M4 Sherman
M4 Sherman
Medium Tank, M4
Production history
Designer U.S. Army Ordnance
Department
Designed 1940
Manufacturer American Locomotive
Company
Baldwin Locomotive
Works
Detroit Tank Arsenal
Federal Machine and
Welder Company
Fisher Tank Arsenal
Ford Motor Company
Lima Locomotive Works
Pacific Car and Foundry
Company
Pressed Steel Car
Company
Pullman-Standard Car
Company
Unit cost $44,556–64,455 in 1945
dollars, depending upon
variant ($607,861-
879,336 in 2017 dollars)[1]
Produced September 1941
(prototype)
February 1942 – July
1945
No. built 49,234, excluding
prototype[2]
Variants See U.S. variants and
foreign variants
Specifications
Mass 66,800–84,000 lb (33.4-
42.0 short tons, 30.3–38.1
tonnes) depending upon
variant[3]
Length 19 ft 2 in–20 ft 7 in (5.84–
6.27 m) depending upon
variant[3]
Width 8 ft 7 in–9 ft 10 in (2.62–
2.99 m) depending upon
variant[3]
Height 9 ft 0 in–9 ft 9 in (2.74–
2.97 m) depending upon
variant[3]
Crew 5 (commander, gunner,
loader, driver, assistant
driver/bow gunner)
Continental R975-C1
or -C4 9 cylinder radial
gasoline engine,
350 or 400 hp (261 or
298 kW) at 2,400
rpm[3]
M4A2 model: General
Motors 6046 twin inline
diesel engine; 375 hp
(280 kW) at 2,100
rpm[3]
M4A3 model: Ford
GAA V8 gasoline
engine; 450 hp (336
kW) at 2,600 rpm[3]
M4A4 model: Chrysler
A57 30 cylinder
gasoline engine; 370
hp (276 kW) at 2,400
rpm[3]
The M4 Sherman, officially Medium Tank, M4, was the most widely used medium tank by the United
States and Western Allies in World War II. The M4 Sherman proved to be reliable, relatively cheap to
produce, and available in great numbers. It was also the basis of several successful tank destroyers, such as
the M10, Achilles and M36. Tens of thousands were distributed through the Lend-Lease program to the
British Commonwealth and Soviet Union. The tank was named by the British for the American Civil War
general William Tecumseh Sherman.
The M4 Sherman evolved from the M3 Medium Tank,[N 1] which had its main armament in a side sponson
mount. The M4 retained much of the previous mechanical design, but moved the main 75 mm gun into a
fully traversing central turret. One feature, a one-axis gyrostabilizer, was not precise enough to allow firing
when moving but did help keep the reticle on target, so that when the tank did stop to fire, the gun would be
aimed in roughly the right direction.[6] The designers stressed mechanical reliability, ease of production and
maintenance, durability, standardization of parts and ammunition in a limited number of variants, and
moderate size and weight. These factors, combined with the Sherman's then-superior armor and armament,
outclassed German light and medium tanks fielded in 1939–42. The M4 went on to be produced in large
numbers, being the most produced tank in American history:[7] The Soviets' T-34 medium tank (total of
some 64,549 wartime-produced examples, split roughly 55%-45% between 76 mm and 85 mm gunned
examples) was the only tank design produced in larger numbers[8] during World War II. The Sherman
spearheaded many offensives by the Western Allies after 1942.
When the M4 tank went into combat in North Africa with the British Army at El Alamein in late 1942, it
increased the advantage of Allied armor over Axis armor and was superior to the lighter German[9] and
Italian tank designs. For this reason, the US Army believed that the M4 would be adequate to win the war,
and relatively little pressure was initially exerted for further tank development. Logistical and transport
restrictions, such as limitations imposed by roads, ports, and bridges, also complicated the introduction of a
more capable but heavier tank.[10][N 2] Tank destroyer battalions using vehicles built on the M4 hull and
chassis, but with open-topped turrets and more potent high-velocity guns, also entered widespread use in the
Allied armies. Even by 1944, most M4 Shermans kept their dual-purpose 75 mm gun.[11] By then, the M4
was inferior in firepower and armor to increasing numbers of German heavy tanks, but was able to fight on
with the help of considerable numerical superiority, greater mechanical reliability, better logistical support,
and support from growing numbers of fighter-bombers and artillery pieces.[12] Some Shermans were
produced with a more capable gun, the 76 mm gun M1, or refitted with a 76.2mm calibre Ordnance QF 17-
pounder gun by the British (the Sherman Firefly).
The relative ease of production allowed large numbers of the M4 to be manufactured, and significant
investment in tank recovery and repair units allowed disabled vehicles to be repaired and returned to service
quickly. These factors combined to give the Allies numerical superiority in most battles, and many infantry
divisions were provided with M4s and tank destroyers.[N 3][13]
After World War II, the Sherman, particularly the many improved and upgraded versions, continued to see
combat service in many conflicts around the world, including the UN forces in the Korean War, with Israel
in the Arab–Israeli wars, briefly with South Vietnam in the Vietnam War, and on both sides of the Indo-
Pakistani War of 1965.[14]
Contents
U.S. design prototype
Doctrine
U.S. production history
Service history
Allocation
First combat
Eastern Front
Pacific Theater
Post–World War II
Armament
Gun development
The tank destroyer doctrine
Variants
Armor
Turret
Hull
Effectiveness
Upgrades
M4A3E2
Mobility
U.S. variants
Foreign variants and use
Former operators
See also
Tanks of comparable role, performance and era
References
Notes
Citations
Bibliography
External links
The Sherman's reliability resulted from many features developed for U.S. light tanks during the 1930s,
including vertical volute spring suspension, rubber-bushed tracks, and a rear-mounted radial engine with
drive sprockets in front. The goals were to produce a fast, dependable medium tank able to support infantry,
provide breakthrough striking capacity, and defeat any tank then in use by the Axis nations.
The T6 prototype was completed on 2 September 1941. The upper hull of the T6 was a single large casting.
It featured a single overhead hatch for the driver, and a hatch in the side of the hull. In the later M4A1
production model, this large casting was maintained, although the side hatch was eliminated and a second
overhead hatch was added for the assistant driver. The modified T6 was standardized as the M4, and
production began in February 1942.[16] The cast-hull models would later be re-standardized as M4A1, with
the first welded-hull models receiving the designation M4. In August, 1942, a variant of the M4 was put
forth by the Detroit Arsenal to have angled, rather than rounded hull and turret armor. The changes were
intended to improve the tank's protection without increasing weight or degrading other technical
characteristics.
