M26A1 Pershing

M26A Pershing

PaísE.e.u.u
PapelTanque pesado/tanque mediano
En servicio 1943-principios de la década de 1950
Construido2212

el M26 Pershing era un tanque pesado / tanque medio del Ejército de los Estados Unidos. El tanque fue nombrado en honor al General de los Ejércitos John J. Pershing, quien dirigió la Fuerza Expedicionaria Americana en Europa en la Primera Guerra Mundial. Fue utilizado en los últimos meses de la Segunda Guerra Mundial durante la Invasión de Alemania y extensamente durante la Guerra de Corea.

Fuente: M26A Pershing en Wikipedia

M26A Pershing
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M26A1 Pershing Walk Around
Fotógrafo Vladimir Yakubov
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Ver también:

Segunda Guerra Mundial: La historia visual definitiva de la guerra relámpago a la bomba atómica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Segunda Guerra Mundial Mapa por Mapa (DK History Mapa por Mapa) - Amazon

T26E3 Pershing Walk Around
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T26E3 Pershing Walk Around
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Too Late for the War, Just in Time for History

el M26 Pershing was the tank American crews had been begging for since they first encountered German Tigers and Panthers. While the M4 Sherman was reliable, it was severely outgunned. The Pershing changed the game with its massive 90mm cannon and significantly thicker armor. Classified as a “Heavy Tank” during WWII (though later reclassified as a Medium), it was the pinnacle of U.S. armored design in the 1940s. It finally gave Allied tankers a vehicle that could go toe-to-toe with the best the Wehrmacht had to offer and win.

Attribute Technical Specification (M26)
Papel Heavy Tank (WWII) / Medium Tank (Post-War)
Equipo 5 (Commander, Gunner, Loader, Driver, Assistant Driver)
Motor Ford GAF 8-cylinder gasoline (500 hp)
Velocidad máxima 40 km/h (25 mph) on road
Armamento principal 90 mm M3 gun (70 rounds)
Armamento secundario 2 × .30 cal M1919A4 & 1 × .50 cal M2 HB MG
Frontal Armor 102 mm (Hull) / 114 mm (Turret Mantlet)
Operational Weight 41.7 tonnes

Design Engineering: Torsion Bars and High Velocity

  • The 90mm M3 Gun: Originally an anti-aircraft gun, the 90mm was America’s answer to the German 88mm. It could punch through the front of a Panther at over 1,000 yards, a feat the Sherman’s 75mm could only dream of.
  • Torsion Bar Suspension: Moving away from the Sherman’s vertical springs, the Pershing used torsion bars. This provided a much smoother ride and a more stable firing platform, though it was more difficult to repair in the field.
  • Low Profile: Despite being much heavier than the Sherman, the Pershing sat lower to the ground. This made it a harder target to hit and represented a major shift toward modern tank silhouettes.
  • Transmission Troubles: The Pershing used the same engine as the much lighter M4A3 Sherman. This meant it was somewhat underpowered for its 41-ton weight, leading to reliability issues in hilly terrain or deep mud.

Operational History: From Elbe to Chosin

  • The “Zebra Mission”: In early 1945, the first 20 Pershings were rushed to Europe in a secret mission to prove the tank in combat. They famously participated in the capture of the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen.
  • The Cologne Duel: The most famous Pershing moment was captured on film in Cologne, where a single M26 knocked out a German Panther in front of the city’s cathedral after the Panther had already destroyed a Sherman.
  • The “Super Pershing”: One experimental T15E1 Pershing was fitted with an even longer 90mm gun and “up-armored” with boiler plates and scrap armor taken from a captured Panther. It was the only tank capable of truly hunting the German King Tiger.
  • Korean War: The M26 saw its most extensive use in Korea. It was the only tank in the U.S. inventory that could reliably stop the Soviet-made T-34/85s used by the North Koreans, though its overheating issues in the mountainous terrain eventually led to its replacement by the M46 Patton.

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