There's a reason they were called tommy cookers. First hit usually lit them on fire burning the entire crew. The US didn't work around the clock to get the pershing into production. The boys back home told everyone that the sherman was more than adequate and thats why they made 10's of thousands of them. Despite as early as 1943 shermans were lighting on fire and were outclassed by panzer4s. I'd consider the barebones t34/76 tanks with a life expectancy of a week a better tank than the sherman piece of shit mobile. Shit Eisenhower had to order that no more 75 mm shermans be sent to europe after the shit ton of losses after the battle of the bulge. Or else they would of kept at it. They worked against the dinky japanese tanks, but got shit on by the germans and needed aircraft support for them to engage enemy armor on a serious scale.
Shermans were not good tanks, they were not planned for future german tanks at all, the americans were really short sighted simply because they performed adequately vs upgunned panzer3s and panzer 4s. Just like russia, they picked really cheap easily expendable tanks because their economy could handle producing 10s of thousands of vehicles as well as finding near infinite crews to operate them relative to the germans. If they really cared about crew safety and such upon entering the war they would have taken a more panther like approach of armor, firepower, and mobility. After the war they wised up and were like "Oh shit maybe sending hundreds of crews to their deaths isn't such a good idea" Hence why everyone copied the idea of the panther and why Modern Main Battle Tanks are a thing.
Feel free to go and read up on some feedback from American tank crews of the time.
http://archives.library.illinois.edu/blog/poor-defense-sherman-tanks-ww2/
Hell even go read through the Wikipedia article on the m4 Sherman. Only the 76mms were more even vs stugs and panzer4s.
There is so many inaccuracies packed into this post....
"Tommy Cooker" is a badly sourced nickname that appears to have no place in reality. At least you didn't call it a Ronson, which is even worse in terms of being able to establish historical precedence. Most people can't even mention the Ronson nickname without then citing an ad slogan that wouldn't appear till years after the war.
The M4 Sherman was actually no more prone to catching fire than any other tank in the war. Early production models and ill instructed crews had poor munition storage and layout (crews were literally stuffing rounds anywhere they'd fit) which generally meant the entire thing was going to explode if any of it was struck. Whereas the Germans would effectively never figure out munitions storage (The Tiger 1 basically had it set where any side penetrating round that wasn't hitting the turret and still placed in the center of the tank was hitting an ammo rack, until they fixed the mantlet design, if the Panther was facing it's turret forward, rounds hitting the lower half would be deflected down into the crew compartment, typically right into another munition rack) the US actually made great strides in munition storage- both where they were stored, and the wet jackets- all of which led to the M4 Sherman effectively being the safest medium tank in the war.
Furthermore the M4 Sherman was actually one of the most successful tank designs of the war- it left a lot to be desired in the French Hedgerows, but that is simply because any tank trying to make offensive action in those would be cut to pieces. All in all from D-Day to VE day the M4 Sherman- based on Steven Zaloga's studies- actually had a performance figure well in excess of the Panther. Never mind the edge in mobile operations the Americans had compared to the Germans.
Furthermore the, "quantity won the war!" argument has no place in reality- at best the Allies were fighting with a 2:1 edge which would fall far short of the oft listed, "5 Shermans to 1 panther" figure people like to fart out of their asses. By '44 and '45 the Americans were actually cutting back the number of tanks they were producing.
And while, yes, Eisenhower ordered that no more 75mm Shermans be called in, the reality remained that the 75mm Sherman was still an adequate tank. Remember- the point of tanks wasn't to fight other tanks. Tanks fighting tanks represents a minority of tanks destroyed in the war- for all sides infantry operated ordinance, be it AT guns, panzerfaust, bazookas, or AT rifles, represented the heavy lifting in this respect. And no, close air support actually represented fairly little.
And of course the, "Muh main battle tank" thing. Are you trying to win wehraboo bingo? The panther has little conceptually in common with a main battle tank. It was so irredeemably crippled by it's design choices that they typically couldn't even engage in traditional tank maneuvers, never mind the fact that it had what was effectively an AT gun rather than a legitimate multi-role gun. If anything it was actually (ironically) the Japanese who first hit on the idea of a singular tank that'd fill multiple roles rather than multiple dedicated tanks for specific roles. No one copied
anything off the Panther. They wanted tanks that worked. Even the French, who kept some after the war and kept them in service long enough to have had more experience than the Germans with them, could only comment that the tanks had an excellent gunnery sight, which they then had to immediately take away because the complete lack of any other optics for the gunner meant that they often spent far too much time trying to acquire targets.
And lastly, no, first hand testimony isn't evidence of the wider narrative. On average every round penetrating any tank was killing at least one person. Even the Germans were building tanks that, Tiger 1 and Tiger 2 excluded, were vulnerable somewhere to aged and antiquated AT weapons. Any asshole with a bazooka or a panzershrek hiding in a foxhole or around a corner could take out a tank. Or the AT gun hidden in that patch of trees you can't see. The Panther was no safer from the sides and rear than an M4 Sherman, and German high command had to instruct German tank crews to keep all M4 Shermans at 800 meters or more. Most actual tank combat happened from 1000 meters to 700. Anyone who wasn't absolutely afraid of being in their tank was either lying, dead, or a mechanic.