Doctrine
As the United States approached entry into World War II, armored
employment was doctrinally governed by Field Manual 100–5,
Operations (published May 1941, the month following selection of
the M4 tank's final design). That field manual stated:
United States doctrine held that the most critical anti-tank work (stopping massed enemy tank attacks) was
primarily to be done by towed and self-propelled anti-tank guns, both of which were referred to as "tank
destroyers", with friendly tanks being used in support if possible.[19] Speed was essential in order to bring
the tank destroyers from the rear to destroy incoming tanks. This doctrine was rarely followed in combat, as
it was found to be impractical. Commanders were reluctant to leave tank destroyers in reserve; if they were,
it was also easier for an opposing armored force to achieve a breakthrough against an American tank
battalion, which would not have all of its anti-tank weapons at the front during the beginning of any
attack.[20]
The Army had seven main sub-designations for M4 variants during M4 and M4A1 (shown), the first
production: M4, M4A1, M4A2, M4A3, M4A4, M4A5, and M4A6. Shermans, share the inverted U
These designations did not necessarily indicate linear improvement; backplate and inherited their engine
in that "M4A4" did not indicate it was better than "M4A3". These and exhaust system from the earlier
sub-types indicated standardized production variations, which were M3 Medium Tank
in fact often manufactured concurrently at different locations. The
sub-types differed mainly in engines, although the M4A1 differed
from the other variants by its fully cast upper hull, with a distinctive
rounded appearance. The M4A4 had a longer engine that required a
longer hull and more track blocks, and thus the most distinguishing
feature of the M4A4 was the wider longitudinal spacing between the
bogies. "M4A5" was an administrative placeholder designation for
Canadian production. The M4A6 had a radial diesel engine as well
as the elongated chassis of the M4A4, but only 75 of these were ever
produced.
From May to July 1944, the Army accepted a limited run of 254 M4A3E2 Jumbo Shermans, which had very
thick hull armor and the 75 mm gun in a new, better- protected T23-style turret, in order to assault
fortifications. The M4A3 model was the first to be factory-produced with the horizontal volute spring
suspension (HVSS) system with wider tracks to distribute weight, beginning in August 1944. With the
smooth ride of the HVSS, it gained the nickname "Easy Eight" from its experimental "E8" designation. The
M4 and M4A3 105 mm-armed tanks, as well as the M4A1 and M4A2 76 mm-armed tanks, were also
eventually equipped with HVSS. Both the Americans and the British developed a wide array of special
attachments for the Sherman, although few saw combat, remaining experimental. Those that saw action
included a bulldozer blade, the Duplex Drive system, flamethrowers for Zippo flame tanks, and various
rocket launchers such as the T34 Calliope. British variants (DDs and mine flails) formed part of the group of
specialized vehicles collectively known as "Hobart's Funnies" (after Percy Hobart, commander of the 79th
Armoured Division).
The M4 Sherman's basic chassis was used for all the sundry roles of a modern mechanized force. These
included the M10 and M36 tank destroyers; M7B1, M12, M40, and M43 self-propelled artillery; the M32
and M74 "tow truck"-style recovery tanks with winches, booms, and an 81 mm mortar for smoke screens;
and the M34 (from M32B1) and M35 (from M10A1) artillery prime movers.
Service history
Allocation
During World War II, approximately 19,247 Shermans were issued
to the U.S. Army and about 1,114 to the U.S. Marine Corps.[32] The
U.S. also supplied 17,184 to Great Britain (some of which in turn
went to the Canadians and the Free Poles), while the Soviet Union
received 4,102[33] and an estimated 812 were transferred to
China.[34] These numbers were distributed further to the respective
countries' allied nations.
The U.S. Marine Corps used the diesel M4A2 and gasoline-powered
M4A3 in the Pacific. However, the Chief of the Army's Armored
Force, Lt. Gen. Jacob L. Devers, ordered that no diesel-engined The first Sherman in U.S. service, the
Shermans be used by the Army outside the Zone of Interior (the M4A1, appeared in the North Africa
continental U.S.). The Army used all types for either training or Campaign. Here one of the 7th Army
testing within the United States, but intended the M4A2 and M4A4 lands at Red Beach 2 on July 10,
(with the A57 Multibank engine) to be the primary Lend-Lease 1943 during the Allied invasion of
exports. Sicily
First combat
The first U.S. Shermans in battle were M4s and M4A1s in Operation Torch the following month. On 6
December, near Tebourba, Tunisia, a platoon from the 2nd Battalion, 13th Armored Regiment was lost to
enemy tanks and anti-tank guns.[37]
Additional M4s and M4A1s replaced M3s in U.S. tank battalions over the course of the North African
campaign.
The M4 and M4A1 were the main types in U.S. units until the fall of 1944, when the Army began replacing
them with the preferred M4A3 with its more powerful 500 hp (370 kW) engine. Some M4s and M4A1s
continued in U.S. service for the rest of the war. The first Sherman to enter combat with the 76 mm gun in
July 1944 was the M4A1, closely followed by the M4A3. By the end of the war, roughly half the U.S. Army
Shermans in Europe had the 76 mm gun. The first HVSS-equipped Sherman to see combat was the
M4A3(76)W in December 1944.
Eastern Front
The M4A2s used by the Red Army were considered to be much less prone to catch fire due to ammunition
detonation than their T-34/76, but had a higher tendency to overturn in road accidents and collisions or
because of rough terrain due to their higher center of gravity.[38]
Under Lend-Lease, 4,102 M4A2 medium tanks were sent to the Soviet Union. Of these, 2,007 were
equipped with the original 75 mm main gun, with 2,095 mounting the more-capable 76 mm gun. The total
number of Sherman tanks sent to the USSR under Lend-Lease represented 18.6% of all Lend-Lease
Shermans.[39]
The first 76 mm-armed M4A2 Shermans started to arrive in Soviet Union in the late summer of 1944.[40] By
1945, some Red Army armoured units were standardized to depend entirely on the Sherman Such units
include the 1st Guards Mechanized Corps, the 3rd Guards Mechanized Corps and the 9th Guards
Mechanized Corps, amongst others. The Sherman was largely held in good regard and viewed positively by
many Soviet tank crews, with compliments given to its reliability, ease of maintenance, generally good
firepower (referring especially to the 76 mm gun version) and decent armour protection,[41] as well as an
auxiliary-power unit (APU) to keep the tank's batteries charged without having to run the main engine for
the same purpose as the Soviets' own T-34 tank required.[42]
Pacific Theater
During the early stages of combat in the Pacific, specifically the Guadalcanal Campaign, the U.S. Marine
Corps' M2A4 light tank fought against the equally-matched Type 95 Ha-Go light tank; both were armed
with a 37 mm main gun. However, the M2 (produced in 1940) was newer by five years.[46] By 1943, the IJA
still used the Type 95 and Type 97 Chi-Ha medium tanks, while Allied forces were quickly replacing their
light tanks with 75 mm-armed M4s.[47] The Chinese in India received 100 M4 Shermans and used them to
great effect in the subsequent 1944 and 1945 offensives in the CBI Battlefield.
