. anti-tank gun, designed to fire the same ammunition as the Sherman tank in British service. The 75 mm gun had a significantly lower muzzle velocity than the 6 pdr or 17 pdr anti-tank gun, but it could fire a very effective HE anti-personnel round. Of the 4016 A.27 tanks produced, 1408 were Centaurs and 2608 Cromwells. An additional 375 Centaur hulls were built to be equipped with anti-aircraft turrets, but only 95 of these were actually completed, because the Allies enjoyed air superiority during the latter part of the war and there was little need for dedicated anti-aircraft vehicles. Especificaciones Técnicas
Empleo Histórico
The Cromwell was superceded by the A.34 Comet heavy cruiser tank which entered service in Diciembre of 1944. British A.27M Cromwell tanks last served in the Korean War in 1950. They were used for training purposes thereafter, and many ended up as hard targets on firing ranges. In terms of armoured vehicle design, the Cromwell and the similarly designed Comet were a step back: both had vertical armour plate like the Tiger I tank, rather than the more protective sloped plate of the Panther, T-34 medium tank, or A.16 Crusader. Preguntas más frecuentesPara más información, por favor contactar con Military Miniatures Magazine en el Miniatures Forum. Figuras del Ejército Británico de la Segunda Guerra Mundial © 2007-2011 by IDL Software GmbH, Darmstadt, Alemania. Todos derechos reservados. Mujeres | Hombres | Selfness | Mercado Navideño | Encuentro del Desayuno | Love & Fun | Internet Juego di Guerra | Agenda Cultural | Enlaces |
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