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Britain Inf Tank Mk II C.S. (Matilda III C.S.) |
| The Inf Tank Mk II C.S. was designed in 1937 based on the existing fully tracked Matilda and was in use from 1940 to 1943. |
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| Specifications | Operational Date(s) | 1940 - 1943 | Quantity Produced | 0 | Weight | 26.5 tonne | Crew | 4 | M.G's small | 1 | M.G's large(>10mm) | n/a | Length | 5.69 mtr | Width | 2.62 mtr | Height | 2.46 mtr | Engine Details/Performance | Max Road Speed | 15 mph | Max Cross Country Speed | 8 mph | Range Road | 101 miles | Range Cross Country | 62 miles | Fuel Type | Diesel | Fuel Capacity | 56 gal | Horse Power | 190 hp | Power/Weight | 7 hp/tonne | | General Information | The Inf Tank Mk II C.S. was designed in 1937 based on the existing fully tracked Matilda and was in use from 1940 to 1943.
The vehicle was powered by Leyla 'Diesel 190HP' diesel powerplant producing 190 HP which could drive the vehicle on roads at up to 15 mph with a range of about 101 miles before refuelling. Its cross country performance was adequate providing a max speed of about 8 mph and a range of about 62 miles.
It was armed with 1 light machine gun. Its main armament consisted of an Ordnance Q.F. 3inch Howitzer which could penetrate 113 mm of flat plate at 100 metres
The Matilda III CS was a complete new design to replace the Matilda I Infantry tank, which had been superceeded by advances in tank designs.
The turret was of a shaped design which held the 3 inch Close Support howitzer. | |
| Turret | Front | | 75mm | @ | 11° | (76mm) | Side | | 75mm | @ | 0° | (75mm) | Rear | | 75mm | @ | 0° | (75mm) | Top | | 20mm | @ | 90° | (20mm) | | Superstructure | Front | | 48mm | @ | 67° | (123mm) | Side | | 70mm | @ | 30° | (81mm) | Rear | | 55mm | @ | 25° | (61mm) | Top | | 20mm | @ | 90° | (20mm) | |
Hull | Front | | 78mm | @ | 10° | (79mm) | Side | | 65mm | @ | 0° | (65mm) | Rear | | 55mm | @ | 25° | (61mm) | Top | | 20mm | @ | 90° | (20mm) | | Armour (x)mm @ (y)° (Effective mm @ 0°) | Effective Armour - Maximum 123 mm - Minimum 20 mm |
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Weapon Details |
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Ordnance Q.F. 3inch Howitzer (Field Gun) |
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| | Manufactured | unknown - 1945 |
| | Calibre | 76.20mm |
Ammunition Details |
Name/Id |
Calibre Weight MVelocity |
Explosive Content |
3 inch howitzer AP
(HE High Explosive)
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76.20mm 6.3Kg 650M/Sec | 0.600Kg explosive |
Range(Mtr) | 1000 | 2000 | 3000 | 4000 | 5000 | 6000 | 7000 | 8000 |
Flight Time(Secs) |
1.77 |
4.17 |
7.61 |
12.96 |
22.39 |
43.45 |
132.43 |
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Direct Fire |
Range(Mtr) | 100 | 200 | 400 | 800 | 1200 | 1600 | 2000 | 2400 |
Flight Time(Secs) |
0.16 |
0.32 |
0.65 |
1.38 |
2.19 |
3.12 |
4.17 |
5.39 |
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Hit Probability(%) |
98 |
98 |
98 |
90 |
60 |
25 |
15 |
6 |
Blast/Fragmentation Effects |
Burst radius Infantry in open 99% kill | 3 mtr |
Burst radius Infantry in open 66% kill | 6 mtr |
Burst radius Infantry in open 33% kill | 15 mtr |
Armour Penetration inc roof at 1 mtr | 1 mm |
An explosion within 3 mtr of infantry in the open will cause 99% casualties - lethal. |
An explosion within 6 mtr of infantry in the open will cause > 66% casualties and could damage some AFV's. |
An explosion within 15 mtr of infantry in the open will cause 33% casualties. |
The blast effect of this shell exploding within 1 mtr of an armoured vehicle will penetrate 1 mm of the tank armour including the roof. |
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Hit probability is based on a static 2 x 2.4 metre panel at 0 degrees(vertical) at the range specified.
The data that has been used to create these records has come from Wikipedia, The Lone Sentry, The Bundes Archive
and numerous books and websites that have provided the detailed information that has not been available anywhere else. The
information we use to calculate the penetration tables, flight times and the hit probability comes from the Gun Calibre,
the Shell Mass(Kg) and the muzzle velocity, plus range reductions to allow for gravity and wind resistance. This calculation
originally came from a pre-war Krupp calculation which has been modified, and seems to fit the actual test results.
© WWIITanks 1980-2024
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