To counter the Sherman,[48] the Japanese developed the Type 3 Chi-Nu and the heavier Type 4 Chi-To; both
tanks were armed with 75 mm guns, albeit of different type. Only 166 Type 3s and two Type 4s were built,
and none saw combat; they were saved for the defense of the Japanese home islands, leaving 1930s vintage
light and medium armor to do battle against 1940s built Allied light and medium armor.
During the later years of the war, general purpose high explosive ammunition was preferred for fighting
Japanese tanks because armor-piercing rounds, which had been designed for penetrating thicker steel, often
went through the thin armor of the Type 95 Ha-Go (the most commonly encountered Japanese tank) and out
the other side without stopping. Although the high-velocity guns of
tank destroyers were useful for penetrating fortifications, M4s armed
with flamethrowers were often deployed, as direct fire seldom
destroyed Japanese fortifications.[49][50]
Post–World War II
After World War II, the U.S. kept the M4A3E8 '"Easy Eight" in As part of Operation Dexterity, an
service, with either the 76 mm gun or a 105 mm M4 howitzer. The M4A1 (75 mm) advances through a
Sherman remained a common U.S. tank in the Korean War, where it tropical rain forest on New Britain, in
fought alongside the M26 Pershing and M46 Patton. The the South-West Pacific
M4A3(76)W HVSS Sherman and T-34-85 were comparable and
could destroy each other at normal combat ranges, although the use
of High Velocity Armor Piercing ammunition, advanced optics, and
better crew training gave the Sherman an advantage.[51] The
M4A3(76)W HVSS Sherman, using 76 mm HVAP ammunition,
destroyed 41 enemy tanks from July–November 1950. The lighter
M4A3(76)W HVSS tank became the preferred U.S. tank in the later
phases of the war in Korea, due to the mechanical reliability of the
M4, its ease of maintenance, and its driveability compared to the
M26 tank.[52]
The Israeli Defense Force used Shermans from its creation in 1948
until the 1980s, having first acquired a single M4A2 lacking main
armament from British forces as they withdrew from Israel.[53] The popularity of the tank (having now been
re-armed) compared to the outdated, 1934-origin French Renault R35 interwar light tanks with their 37 mm
short-barreled guns, which made up the bulk of the IDF's tank force, led to the purchase of 30 unarmed
M4(105mm)s from Italian scrapyards.[53] Three of these, plus the original M4A2, saw extensive service in
the 1948-9 war of independence. The remainder were then serviced and rearmed with 75 mm guns and
components whenever these became available, composing a large part of Israeli tank forces for the next
eight years. The 75 mm-armed Shermans were replaced by M4A1 (76 mm) Shermans imported from France
before the 1956 Suez Crisis, after it was realised that their armor penetration was insufficient for combat
against newer tanks such as the IDF Centurions as well as the T-34-85s being delivered to Egyptian
forces.[54] During further upgrades, the French military helped develop a conversion kit to upgrade about
300 Shermans to the long high-velocity 75 mm gun CN 75-50 used in the AMX-13. These were designated
Sherman M-50 by the Israelis. Before the Six-Day War in 1967, the Israeli Army upgraded about 180
M4A1(76)W HVSS Shermans with the French 105 mm Modèle F1 gun, re-engined them with Cummins
diesel engines and designated the upgraded tank Sherman M-51. The Sherman tanks, fighting alongside the
105 mm Centurion Sh'ot Kal and M48 Patton tanks, were able to defeat the T-34/85, T-54/55/62 series, and
IS-3 tanks used by the Egyptian and Syrian forces in the 1967 Six-Day War.[55]
M4A3s were also used by British forces in Indonesia during the Indonesian National Revolution until 1946,
when they were passed on to the KNIL, which used them until 1949 before they were passed on to the
Indonesian Army.[56]
Armament
Gun development
As the Sherman was being designed, provisions were made so that multiple types of main armament
(specified as a 75 mm gun, a 3-inch gun, or a 105 mm howitzer) could be mounted in the turret.[57] The
possibility of mounting the main gun of the M6 heavy tank, the 3-inch gun M7, in the turret of the M4
Sherman was explored first, but its size and weight (modified from a land-based antiaircraft gun) made it too
large to fit in the turret of the Sherman. Development on a new 76 mm gun better-suited to the Sherman
began in fall 1942.
In early 1942, tests began on the feasibility of mounting a 105 mm howitzer into the turret of the Sherman.
The basic 105 mm howitzer M2A1 was found to be ill-designed for mounting in a tank turret, so it was
completely redesigned and re-designated the 105 mm howitzer M4. After modifications to the turret
(concerning the balancing of the gun and the strength of the power traverse) and interior of the hull
(concerning the stowage of the 105 mm ammunition), the Ordnance Department expressed its approval of
the project, and production of M4 tanks armed with 105 mm howitzers began in February 1944.[58]
The Sherman would enter combat in 1942 equipped with the 75 mm gun M3, a 40-caliber gun that could
penetrate 88 mm (3.5 in) of unsloped rolled homogeneous armor (RHA) at 100 meters (110 yd) and 73 mm
(2.9 in) at 1,000 meters (1,100 yd) firing the usual M61 round.[59] Facing the early Panzer III and Panzer IV
in North Africa, the Sherman's gun could penetrate the frontal armor of these tanks at normal combat ranges,
within 1,000 yd (910 m). U.S. Army Intelligence discounted the arrival of the Tiger I in 1942 and the
Panther tank in 1943, predicting that the Panther would be a heavy tank like the Tiger I, and doubted that
many would be produced. There were also reports of British QF 6 pdr (57 mm) guns being able to destroy
the Tiger I. However, this only happened at very close ranges and against the thinner side armor. Due to
their misconceptions related to this, and also due to tests that seemed to prove that the 76 mm gun was able
to destroy both the Tiger and the Panther, the leadership of Army Ground Forces were not especially
concerned by the Tiger I. The tests of the 76 mm were later ruled inaccurate, with Eisenhower even
remarking that he was wrongly told by Ordnance that the 76 mm could knock out any German tank. The
Army also failed to anticipate that the Germans would attempt to make the Panther the standard tank of their
panzer divisions in 1944, supported by small numbers of Tiger I and IIs.[60]
When the newly-designed 76 mm gun, known as the T1, was first installed in the M4 in spring 1943, it was
found to unbalance the turret, and the gun barrel also protruded too far forward, making it more difficult to
transport and susceptible to hitting the ground when the tank traveled over undulating terrain. The barrel
length was reduced by 15 in (380 mm) (from 57 calibers to 52), resulting in the M1 variant. Mounting this
gun in the original M4 turret proved problematic, so the turret for the aborted T23 tank project was used
instead for the definitive production version of the 76 mm M4 Shermans,[61] along with a modified version
of the gun known as the M1A1.
