Hanny
Posts: 422
Joined: 7/5/2011 Status: offline
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Well the circus is back in town, lets see what antics the clown gets up to. viewer discretion is advised as this performance is not suitable for young children, there will be strong language, and frequent piss taking. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Hanky and Morvael both subscribe to the ridiculous proposition that you need to have half your transport convoy composed of fuel trucks to go long distances. This is their justification for the drop in supply delivered after 10 hexes. Your fact free ignorant opinion. V what the maths shows, and the historical record contains. Everyone has an opinion, not all opinions are equal, yours is less equal than almost all others. Halder tells us for AGC in July 13000 tons of supply required daily, but only 6500 arrived at the rail heads, of that 5000 or so makes it to the Divisions requiring it each day. Based on how many trucks are left according to Halder. Supply branch of the OKH warned Brauchitsch, Halder and Bock 'if the intensity of fighting and the operational rhythm was to be similar to that of the summer campaign, the supply system would be able to cover a bit over 50% of AGC's needs for a space of time of two weeks. More than that, and the system would collapse and the it would be able to deliver just between 10-20% of the total load of supplies needed'. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown First the Germans SET UP PETROL STATIONS. Incorrect. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Second they had petrol tanker convoys Correct but are subject to the limits imposed by reality. Already given you the maths of Mot/Pzr Div resupply Halder diary gives us the data so we know that in reality the fuel demand was always higher than the capacity to deliver it, and that after 300klm, the amount of logistics reaching those consuming it would be in the 15-20% range. Just as shown in the pre war logistical planning. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Third they could use Russian fuel. They could, and on 6th July 41 Schwepenburg reported what the effects of doing so were, 30 Pzr III and 4 Pzr 4 total write offs when using captured fuel. Every, every, author on this is clear, soviet fuel was to low powered for German use. We know this because Halder in the pre war logistics planning notes there cannot be use of captured fuel, and only in 42 did they complete the installations to add benzol to captured fuel for use. Here: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=KeDvCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT49&lpg=PT49&dq=captured+soviet+petrol&source=bl&ots=jdQlXgffK8&sig=ACfU3U3G6x43GLQFyac8CdCUggLu7hTKmQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjxsum1z53lAhWwQEEAHUbdChkQ6AEwDHoECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=captured%20soviet%20petrol&f=false Here: https://www.joelhayward.org/Hitlers-Quest-Finished.pdf Moreover, during the eastern campaign German units were unable to utilize captured fuel, as they had during the campaigns of 1939 and 1940. This was because the octane content of Soviet petrol was too low for German vehicles. It could only be used after the addition of benzol in complex installations constructed specifically for that task. Here: https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/35463983.pdf Moreover, during the eastern campaign German units were unable to utilize captured fuel, as they had during the campaigns of 1939 and 1940. This was because the octane content of Soviet petrol was too low for German vehicles. It could only be used after the addition of benzol in complex installations constructed specifically for that task.46 The oil situation of the eastern armies soon became desperate. For example, on 6 September 1941 Hitler issued War Directive 35, which outlined Operation Taifun, the resumption of the offensive against Moscow.47 Five days later, Generaloberst Franz Halder, the German Army Chief of Staff, recorded in his war diary that the eastern forces needed 27 train loads of fuel per day throughout the rest of September and 29 per day throughout the entire following month if they were to carry out successfully the new offensive.48 However, wrote Halder, the High Command of the Armed Forces (OKW)argued that it could not supply this enormous quantity of fuel. It could supply only 22 trainload daily for the period to 16 September and, whilst it could provide the required 27 trainload per day for the last two weeks of that month, it could supply only 22 per day (less than 75 per cent of those required) for the whole of October. For the month of l\November, when the daily requirements were estimated to be 20 trainload, the OKW believed that only three (or 15 per cent of the required level) could be supplied each day.49 As it turned out, the OKW failed to supply even these lower quantities to the eastern forces. Here:https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=k-bubnhoueEC&pg=PA134&lpg=PA134&dq=captured+fuel+east+front+stahel&source=bl&ots=ysE811zMl2&sig=ACfU3U0qpj-JHeZdDUUmrD3XiaIX3b9xvQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj7_ZCJ8Z3lAhWSbsAKHX2JBxA4ChDoATADegQIBxAB#v=onepage&q=petrol&f=false quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Some of the German trucks used diesel, these trucks could happily run on captured Russian diesel of which I'm sure they captured plenty. June 41, German diesel allocation for EF, 50,000 gallons, total consumed, 38000 tons, by the just under 20,000 diesel MT on EF, Germany had no diesel shortage on EF, it barely had any diesel trucks either. More deflection as its not relavent, "but about as relevant as the temperature on Mars" is how you put it. Note your still incapable of using the forum quote function. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown KB70 and B70 is Russian fuel for their aircraft and light tanks, the Russians had a lot of both. 70 is the octane rating. The German army ran on 70-74 octane so this fuel CAN be pumped straight into the German vehicles. Nope, B70 is soviet AVgas. 70 is the rich octane number, SU always uses the rich octane value. 7-74 is the lean Octane value for German B3 You used caps for the word can, its considerd bad manners to do this on the net, as its shouting, and is the resort/retort of the inarticulate who have run out of argument. You do it all the time. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown all mogas had a far lower octane level than western European engines could run on and required additives to bring the octane level up high enough to use in engines. Using the word all makes this a bald faced LIE because KB70 and B70 are the same octane level as German fuel. It can be pumped straight into a German engine. Only if you intend to destroy them. Neither are the same octane rating as each other. liars, and you are one such, expect to be lied to and act/think accordingly. