Originally posted by Karnak:
I don't know about them lighting up (theirs used diesel, ours used gasoline) but they were riveted, thinly armored, under-gunned and unreliable. I seem to recall that they made one decent tank in very limited quantities, but I'm not sure what it was called.
I have to agree with RAM, outside of scenarios Japanese tanks would be useless.
NOTE: They didn't face M4s very often because we didn't use M4s in the Pacific due to the terrain. They faced a lighter tank, the name of which escapes me, that had better terrain handling qualities. Like the M4 it was vastly superior to the Japanese tanks.
Sisu
-Karnak
The US had plenty of M4 tanks in the Pacific. Once beach heads were established many times M4A3 equppied with the 25gal flamethrower pack were brought in to take out pillboxs and bunkers, terrain premitting.
Sherman Dozers were very heavily used in the Pacific for clearing paths through heavy vegetation, crushing pill boxes and bunkers, and clearing mine fields. Sherman 105's saw alot of use as well, again for knocking out pill boxes at bunkers
But mostly the really dated tanks were used in the Pacific because even the best Japanese tanks were very poor armor wise. M3A1 Lee's saw very extensive use by Marines from the the time they recieved them. The M3 and M5 Stuarts probably saw the most use in the pacfic, they were nearly useless in Europe. The M5 Satan was comparble to the Sherman Flame, actually better because it held quite a bit more flamethrower fuel and was faster and more manuverable.
Even the LVT's had no problem with tanks...the only ones with guns larger then a 37mm are the Type 89 Ko, Shinhoto Hai-to, Type 1 Chi-He, Type 97 Chi-Ha, and the Type 2 Ho-I.
The only threat to US tanks was the Type 3 Chi-Nu, with a gun comparable to the German 75L48. Very few were produced, towards the end of 1944.

- Jig