Despite the Ordnance Department's development of new 76 mm and 90 mm anti-tank guns, the Army
Ground Forces rejected their deployment as unnecessary. An attempt to upgrade the M4 Sherman by
installing the 90 mm-armed turret from the T26 tank project on an M4 hull in April 1944 was halted after
realizing it could not go into production sooner than the T26 and would likely delay T26 development.[62]
Even in 1943, most German armored fighting vehicles (later models of the Panzer IV, StuG III, and Marder
III) mounted the 7.5 cm KwK 40. As a result, even weakly armored light German tank destroyers such as
the Marder III, which was meant to be a stop-gap measure to fight Soviet tanks in 1942, could destroy
Shermans from a distance. The disparity in firepower between the German armored fighting vehicles of
1943 and the 75 mm-armed M4 was the impetus to begin production of 76 mm-armed M4s in January
1944.[63] In testing prior to the invasion of Normandy, the 76 mm gun was found to have an undesirably
large muzzle blast that kicked up dust from the ground and obscured vision for further firing. The M1A1C
gun, which entered production lines in March 1944, was threaded for a muzzle brake, but as the brakes were
still in development, the threads were protected with a cap. The addition of a muzzle brake on the new
M1A2 gun (which also incorporated a faster rifling twist leading to a slight accuracy increase at longer
ranges) beginning in October 1944 finally solved this problem by directing the blast sideways.[64]
Army doctrine at the time emphasized the multirole ability of the tank, and the capability of the high
explosive shell was considered important. Being a dedicated anti-tank gun, the 76 mm had a much weaker
high explosive shell than the existing 75 mm, and was not initially accepted by various U.S. armored
division commanders, even though many had already been produced and were available. All of the U.S.
Army M4s deployed initially in Normandy in June 1944 had the 75 mm gun.[65] Tests against American
armor plate suggested that the new M1A1 gun would be adequate, but testing against captured Panther tanks
was never done. Fighting against Panther tanks in Normandy quickly demonstrated the need for better anti-
tank firepower, and the 76 mm M4s were deployed to First Army units in July 1944. Operation Cobra was
the combat debut of the 76 mm gun-armed Sherman, in the form of the M4A1(76)W.[66] General George S.
Patton's Third Army were initially issued 75 mm M4s and accepted 76 mm-armed M4s only after the Battle
of Arracourt against Panther tanks in late September 1944.[67]
In late summer 1944, after breaking out of the bocage and moving into open country, U.S. tank units that
engaged German defensive positions at longer ranges sometimes took 50% casualties before spotting where
the fire was coming from.[71] The average combat range noted by the Americans for tank versus tank action
was 800 to 900 meters (870 to 980 yd). Sherman crews also had concerns about firing from longer ranges,
as the Sherman's high-flash powder made their shots easier to spot. This, and the U.S. Army's usual
offensive tactical situation, often contributed to losses suffered by the U.S. Army in Europe.[72] Even though
the various gunsights fitted to the Sherman had fewer magnification settings than those fitted to German
tanks, their gunners were able to use a secondary periscope that featured a far larger field of view than their
German counterparts.
T4 High-Velocity Armor Piercing (HVAP) ammunition became available in August 1944 for the 76 mm
gun. The projectile contained a tungsten penetrator surrounded by a lightweight aluminum body and ballistic
windshield, which gave it a higher velocity and more penetrating power. The increased penetration of HVAP
allowed the 76 mm gun to match the Panther's 7.5 cm KwK 42 APCR shot.[73] However, its performance
was heavily degraded by sloped armor such as the Panther's glacis. Because of tungsten shortages, HVAP
rounds were constantly in short supply. Priority was given to U.S. tank destroyer units and over half of the
18,000 projectiles received were not compatible with the 76 mm gun M1, being fitted into the cartridge case
of the M10 tank destroyer's 3-inch gun M7.[74] Most Shermans carried only a few rounds at any one time,
and some units never received any.[75]
After the heavy tank losses of the Battle of the Bulge, in January 1945, General Eisenhower asked that no
more 75 mm M4s be sent to Europe: only 76 mm M4s were wanted.[79] Interest in mounting the British 17-
pounder in U.S. Shermans flared anew. In February 1945, the U.S. Army began sending 75 mm M4s to
England for conversion to the 17-pounder. Approximately 100 conversions were completed by the
beginning of May. By then, the end of the war in Europe was clearly in sight, and the U.S. Army decided the
logistical difficulties of adding a new ammunition caliber to the supply train was not warranted. None of the
converted 17-pounder M4s were deployed in combat by the U.S., and it is unclear what happened to most of
them, although some were given to the British as part of Lend-Lease post-war.[80]
General Lesley J. McNair was head of the Army Ground Forces from 1942 to 1944. McNair, a former
artilleryman, advocated for the role of the tank destroyer (TD) within the U.S. Army. In McNair's opinion,
tanks were to exploit breakthroughs and support infantry, while masses of attacking hostile tanks were to be
engaged by tank destroyer units, which were composed of a mix of self-propelled and towed anti-tank guns.
Self-propelled tank destroyers, called "gun motor carriages" (as were any U.S. Army self-propelled armored
vehicles mounting an artillery piece of heavy caliber) were similar to tanks, but were lightly armored with
open-topped turrets. The tank destroyers were supposed to be faster and carry a more powerful anti-tank gun
than tanks (although in reality tanks often received more powerful guns before tank destroyers did) and
armor was sacrificed for speed.[81] Armored Force and Tank Destroyer Force doctrine were developed
separately, and it was not against Armored Force doctrine for friendly tanks to engage hostile tanks that
appeared while attacking or defending.[82]; tank destroyers were to engage numbers of enemy tanks that
broke through friendly lines.
McNair approved the 76 mm upgrade to the M4 Sherman and production of the 90 mm gun-armed M36
tank destroyer, but he at first staunchly opposed mass production of the T20 medium tank series and its
descendants, the T25 and T26 (which would eventually become the M26 Pershing) during the crucial period
of 1943 because they did not meet the two criteria of the Army Ground Forces for accepting new equipment;
they were not "battle worthy," and he saw no "battle need" for them. In fall 1943, Lieutenant General
Devers, commander of U.S. forces in the European Theater of Operations (ETO), asked for 250 T26 tanks
for use in the invasion of France; McNair refused, citing the fact that he believed the M4 was adequate.
Devers appealed all the way to the War Department, and Major General Russell L. Maxwell, the Assistant
Chief of Staff G-4 of the War Department General Staff, ordered the 250 tanks built in December 1943.
McNair finally relented in his opposition, but still opposed mass production; his Army Ground Forces even
asked for the tanks to be "down-gunned" from 90 mm to 75 or 76 mm in April 1944, believing the 76 mm
gun was capable of performing satisfactorily. Marshall then summarily ordered the tanks to be provided to
the ETO as soon as possible. Soon after the Normandy invasion in June 1944, General Dwight D.
