In the book "The Sharp End" The Fighting man in WWII is an interview of a British Churchill Tank commander about fighting Panthers and Tigers:
"What do the Germans have most of?
Panthers. The Panther can slice through a Churchill like butter from a mile away.
And how does a Churchill get a Panther?
It creeps up on it. When it reaches close quarters, the gunner tries to bounce a shot off the underside of the Panther's gun mantle. If he's lucky, it goes through the piece of thin armor above the driver's head.
Has anyone ever done it?
Yes, Davis in "C" Squadron. He's back with headquarters now trying to recover his nerve.
What's next on the list?
Tigers. The Tiger can get you from a mile and a half.
And how does a Churchill get a Tiger?
***'s supposed to get within 200 yards and put a shot through the periscope.
Has anyone ever done it?
No.
Not mentioned if it was the 6 pounder (57mm cannon) or the 75 mm cannon version of the Churchill. Later it talks about the Churchill when shot would catch fire 3 out of 5 times and take about 10 seconds for the flames to sweep through the entire tank. It then says the Sherman caught fire every time, and flames swept through in about 3 seconds, and the Germans called the Sherman "Tommy cookers" while supposedly the Allies called the Sherman "Ronson" burners. This came from the Ronson add that their product "light the first time".
Still there were way more Sherman's than Panters or Tigers and the fact that the Allies had almost complete air superiority and P47's and Mustangs over almost all advances saved lots of tank crews. John
That sounds like an extremely creative piece of writing. Tank to tank kills at a mile or a mile and a half were a small part of anybody's worries until the computer age. I think many people underrate the difference when similar-sounding guns are run by stationary artillery with spirit-levels and mechanical calculating devices. Let alone a warship, with people sitting around a table of dials below the waterling, factoring in everything there is.
The Churchill was conceived as an infantry support tank, on the basis that war in France just might be like WWI. It was intended to flatten wire, cross trenches and tackle strongpoints improvised or not, in field-fortifications, or to be a strongpoint. It wasn't intended for armour against armour comb at all.
It started out with a even more pitiful 2-pounder gun, but the 6-pounder was considered adequate for its purpose, and the small turret helped to permit armour exceptional for its period. It was very difficult to put out of action by anti-tank guns, and would stand considerable damage to the suspension without being immobilised. Its original speed of 12mph declined somewhat with the Mk VII, which was actually more heavily armoured than the Tiger 1. Slowness increased its vulnerability, and from some angles lack of slope did. But I can't see it being worse off than the T-34, with less than half the thickness It shared the danger of any gasoline-fuelled tank, but did have side escape hatches between the upper and lower paths of the tracks. It was also capable of crossing steeper terrain obstacles than most main battle tanks of the war. Much is made of the Churchills' difficulty in crossing a steep gravel beach in the Dieppe Raid, but I think most would have done at least as badly.
The summer of 1940 probably strengthened faith in the Churchill, since the danger of invasion was the major preoccupation, and the Germans had no means of importing many main battle tanks until a port had been taken. By the time production began it had dawned on people what blitzkrieg could be, and consideration was given to discontinuing Churchill production. Besides, the need for armour was too pressing to temporarily immobilise a production line by switching to something else. But uses continued to be found for it, notably at El Alamein, resulting in a continuation of production, and in the bocage country of Normandy.
It is safe to say that Churchills were less in demand than other large tanks, resulting in the wide variety of recovery, mine-clearing and bridging vehicles built on the Churchill chassis.
A point often forgotten about the Sherman is that the decision to rely so heavily on them was made when it was impossible to ship them directly from the US to the continent of Europe, and it was uncertain how that might change after invasion. I believe even the wide-bodied Churchill could be transported by rail to the ports by certain routes. But in general, British railways were built when mid-Victorians took a guess at how wide to make the tunnels. Continental railways mostly had (and have) a slightly wider loading gauge, but not by much. The narrow-bodied Sherman is probably the last main battle tank of anybody's to be transportable just about anywhere by train. Both versions of the Tiger were occasionally transportable by rail in fighting order, on slected pieces of line. But they more often required to have their narrow transportation tracks changed.
Many people forget to remember than the British produced what is surely the best tank design of WW2, the Centurion. Credit for it would be greater if it had gone into production before November 1945. But ordering 800 surely does count as shaking off post-war inertia, parsimony and euphoria.
I do know a railway bridge near my home where the stonework is still patched with brick after a Churchill was stuck there for several days. The road is wide enough for two-way traffic, so I think it tried to cut the corner too sharply, lifting one track off the ground, and they left it there till the bridge could be shored up.