Found a website to finally show you that Tiger can't be killed from short range, even from a 76mm Sherman.
http://www.2worldwar2.com/sherman.htm
This has to be some info somewhere from WWII records, doesn't match what Lusche's chart says, which is AH standards by the way again, and lets leave spit 16 out of this forum huh ak? Lets focus on M4 and Tiger
Okay, it seems you didn't even read what the article said.
an inferior 75mm or 76mm gun which simply could not penetrate the front armor of the German Tiger tanks even from short range
Yes, the Tiger I was a very tough tank and
almost invulnerable to most tanks shooting normal armor piercing rounds or beyond 800 meters. However, it was possible at close ranges for a Sherman to knock out a Tiger I by hitting it in the areas where the armor is thinner, the sides and especially the rear (engine) area. In North Africa when the Shermans (75mm version) first encountered the Tigers is when the tactic of using 5 Sherman tanks to engage a Tiger was developed. That tactic was born more out of the fact of the deadliness of the 88mm gun rather than how tough it was to knock out. The surviving Shermans would then target the sides and area area hoping to knock it out. It must have worked because the 75mm Shermans did triumph from time to time over the Tiger I, though at a tremendous price. The 76mm Sherman tanks had a little bit easier time because by the time the 76mm Sherman encountered the Tiger I, it was in Normandy and combat encounters were usually at a much closer range than they were in North Africa. In addition, the 76mm Shermans were able to use the HVAP round which made it easier for the 76mm Shermans to knock out a Tiger at close ranges to hits from the sides and rear area.
This is a picture of a Tiger I tank that was knocked out by a M4A3 75mm Sherman tank from the 18 Armoured Regiment, 4 Armoured Brigade, 2nd New Zealand Division in Italy. As you can read in the captio, it was their first Tiger I kill.
While not a Sherman, this Tiger I tank was destroyed by a 75mm round fired from a Cromwell tank. The Cromwell fired from behind the Tiger I and the 75mm shell penetrated through the hatch in the back of the turret. If you look close at the image, you can actually see the hole in the hatch where the round penetrated. Most likely, the Cromwell was firing a HVAP type round.
Like I also stated, the VC Firefly model or M4 75/76 that would have to get really close in on the Tiger were the only threats. Another threat that killed Tigers were none other than bombs of course. The Sherman VC Firefly was the only American/British tank that could kill the Tiger from a great distance, only competition on the battlefield, no other american tank had the ability like the Firefly.
There was the 90mm GMC M36 tank destroyer that was introduced in fall of 1944 that was able to knock out both Panther and Tiger I tanks at close and long ranges with its 90mm main gun.
There was also the Pershing and Super Pershing tanks. The Pershing was equal to, if not superior to the Tiger I tank and could easily match it in a one on one engagement at either close or long ranges. In fact, the Pershing out be able to kill it at a longer range than the Tiger would be able to fire at the Pershing. The Super Pershing was undeniably far superior to the Tiger I in every single shape or form and like the Pershing, the Super Pershing would have easily been able to destroy a Tiger I at any range with a single shot. If the Super Pershing was able to defeat a King Tiger in an urban engagement and survive hits from not only the King Tiger but a Panther as well, just imagine the devastation it could hand out to a Tiger I. I'm sure there are some very old Tiger I tank crews that are very happy they never ran into a Super Pershing, though sadly, I know of one King Tiger and Panther crew that wish they never ran into one.
So, as you can see, other than the Firefly there were at least 3 different tanks that were able to defeat the Tiger I at long ranges.
ack-ack