Eisenhower urgently requested heavy tanks, but McNair's continued opposition to mass production due to
persistent serious mechanical problems with the vehicles delayed their procurement. That same month, the
War Department reversed course and completely overruled the Army Ground Forces when making their
tank production plan for 1945. 7,800 tanks were to be built, of which 2,060 were to be T26s armed with
90 mm guns, 2,728 were to be T26s armed with 105 mm howitzers, and 3,000 were to be M4A3 Sherman
tanks armed with 105 mm howitzers. As a part of the plan, the British requested 750 90 mm-armed T26s
and 200 105 mm-armed T26s.[83] General McNair was killed in a botched air support mission in July 1944,
and the path to production for the T26 tank became somewhat clearer. General Marshall intervened again
and the tanks were eventually brought into full production. However, only a few T26 tanks (by then
designated M26) saw combat beginning in February 1945, too late to have any effect on the battlefield.[84]
Variants
The Sherman, like its M3 predecessor, was one of the first tanks to
feature a gyroscopically stabilized gun and sight. The stabilization
was only in the vertical plane, as the mechanism could not slew the
turret. The stabilizer was sufficient to keep the gun's elevation
setting within 1/8th of a degree, or 2 mils, while crossing moderately
rough terrain at 15 miles per hour (24 km/h). This gave a hit
probability of 70% on enemy tanks at ranges of 300 yards (270 m) to
1,200 yards (1,100 m).[85] The utility of the stabilization is
debatable, with some saying it was useful for its intended purpose,
others only for using the sights for stabilized viewing on the A USMC M4A3 uses its flame
move.[86] Some operators disabled the stabilizer. thrower during the Battle of Iwo Jima
The 75 mm gun had a white phosphorus shell originally intended for use as an artillery marker to help with
targeting. M4 tank crews discovered that the shell could also be used against the Tiger and Panther—when
the burning white phosphorus adhered to the German tanks, their excellent optics would be blinded and the
acrid smoke would get sucked inside the vehicle, making it difficult or impossible for the crew to breathe.
This, and the fear of fire starting or spreading inside the tank, would sometimes cause the crew to abandon
the tank.[87] There were several recorded instances where white phosphorus shells defeated German tanks in
this fashion.[88]
A variant of the M4 Sherman was armed with the 105 mm M4 howitzer, which provided even more
powerful high explosive armament. This variant was employed in three-vehicle "assault gun" platoons in
tank battalions[89] to provide close fire support and smoke. Armored infantry battalions were also eventually
issued three of these Shermans.[90] The 105 mm-armed variants were of limited use against enemy tanks due
to the poor anti-armor performance of the howitzer, which was not intended to fight other tanks, though a
high explosive anti-tank (HEAT) round for the 105 mm howitzer was available for self-defense.
Armor
Turret
Later models of the M4A1, M4A2 and M4A3 Sherman tanks were equipped with the T23 turret and the new
76 mm gun. This turret's armor was 63.5 mm (2.50 in) thick on the sides and rear, angled from 0 to 13
degrees from the vertical. It had a 25.4 mm (1.00 in) thick roof, which sat at 0 to 45 degrees from the
vertical.[3] The front of the T23 turret, which like the 105 mm-armed Sherman's turret, did not have a rotor
shield, was protected by an unsloped 88.9 mm (3.50 in) thick cast gun mantlet. Combat experience indicated
that the single hatch in the three-man 75 mm gun turret was inadequate for timely evacuation, so Ordnance
added a loader's hatch beside the commander's beginning in late 1943. All 76 mm gun turrets had two roof
hatches.
Hull
Effectiveness
The armor of the M4 was effective against most early war tank and anti-tank weapons,[91] but needed a
compound angle to resist later German tank and anti-tank guns. The distinctive protruding "hatchways" of
the early Sherman compromised the 56 degree-angled glacis plate, making them weak points where the
effect of the glacis plate's slope was greatly reduced. In 1943, to make the thickness of these areas equal
with the rest of the glacis plate, 1-inch thick (25 mm) appliqué armor plates were fitted in front of them.
A Waffenamt-Prüfwesen 1 report estimated[95] that with the M4 angled 30 degrees sidewards, the Sherman's
glacis plate was invulnerable to shots from the Tiger's 8.8 cm KwK 36 L/56[96] and that the Panther, with its
7.5 cm KwK 42 L/70, would have to close in to 100 meters (110 yd) to achieve a penetration in the same
situation.[97] Although the later-model German medium and heavy tanks were greatly feared, Buckley
opined "The vast majority of German tanks encountered in Normandy were either inferior or merely equal to
the Sherman."[98]
Research for tank casualties in Normandy from 6 June to 10 July 1944 conducted by the British No. 2
Operational Research concluded that, from a sample of 40 Sherman tanks, 33 tanks burned (82 percent) and
7 tanks remained unburned following an average of 1.89 penetrations. In comparison, from a sample of 5
Panzer IV's, 4 tanks burned (80 percent) and 1 tank remained unburned, following an average of 1.5
penetrations. The Panther tank burned 14 times (63 percent) from a sample of 22 tanks and following 3.24
penetrations, while the Tiger burned 4 times (80 percent) out of a sample of 5 tanks following 3.25
penetrations.[99] John Buckley, using a case study of the British 8th and 29th Armoured Brigades, found that
of their 166 Shermans knocked out in combat during the Normandy campaign, 94 (56.6 percent) burned out.
