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FV4005 Stage II (Realistic Version)

6,474 Zharapparbyell  4.3 years ago

This is a new more realistic and more detailed version of the FV 4005 Stage II. I love this project and wanted to make it better, here is some of the new content:

ATTENTION:

THIS VERSION IS NOT MOBILE FRIENDLY, here is a mobile friendly version “light” version of the FV4005

NEW:

-MORE details
-Made the interior of the turret and you can see it (Read “Controls” to see how)
-Now the tank can move backwards too. (Read “controls” to see how)
-Crew added; Ammo and propellant stowage added; Gun Breach Added;
-Recoil Spade working better (now it can stop the tank going forwards and backwards more faster)
-Gun Support working better (it is moving faster)
-More realistic recoil (with the new cannon it was easy)
-Paint more close to reality (not like the model in the museum)
-More Realistic Gameplay (speed decreased; now it can move backwards and change the angles of movement to the exact same of the specifications)
-Extremely close to actual specifications (make it even closer)

BUG REMOVED:

-Tank explodes when trying to shoot the cannon
-Machine Gun can shoot the hull and destroy the tank
-Cannon barrel explodes when trying to shoot
-Gun Support Get Tangled
-Recoil Spade Takes too long to raise

CONTROLS:

AG1: Activate G1 will lower the Gun Support and let you movement the Turret and the Gun (Move the gun using WASD or able the mouse as Joystick)
AG2 + VTOL Activate G2 and place VTOL up to lower the recoil spade. To raise back just activate it again and place VTOL 0.
AG3 + VTOL: Activate G3 and raise the VTOL control to open the back turret door, you can see all the crew
AG8: If you disable G8 it will turn off the engine and the lights.
Throttle: Accelerate (I recommend using only 10-15% of the force on flat terrain, use more if you need to climb steep hills, the speed won’t change).
Brake: Go backwards (The only wat of stop completely the tank is using the Recoil Spade
Yaw: Turn the tank. (Q;E)
Roll: Horizontal Axis (Turret)(A;D)
Pitch: Vertical Axis (Cannon) (W;S) (Enable the mouse as Joystick for easy movement).
R (x2) + Alt (by default): Fire the main armament
Fire Guns: Fire coaxial machine gun.
Cockpit View: Commander / Gunner View.
Cam 1: Driver View.

GIF:

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NEW SPECIFICATIONS

Dimensions (L-W-H) 7.82 (without gun) x 3.39 x 3.6 m
(25’7? x 11’1? x 11’8”)
Total weight 60 tons
Crew 5 (driver, gunner, commander, x2 loaders)
Propulsion Rolls-Royce Meteor; 5-speed Merrit-Brown Z51R Mk. F gearbox 650 hp (480 kW), later BL 60, 695 bhp
Speed (road) Apx. 30 km/h (19 mph)
Armament QF 183 mm (7.2 in) L4 Tank Gun
.30 Cal. (7.62 mm) machine gun.
Gun Angles +15/-7º
Turret Angles +/- 45º
Ammunition 12 (Increased to 30 for better gameplay)
Armor 120 mm frontal hull armor. Turret 14mm all over.

ATTENTION:

The paragraphs below contain the history of the FV4005 Stage II and are exactly the same as the description of the “light” version of the FV4005 made by me, the above information is sufficient to know how to control the tank.

HISTORY:

During the development phase of the FV215B, another project was done on the Centurion. Labeled the FV4005, it was an attempt to mount the 183 mm on the Centurion hull. The design phase is distinctive in two parts, Stage I and II. Stage I had the gun mounted on an open-topped hull. The gun had a concentric recoil system and an auto-loader. Stage II had the gun encased in a lightly armoured, splinter-proof turret with a conventional recoil system and manual loading. Though a single prototype was made for testing, the project never passed basic feasibility. In August 1957, the project was abandoned as well. The lone prototype is currently stationed outside at Bovington Tank Museum.
Despite being an extremely prominent target, the turret armor was only 14 mm (0.55 in) at its thickest. This was easily penetrable even by large caliber machine guns rounds. It also only had enough space to store 12 rounds . These rounds were stored in racks of 6 on each side of the large bustle.
The turret housed 4-5 crew members. These were the commander on the forward left, gunner on the front right and 2 loaders positioned behind the gun. On the left of the gun, in a small box on the cheek, was a coaxial .30 cal machine gun. This was most likely used for ranging rather offensive/defensive fire. There was a large door in the rear of the turret bustle for crew access and ammunition re-supply. The driver was located in the standard position in the hull
It should be noted that the lack of armor was intentional. This vehicle was designed to engage at long-range, shoot and re-position. Flexibility was slightly hampered by the turret, however. In theory, it was fully traversable. On uneven ground, this was not recommended due to balancing issues with the gun. As such, the vehicle only really had a 90 degrees arc of fire to the left and right.
In 1950, work started on the Ordnance Quick Firing 183 mm (7.2 in) L4 gun. At the time, it was the largest and most powerful tank gun in the world. The cannon was based on the 183 mm (7.2 in) BL 7.2 inch howitzer, a WWI era weapon. The gun itself weighed a mighty 4 tons and when fired it produced the equivalent of 87 tons of recoil force. The L4 was designed to be chambered for only one type of ammunition, HESH (High Explosive Squashed Head). It was separately loading ammunition. The projectile was loaded first followed by the correct propulsion cartridge. Each shell weighed a combined total of 104.8 kg. A shell of this size understandably produced a substantial amount of fumes and smoke inside of the fighting compartment. As such, a large fume extractor was added to the barrel, a relatively new feature at the time. The L4 was expected to have a rate of fire of 6 rounds per minute, as such, the gun would
require 2 loaders to service the weapon effectively, but it didn’t work like expected , in practice the reload time took from 45 to 30 seconds.
The 183 mm was tested in live fire trials against a Centurion and a Conqueror. In 2 shots, the 183 blew the turret clean off the Centurion and split the mantlet of the Conqueror in half. In total, the gun fired 150 shells.
The FV4005 Stage II is the only one of these 183mm armed vehicles to survive to this day. The turret is original, but it was mounted on a spare Mk.VIII Centurion hull, not the original it was trialed with. It is missing the recoil spade and travel lock. This “Cut-and-Shunt” representation of the vehicle now sits as a “gate-guardian” at The Tank Museum, Bovington, alongside an M4 Sherman. Its predecessor, the FV4004 Conway is safe and sound in the VCC (Vehicle Conservation Center) at the site.

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The FV 4005 as it stands today outside the Bovington Tank Museum

OBSERVATIONS:

Again, I decided to change some features so you have a more realistic experience when you play. I decreased the number of rounds from 200 to 30, I also decreased the top speed to 18 mph (the light version is faster (40mph)), and decreased the reload time to 5 seconds (I know nobody will wait the 30 seconds).
I tried to be as faithful as possible to the model, even in the insides, I apologize if I leave something important out or if I did something wrong. This time I used the correct models.

light version FV4005 Stage II

I think that’s all, I tried my best for make it realistic, I hope you like it. Thanks for the support of all and the tips, comment what you think of this project and upvote also, enjoy and see my other projects, I know you’ll like, Ideas to improve my projects are always welcome, please if you really like this project upvote, don’t forgot. Also, sorry for my English.

Spotlights

General Characteristics

  • Created On Windows
  • Wingspan 11.9ft (3.6m)
  • Length 40.4ft (12.3m)
  • Height 18.4ft (5.6m)
  • Empty Weight 133,343lbs (60,483kg)
  • Loaded Weight 134,024lbs (60,792kg)

Performance

  • Wing Loading 398,441.3lbs/ft2 (1,945,360.8kg/m2)
  • Wing Area 0.3ft2 (0.0m2)
  • Drag Points 11548

Parts

  • Number of Parts 1742
  • Control Surfaces 0
  • Performance Cost 4,749