It would also easily get stuck in mud, and the transmission would break if a rock got kicked up into the undercarriage, which happened a lot, and couldn't be repaired in the field - unlike Allied tanks, where the transmission could be easily replaced!
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It was too heavy to cross most bridges, which meant any army group containing tigers was severely restricted in its strategic mobility, and it ran out of gas quickly, meaning it needed constant access to refueling to keep operating.
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And on top of all that, it was horrifically expensive to make! Even compared to its performance under ideal conditions, the very thing that leads people to mistakenly rate it so high!
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Only something like 60% of Tigers produced ever actually made it to the battlefield, so many broke down outside it.
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Replying to @SableCat2 @lisaquestions
Hitler's childlike obsession with "secret weapons", although it's one of the things that annoyingly endears the Nazis to wargaming nerds, obviously helped waste their money and lose them the war And is very similar to Trump's childlike glee at the "invisible" F-35
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People like to speculate on unlikely scenarios if everything had gone perfectly for the Nazis and their experiments had paid off - "What if they'd made the first guided missile submarine? What if they'd fielded the first jet fighter air force?"
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The classic LucasArts flight sim Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe was based on the latter scenario (and the Star Wars game TIE Fighter loosely based on that), this movie fantasy of an ultimate strike bomber letting one Knight of the Air win the war by himself
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It leaves a bad taste in my mouth having been a fan of that stuff as a kid But I mean you don't have to worry, Göring was too stupid not to get anyone who would've been competent enough to volunteer for such a role pointlessly killed (which is the plot of TIE Fighter)
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And then, of course, Hitler, being such a fan of his high-tech toys, couldn't stop himself from meddling in them, trying to turn the Me-262 into a bomber and the like
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Yeah the manual of SWotL makes it clear that if the jet planes had any ability to turn the tide of the war it would've been as *fighters*, to shoot down the enemy's bombers, not as a bomber itself Because, you know, at that point they were losing and playing defense
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But Hitler was extremely reluctant to do anything to beef up the Luftwaffe's air-to-air combat capacity even though it was there where their pilots had the most advantage and it was obviously the smart play Because playing defense is for pussies
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Radlein and
He was lost in his schoolboy fantasy of his ultimate strike bomber ending the war instantly by flying off on its own to blow up London or something because he didn't grasp that longer range didn't mean infinite range
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Radlein and
And that the ultimate bomber was never going to get an ultimate bomb to carry because he'd sent away all the German scientists who knew the first thing about how to build an A-bomb, for being Jewish
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