Buckley also notes that an American survey carried out concluded that 65% of tanks burned out after being
penetrated.[100] United States Army research proved that the major reason for this was the stowage of main
gun ammunition in the vulnerable sponsons above the tracks. A U.S. Army study in 1945 concluded that
only 10–15 percent of wet stowage Shermans burned when penetrated, compared to 60–80 percent of the
older dry-stowage Shermans.[101]
At first, a partial remedy to ammunition fires in the M4 was found in 1943 by welding 1-inch thick (25 mm)
appliqué armor plates to the sponson sides over the ammunition stowage bins, though there was doubt that
these had any effect. Later models moved ammunition stowage to the hull floor, with water jackets
surrounding each stowage bin. The practice, known as wet stowage, reduced the chance of fire after a hit to
about 15 percent.[102] The Sherman gained grim nicknames like "Zippo" (after the cigarette lighter),
"Ronson" (because "it lights the first time, every time").[7] The latter story has been challenged on the
grounds that Ronson did not begin using the slogan until the 1950s. [103] and "Tommycooker" (by the
Germans, who referred to British soldiers as "Tommies"; a tommy cooker was a World War I-era trench
stove). Fuel fires occasionally occurred, but such fires were far less common and less deadly than
ammunition fires.[101] In many cases, the fuel tank of the Sherman was found intact after a fire. Tankers
described "fierce, blinding jets of flame", which is inconsistent with gasoline-related fires.[100]
Upgrades
Upgrades included the rectangular armor patches protecting ammunition stowage mentioned above, and
smaller armor patches in front of each of the protruding hatchway structures in the glacis in an attempt to
mitigate their ballistic weakness. Field improvisations included placing sandbags, spare track links,
concrete, wire mesh, or even wood for increased protection against shaped-charge rounds. While mounting
sandbags around a tank had little effect against high-velocity anti-tank gunfire it was thought to provide
standoff protection against HEAT weapons, primarily the German Panzerfaust anti-tank grenade launcher
and the bazooka-derived Panzerschreck 88 mm calibre anti-tank rocket launcher. In the only study known to
have been done to test the use of sandbags, on March 9, 1945, officers of the 1st Armored Group tested
standard Panzerfaust 60s against sandbagged M4s; shots against the side blew away the sandbags and still
penetrated the side armor, whereas shots fired at an angle against the front plate blew away some of the
sandbags but failed to penetrate the armor. Earlier, in the summer of 1944, General Patton, informed by his
ordnance officers that sandbags were useless and that the machines' chassis suffered from the extra weight,
had forbidden the use of sandbags. Following the clamor for better armor and firepower after the losses of
the Battle of the Bulge, Patton ordered extra armor plates salvaged from knocked-out American and German
tanks welded to the turrets and hulls of tanks of his command. Approximately 36 of these up-armored M4s
were supplied to each of the three armored divisions of the Third Army in the spring of 1945.[104]
M4A3E2
The M4A3E2 Sherman "Jumbo" assault tank variant, based upon a standard M4A3(75)W hull, had an
additional 38 mm (1.5 in) plate welded to the glacis, giving a total thickness of 101.6 mm (4.0 in), which
resulted in a glacis of 148.97 mm (5.9 in) line-of-sight thickness, and over 180 mm (7.1 in) effective
thickness.[105] The sponson sides had 38 mm (1.5 in) thick plates welded on, to make them 76 mm (3.0 in)
thick. The transmission cover was significantly thicker, and a new, more massive T23-style turret with
177.8 mm (7.0 in) of armor on the sides and rear and a 25.4 mm (1 in) thick flat roof, and a gun mantlet with
an additional 88.9 mm (3.5 in) of armor welded on, which resulted in a thickness of 177.8 mm, was fitted. It
was originally to be armed with the 76 mm gun, but the 75 mm was preferred for infantry support and was
used. The higher weight required reducing maximum speed to 22 mph, and crews were warned not to let the
suspension "bottom" too violently. 254 were built at the Fisher Tank Arsenal from May to July 1944, and
arrived in Europe in the fall of 1944, being employed throughout the
remainder of the fighting in various roles. They were considered
"highly successful".[106]
Mobility
In its initial specifications for a replacement for the M3 medium
tank, the U.S. Army restricted the Sherman's height, width, and
weight so that it could be transported via typical bridges, roads,
railroads and landing craft without special accommodation. This
greatly aided the strategic, logistical, and tactical flexibility and
mobility of all Allied armored forces using the Sherman. A long-
distance service trial conducted in Britain in 1943 compared diesel
and gasoline Shermans to Cromwell tanks (Rolls-Royce Meteor
engine) and Centaur (Liberty L-12). The British officer commanding
the trial concluded "They are utterly reliable.....I do not think they Vertical volute springs of Stuart tank
are quite as good as the Cromwell across country when they are with similar suspension system
running on rather worn rubber tracks and the going is greasy, neither
does one get as smooth a ride, but they appear so infinitely superior
in every other way particularly in reliability with a minimum of maintenance that this cross-country
consideration is completely overweighed."[107]
The Sherman had good speed both on and off-road. Off-road performance varied. In the desert, the
Sherman's rubber-block tracks performed well, while in the confined, hilly terrain of Italy, the smaller, more
nimble Sherman could often cross terrain that some heavy German tanks could not.
On the southwestern front (Italy) reports on the cross country mobility of the Sherman have
been very favorable. The Sherman climbs mountains our tank experts consider inaccessible to
tanks. One great advantage is that the Sherman has a very powerful motor in proportion to its
weight. Its cross-country mobility on level ground is, as the 26th Panzer Division reports,
definitely superior to that of our tanks.[108]
However, while this may have held true compared with the first generation German tanks, such as the
Panzer III and Panzer IV, comparative testing with the second generation wide-tracked German tanks
(Panther and Tiger) conducted by the Germans at their Kummersdorf testing facility, as well as by the U.S.
2nd Armored Division, proved otherwise; partly from their use of the characteristic Schachtellaufwerk
interleaved and overlapped roadwheels (as used on pre-war origin German halftrack vehicles), especially
over muddy or other unfavorable terrain. Lieutenant Colonel Wilson M.
Hawkins of the 2nd Armored Division wrote the following comparing the
U.S. M4 Sherman and German Panther in a report to Allied headquarters:
U.S. crews found that on soft ground, such as mud or snow, the
narrow tracks gave poor (i.e., high) ground pressure compared to the
Panther and Tiger. The U.S. Army issued extended end connectors
("duckbills") to add width to the standard tracks as a stopgap
solution. Duckbills began to reach front-line tank battalions in fall
1944, but were original factory equipment for the heavy M4A3E2
Jumbo to compensate for the extra weight of armor. The
M4A3(76)W HVSS Shermans and other late models with wider-
tracked suspensions corrected these problems, but formed only a
small proportion of the tanks in service even in 1945.
U.S. variants
A Sherman with track widening
"duckbill" extended end connectors
Vehicles that used the M4 chassis or hull:
A later Canadian medium tank, produced from late 1943, was the Grizzly, an adaption of the Sherman
M4A1. This differed only in details, such as the CDP tracks, British radio equipment and the British 2"
smoke mortar in the turret roof. 188 were produced.[115]
After World War II, Shermans were supplied to some NATO armies; Shermans were used by U.S. and allied
forces in the Korean War.
Shermans also went to Israel.[116] The Israeli up-gunned 75 mm M-50 and 105 mm armed M-51 Super
Shermans are remarkable examples of how a long obsolete design can be upgraded for front-line use.[117]
They saw combat in the 1967 Six-Day War, fighting Soviet World War II-era armor like the T34/85, and
also in the 1973 Yom Kippur War, proving effective even against newer, heavier Soviet tanks like the T-54
and T-55.