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Hanky also says German MTV and Russian MTV used different grades of fuel, they were not interchangeable, each destroys the others engines. In Russia you cant use captured fuel stocks until its been converted to the same fuel grade. Wrong again Hanky, German MTV and Russian light tanks used the SAME grade of fuel, KB70 and B70. So another bald faced LIE. I am?, so is every author, and so is Halder who explained that no fuel could be used until benzol was added to it to bring its octane level up. For the simple reason they are not even close to being the same grade of octane. Its rather simple, you post about ww2 but have no ****ing clue about ww2. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown You CAN put low octane gas (Russian) in a high octane engine (German) the engine loses power and the fuel can ignite early giving knocking but it still runs. It doesn't necessarily destroy the engine. This depends on how different the ideal and actual octane levels are and the engine itself. Don't forget an engine will run just fine on a quite wide range of fuel octane levels Only if you intending to destroy the engine. Your modern car auto shuts down preventing ignition if the wrong fuel is inserted, on idle with B70 in a Panzer, you have major engine rebuild after 90 seconds, if the accelerator is used, its a scrapper within minutes. MT going into Austria in the Anschluss lost 40% to major engine overhauls to single digit octane difference between German and Austrian petrol. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown And here's something I found very interesting from Van Creveld no less. https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?t=209233 Fuel consumption by both armoured groups was very high, but could be met because that of ammunition was correspondingly low, and because Panzergruppe 2 made a TIMELY DISCOVERY OF A LARGE RUSSIAN RESEVIOUR near Baranovichi. Crvald page 150, using Halders explanation of why no use of fuel was made in the planning of the campaign. "Nor was there much hope of utilizing captured fuel, for Russian petrol had a low octane content, and could only be used by German vehicles after the addition of benzol in specially-constructed installations". What is crevald referring to?, when he mentions Guderian use of captured fuel?.https://www.scmglobe.com/battle-smolensk-1941-invasion-russia/ Its the stocks of AVGas B78 in the Air fuel depot, refined at the intact captured refinery at Baranovich, one of 5 in the whole SU who in total produced 40,600 gallons of B78 to fuel the most modern of the SU fighters. Guderian is low on fuel, cannot advance and asks for team of petro chemist to be flown in from IG Farben, to see if the AVgas B 78 can be modified for MOgas use, the reports/findings are at fishertroppe archive, they blended, running it through the refinery, German B3 with SU B78 and got on a 4 to 1 ratio and thus increased Guderians fuel stocks, allowing him to continue. Engineers then worked out how much benzol ( blending B70 was a no go cording to the petro chemists) to add to B70 and set in motion the creation of installations to refine captured SU fuels on the eastern front. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Hanky note this is in JUNE 41. In the game the Germans cannot find any large Russian reservoirs near anywhere. But here we have an example of a whole Panzergruppe finding enough RUSSIAN FUEL to run on. I take note note of your ignorance of the meaning of the quote, i take not note of your ignorance of what Crevald wrote of the use of captured AVgas. Again with the caps, to draw attention to your ignorance of the events being refereed to. There were 195 SU refanaries in June 41, producing 883,600 tons AVgas, 3.477 million tons of Mogas, in the 12 months leading up to war. At the start of the war, the Red Army Fuel Service had 247 fixed storage facilities and fuelling stations. 90% of the Red Armys fuel stores were located in the border military districts. Seventy-three fixed tank farms with a storage capacity of 171,000 m3 were lost in just the first month of military operations. Germany had a large captured stock of AvGas and Mogas by end of the first month, the tonnage of captured B78 it could blend was insignificant. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Oh and just a point on etiquette for you Hanky here's something you said, Soviet account: from "Technical Support of Armoured Forces in the Vistula-Oder Operation" is that they could not use captured enemy fuel dumps until they had been tested for octane rating, water contamination, type of fuel, etc which was done by the Army laboratory but took some time to find out if the fuel was usable. ' You lifted this word for word straight out of https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?t=226225 with no acknowledgement that you lifted it from that article and the whole thing should be in quotes not just the title, that plagiarism my friend. You presented this as though you had read the reference and they were you words, but you copied it. So what other stuff have you made up? seems you are a liar and a thief. or maybe a just leave it at lying thief. For a poster who is offensive in the extreme to anyone who points out the errors in your posts content, who failed to follow board rules and got banned, your in no position to give points of etiquette or how to behave. I wrote: German MTV and Russian MTV used different grades of fuel, they were not interchangeable, each destroys the others engines. Unlike in France where the Heer simply topped up from French petrol stations, who used the same form of fuel, and went on, in Russia you cant use captured fuel stocks until its been converted to the same fuel grade. Its also common sense that the average German Div did not have an refinery in its TOE to convert soviet fuel for use. You claim i was a lair, denied there were 4 SU fuels, i pointed out the links you used show that to be the case, and you should read them, i linked you to a book using the same, (Technical Support of Armoured Forces in the Vistula-Oder Operation, lieutenant general Milovskiy, 6.41 to 5.45, from the soviet QM reports, and is the original wartime source) you just again linked to a thread that again explains that to be the case and refers back to the origibnalm source, Now you dont like any of that, and claim its plagiarism. this is called deflection, and is the resort of the inherently dishonest when faced with the facts they refuse to face. You do it all the time. quote:
ORIGINAL: chuckles the clown Shalkai I looked at your links but I still cannot understand how to fix more that 6 railway hexes a turn to get to Jelgava in two turns. Can you explain how that is done? Not sure whats more pathetic, your inept incompetent attempt to play the game, arising from ignorance of the rules that govern supply, or your imbecility. Btw when people go out of there way to help you, you have instead of thanking them, insulted them. My last post to you ****wit.
< Message edited by Hanny -- 10/15/2019 10:13:45 AM >
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