Paraguay retired three Shermans from the Regimiento Escolta Presidencial (REP, Presidential Escort
Regiment) in 2018, which marked the end of service of the final Sherman tanks in use anywhere in the
world.[118]
Former operators
Argentina[119]
Bangladesh
Belgium (M4A3E4 Sherman was used)
Brazil[120] (80 M4, M4A1 Shermans received)
Canada
Chile
Cuba
Denmark (M4A3E4 Sherman suppled by USA)
Egypt
Ethiopia
Free France
France: 755
Greece
India
Iran
Israel
Italy (from post-WWII)
Indonesia (inherited from the Netherlands following independence in 1949)
Japan (from post-WWII; M4A3E8 Sherman supplied by the USA)
Lebanon
Mexico
Nazi Germany (as Beutepanzer,
captured vehicles)
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Pakistan (received M4A1E6 Shermans from USA)
Paraguay (retired in April 2018[121])
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal (M4A3E4 Shermans used)
People's Republic of China
Republic of China
South Africa
South Korea
Soviet Union 3,664.[112]
Sweden (for testing purposes only)
Syria (one turretless M4A1 Sherman)
Uganda[122]
Turkey (34 delivered in January 1945)[123]
United Kingdom 17,181.[110]
United States (Retired in 1957)
Yugoslavia (599 M4A3E4 Shermans received during the Informbiro period)[124]
See also
SCR-508
Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant
List of land vehicles of the U.S. Armed Forces
Vickers Tank Periscope MK.IV
Allied technological cooperation during World War II
G-numbers
M50 Super Sherman
Rhino tank
References
Notes
1. Also known by the British service names "Grant" and "Lee".
2. An Army Ground Forces policy statement of November 1943 concluded thus: "The
recommendation of a limited proportion of tanks carrying a 90 mm gun is not concurred in for
the following reasons: The M4 tank has been hailed widely as the best tank of the battlefield
today ... There appears to be no fear on the part of our forces of the German Mark VI (Tiger)
tank. There can be no basis for the T26 tank other than the conception of a tank-vs.-tank duel-
which is believed to be unsound and unnecessary."[10]
3. By 1944, a typical U.S. infantry division had attached for armor support an M4 Sherman
battalion, a tank destroyer battalion, or both.
Citations
1. Army Service Forces Catalog ORD 5-3-1, dated 9 August 1945
2. Zaloga (Armored Thunderbolt) p. 57
3. Conners, Chris (2000–2013). "Medium Tank M4A1 Sherman" (http://afvdb.50megs.com/usa/m
4sherman.html). Retrieved 9 January 2014.
4. Berndt, p. 195
5. Zaloga 1993, p. 19
6. Zaloga, Stephen J. Panther vs Sherman: Battle of the Bulge 1944. Osprey Publishing, 2009, p.
28.
7. Axe, David War Is Boring (April 30, 2019). "Armored Coffin: The M-4 Sherman Tank Was Hell
on Wheels" (https://www.yahoo.com/news/armored-coffin-m-4-sherman-120000452.html). The
National Interest. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
8. Walter S. Dunn, Jr (2007). Stalin's Keys to Victory: The Rebirth of the Red Army (https://books.
google.com/books?id=JE7Yd2sNBu4C&lpg=PA92&dq=%22T-34%22%20June%201941&pg=P
A34#v=onepage&q=%22T-34%22&f=false). Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-
0-8117-3423-3.
9. Luck, Hans (2013). Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck. Dell.
p. Paragraph 6.75.
10. AGF policy statement. Chief of staff AGF. November 1943. MHI
11. Zaloga, Steven (2008). Panther vs. Sherman: Battle of the Bulge 1944. Osprey Publishing Ltd.
p. 72. ISBN 9781846032929.
12. Doyle, Hilary; Zaloga, Steven. "Operation Think Tank Part 4" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=jgcM2uLUrxA&t=14m35s). YouTube/. Wargaming.net. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
13. "Tank Tactics: From Normandy to Lorraine" by Roman Jarymowycz
14. Hunnicutt 1978
15. British War Production by Michael Postan (1952) p. 245
16. Canavan, Michael J., Opening Salvo: M4A1 Sherman Tank (http://www.wizards.com/default.as
p?x=ah/article/ah20050729b), Avalon Hill / Wizards.com
17. War Department (22 May 1941). FM 100–5, Field Service Regulations, Operations (http://www.
ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/ref/FM/FM100-5/index.html) (reprint). Washington, DC: GPO.
OCLC 49969146 (https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49969146). Retrieved 5 September 2013.
18. FM 17–33 (http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/ref/FM/PDFs/FM17-33.PDF) (PDF)
19. FM 100-5, Paragraph 680 and 685, 1941
20. Tank Tactics: From Normandy to Lorraine by Roman Jarymowycz, Ch. 5 "Creating North
American Panzer Armies"
21. Fletcher p93
22. "M4A1 Tank Medium (E1955.32)" (http://www.tankmuseum.org/museum-online/vehicles/object
-e1955-32). The Tank Museum. Retrieved 10 August 2017.
23. Zaloga (Armored Thunderbolt) p. 24, 301
24. Zaloga (Armored Thunderbolt) pp. 22, 24, 28
25. Zaloga (Armored Thunderbolt) p. 24
26. Berndt, Thomas. Standard Catalog of U.S. Military Vehicles (Krause Publications, 1993), pp.
192–93.
27. Berndt, pp. 192–93.
28. Berndt, pp. 190, 192–93.
29. Siemers, Cary (2014). "United States' M4 medium tank production, Sherman" (https://web.arch
ive.org/web/20150404211640/http://www.wwiivehicles.com/united-states/vehicle/medium-tank/
m4-medium-tank-production.asp). wwiivehicles.com. Archived from the original (http://www.ww
iivehicles.com/united-states/vehicle/medium-tank/m4-medium-tank-production.asp) on 4 April
2015. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
30. http://the.shadock.free.fr/sherman_minutia/data/sherman_production.html}
31. Whitman, Jeremy (7 October 2015). "Fisher Body Tank Plant" (https://ss.sites.mtu.edu/mhugl/2
015/10/07/fisher-body-plant/). Military History of the Great Lakes. Michigan Technological
University. Retrieved 1 May 2019. "Built From the ground up to accommodate the growing
need for tank production in the United states during World War II, it became one of the most
important but understated production facilities in the United States"
32. Zaloga, Armored Thunderbolt, p. 332
33. Zaloga, Armored Thunderbolt, p. 57
34. Hunnicutt p. 166
35. Hunnicutt p174
36. Hunnicutt pp. 175—76
37. Hunnicutt p. 178
38. Лоза Дмитрий Федорович – Я Помню. Герои Великой Отечественной войны. Участники
ВОВ. (http://www.iremember.ru/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=85&Itemid=19)
in Russian.
39. Lend-Lease Shipments: World War II (https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/ref/LL-Ship/LL-Shi
p-3A.html), Section IIIB, Published by Office, Chief of Finance, War Department, 31 December
1946, p. 8. (https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/ref/LL-Ship/LL-Ship-3A.html)
40. Zaloga, Steven (20 April 2003). M4 (76mm) Sherman Medium Tank 1943–65 (https://books.go
ogle.com/books?id=NbmtnAc8lCcC&pg=PT23&lpg=PT23&dq=sherman+soviet#v=onepage&q
=sherman%20soviet&f=false). p. 37. ISBN 9781841765426.
41. "IRemember.ru – Memories of veterans of the Great Patriotic War – Dmitriy Loza" (https://irem
ember.ru/en/memoirs/tankers/dmitriy-loza/). IRemember.ru. Ministry of Telecom and Mass
Communications of the Russian Federation. 21 September 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
"Dmitriy Fedorovich, on which American tanks did you fight?..."On Shermans. We called them
"Emchas", from M4 [in Russian, em chetyrye]. Initially they had the short main gun, and later
they began to arrive with the long gun and muzzle brake. On the front slope armor there was a
travel lock for securing the barrel during road marches. The main gun was quite long. Overall,
this was a good vehicle but, as with any tank, it had its pluses and minuses. When someone
says to me that this was a bad tank, I respond, "Excuse me!" One cannot say that this was a
bad tank. Bad as compared to what?""
42. Loza, Dimitri (21 September 2010). "IRemember.ru WW II Memoirs" (https://iremember.ru/en/
memoirs/tankers/dmitriy-loza/). iremember.ru/en. IRemember. Retrieved 13 June 2017. "Still
one great plus of the Sherman was in the charging of its batteries. On our T-34 it was
necessary to run the engine, all 500 horsepower of it, in order to charge batteries. In the crew
compartment of the Sherman was an auxiliary gasoline engine, small like a motorcycle's one.
Start it up and it charged the batteries. This was a big deal to us!"
43. Zaloga (Armored Thunderbolt) p. 301
44. Zaloga (Japanese Tanks) p. 37
45. Zaloga, pp. 15, 33
46. Zaloga, p. 40
47. Zaloga, p. 34
48. Zaloga, Stephen Japanese Tanks 1939–45 (https://books.google.com/books?id=nbwZvfSPLT
MC&pg=PA21) pp. 21–22
49. Zaloga, Armored Thunderbolt, "Bunker Blasters" p. 215–17, 318 caption.
50. Zaloga (M3/M5 Stuart) p. 35, "tank guns could not penetrate bunkers"
51. Zaloga, Stephen (2001). M26/M46 Pershing Tank 1943–53. City: Osprey Publishing (UK).
ISBN 1-84176-202-4.
52. Zaloga, Stephen. T-34-85 vs M26 Pershing: Korea 1950. Osprey Publishing (UK), 2010. pp.
74–77. ISBN 978-1-84603-990-4
53. Manasherob, Robert (2010). Lion and Lioness of the Line Volume 5. SabIngaMartin
Publications. pp. 5–6, 26. ISBN 978-0984143726.
54. Manasherob, Robert (2013). Lion and Lioness of the Line Volume 12. SabIngaMartin
Publications. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-0-9841437-8-8.
55. Zaloga, Steven. Armour of the Middle East Wars 1948-1978. Vanguard 19. London: Osprey,
1981. pp. 12–24. ISBN 0 85045 388 7
56. "M4A3 Sherman: Sejarah Tank Pertama Korps Marinir TNI AL" (http://www.indomiliter.com/m4
a3-sherman-sejarah-tank-pertama-korps-marinir-tni-al/). Indomiliter/. Indomiliter.com.
Retrieved 7 January 2016.
57. Hunnicutt p. 198
58. Hunnicutt pp. 208-210
59. Bird, Lorrin Rexford; Livingston, Robert D. (2001). WWII Ballistics: Armor and Gunnery.
Overmatch Press. pp. 62–63.
60. Zaloga 2008, p. 94-97
61. Zaloga pp. 106–08, 115–16
62. Zaloga 2008, pp. 126–30
63. Zaloga pp. 115–16
64. Zaloga, Steven (2003). M4 (76mm) Sherman Tank 1943–65. Osprey Publishing, Ltd. pp. 10–
11. ISBN 1841765422.
65. Zaloga 129–131
66. Zaloga 2008. p. 93
67. Zaloga 2008, pp. 166, 193
68. World War II Ballistics: Armor and Gunnery. Albany NY: Overmatch Press. 2001.
69. Zaloga 2008 pp. 124–25
70. Tigerfibel supplements (http://paijmans.net/Tanks/Tigerfibel/ShermanChart.jpg)
71. Tank Tactics: From Normandy to Lorraine by Roman Jarymowycz, Ch. 13 "'Who killed Tiger?'
The Great Scandal"
72. "12th Army Group, Report of Operations (Final After Action Report)" Vol. XI, Wiesbaden,
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1/The_Chieftains_Hatch_Firefly3/). World of Tanks. Wargaming.net. Retrieved 28 October
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75. Zaloga 2008, pp. 194–95
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79. Zaloga 2008, pp. 268–69
80. Zaloga 2008, pp. 276–77
81. Zaloga 2008, "McNair's Folly" pp. 72–77
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19-20. ISBN 978-1-84603-990-4
84. Zaloga 2008, pp. 120–25, 287
85. "Ohio State Engineer", vol 28 number 4 (March 1945) pp. 10–11, 23.
86. "M4 Sherman at War" by Michael Green, James D. Brown, Zenith Press; 1st edition (February
15, 2007), pp. 87–88.
87. Zaloga 2008 p. 182
88. Schneider 2004, p. 303
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18Nov44.pdf) (PDF). Retrieved 18 June 2016.
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92. Reid, p. 215
93. Hart, p. 27
94. Buckley, p. 110
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96. Jentz, Thomas. Tiger I Heavy Tank 1942–45. Osprey Publishing. p. 19.
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01. Zaloga (2008), pp. 116–18
02. Buckley p. 128
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External links
The Sherman Tank Site (http://www.theshermantank.com/)
Interview with Soviet Tanker Dmitriy Loza detailing the comparative utility of Shermans in the
6th Guards Tank Army (https://web.archive.org/web/20130210153124/http://english.iremembe
r.ru/tankers/17-dmitriy-loza.html) at www.iremember.ru
Please don’t use the “5 M4s = 1 Panther” myth. (http://ftr.wot-news.com/2013/07/28/please-do
nt-use-the-5-m4s-1-panther-myth/)
U.S. 75mm M61 Tank Round – World War II (http://www.inert-ord.net/usa03a/usa5/75mm/inde
x.html)
M4 Sherman Photos and Walk Arounds on Prime Portal (http://www.primeportal.net/apc/m4_s
herman.htm)
Sherman Register (http://web.inter.nl.net/users/spoelstra/g104/)
OnWar (https://web.archive.org/web/20170810133124/https://www.onwar.com/weapons/afv/da
ta/fm4.htm)
AFV Database (http://afvdb.50megs.com/usa/m4sherman.html)
World War II vehicles (https://web.archive.org/web/20080226192106/http://www.wwiivehicles.c
om/usa/tanks-medium/m4.asp)
israeli-weapons.com (https://web.archive.org/web/20060512130147/http://www.israeli-weapon
s.com/weapons/vehicles/tanks/sherman/Sherman.html)
About.com Military History (http://militaryhistory.about.com/od/vehiclesarmor/p/M4Sherman.ht
m)
M4 Sherman (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fKrjMMQkLE)
M42B1 Sherman (http://www.memorialmuseum.org/displays/tanks/item/m42b1-sherman-flame
thrower-tank-2) at U.S. Veterans Memorial Museum
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