O-Ho
Revision as of 19:34, 30 April 2019 | Revision as of 11:03, 18 June 2019 | |||
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The 120 ton O-I supposedly mounted a 105 mm gun on it's main turret, had two turrets in front and one in back, and up to 200 mm thick armor. | The 120 ton O-I supposedly mounted a 105 mm gun on it's main turret, had two turrets in front and one in back, and up to 200 mm thick armor. | |||
? | However, with more information now available to public, it is known that '''all of this is false, and that there is only one version of the O-I - the 150 tonne O-I with 15 cm howitzer''' (with prototype being "only" 97 tons, as it lacked turrets, main armament and additional 75 mm armor). The 100 ton O-I is based on misleading information of the O-I combined with it's design being based on very early sketch of the O-I. | + | However, with more information now available to public, it is known that '''all of this is false, and that there is only one version of the O-I - the 150 tonne O-I with 15 cm howitzer''' (with prototype being "only" 97 tons, as it lacked turrets, main armament and additional 75 mm armor plates). The 100 ton O-I is based on misleading information of the O-I combined with it's design being based on very early sketch of the O-I. | |
? | It is however interesting to note how the information of the O-I 120t | + | It is however interesting to note how the information of the O-I 120t came up. It has been mentioned on multiple ocassions that it was supposedly "shipped to Manchuria in 1944" and "had 200 mm armor" - neither of these fitting the description of the O-I. It is possible that this misleading information might actually refer to Type 4/5 super-heavy tanks that may have existed, as a turret that possibly was originally meant to be used on these tanks was used in Manchuria on a bunker. | |
|HistAcc= | |HistAcc= | |||
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* O-Ho is based on the drawings from the book “Imperial Japanese Army Ground Weapon Guide 1872-1945”. Unlike the drawings of "O-I 100t", which is what the tier 7 Japanese heavy tank O-Ni is based on, the dawings of the "O-I 120t" has basically no basis on them; they are *purely* based on false information and rumors. Due to this, the O-I 120t/O-Ho '''never actually existed'''. | * O-Ho is based on the drawings from the book “Imperial Japanese Army Ground Weapon Guide 1872-1945”. Unlike the drawings of "O-I 100t", which is what the tier 7 Japanese heavy tank O-Ni is based on, the dawings of the "O-I 120t" has basically no basis on them; they are *purely* based on false information and rumors. Due to this, the O-I 120t/O-Ho '''never actually existed'''. | |||
? | * In-game name is incorrect. The name "O-Ho" means "fifth (super) heavy tank". There however are no third and fourth super-heavy designs, as the O-I was the first and the Type 4/5 | + | * In-game name is incorrect. The name "O-Ho" means "fifth (super) heavy tank". There however are no third and fourth super-heavy designs, as the O-I was the first and the Type 4/5, if they existed, the second design. If the O-Ho actually existed, a more realistic designation would be "O-I III" (as the both O-I 100t (O-Ni) and O-I 120t are based on designs that were earlier designs than the Type 4/5, they most likely would have been referred as "altnerate" designs to the O-I - O-I 100t and O-I 120t as O-I II and O-I III, respectively). | |
|HistoricalGallery= | |HistoricalGallery= |
Revision as of 11:03, 18 June 2019
O-Ho
Mouse over "
[Client Values; Actual values in
2,680,000 Cost |
1700340 HP Hit Points |
120/12255.38/130 t Weight Limit |
- Commander
- Gunner
- Driver
- Radio Operator
- Radio Operator
- Loader
11001200 hp Engine Power |
25/10 km/h Speed Limit |
1719 deg/s Traverse |
9.1721.67 hp/t Power/Wt Ratio |
NoNo Pivot |
// mm Hull Armor |
200/200/200200/200/200 mm Turret Armor |
AP//HE
AP//HE Shells |
0/3600/190
0/0/245 Shell Cost |
300/300/360330/330/430 HP Damage |
175/201/53215/253/53 mm Penetration |
r/m ▲
5.71 r/m Standard Gun ▲
6.45 Rate of Fire Standard Gun |
▲
Standard Gun
▼
Standard Gun
▲
1713 Standard Gun ▲
Standard Gun
▼
Standard Gun
▲
2128.5 Damage Per Minute Standard Gun |
m ▲
0.41 m With 50% Crew: 0.508 m ▲
0.42 Accuracy With 50% Crew: 0.52 m |
s 3.1 s 3.1 Aim time |
2020 deg/s Turret Traverse |
360° Gun Arc |
-10°/+20°-10°/+20° Elevation Arc |
100100 rounds Ammo Capacity |
2020 % Chance of Fire |
m 380 m 380 View Range |
m 425 m 750 Signal Range |
VIII
2680000
The O-Ho is a Japanese tier 8 heavy tank.
The O-Ho was a further development of the idea of a superheavy tank with improved armor protection. The vehicle had a good set of guns that allowed for all-angle fire. The project was discontinued due to the war ending. No finished prototypes were built and the vehicle never saw action.
The O-Ho continues the Japanese superheavy line from O-Ni. The most noticeable improvement is significantly better rate of fire: both of O-Ho's guns has incredibly quick reload for their calibers (albeit after update 1.5 15cm has a much slower reload, by at least 5 seconds). O-Ho also finally has improved side armor; while its still unimpressive, it makes sidescraping bit more reliable option. Furthermore, O-Ho's cheeks and miniturrets are no longer weaker than hull.
Gaining significant advantages comes up with floppy downside which is extremely limited gun depression on front. One must learn to how to position O-Ho correctly in order to use it effectively. Furthermore, it still has same old downsides compared to its peers, such as poor mobility, gigantic size and flat armor that doesnt offer that much protection against higher tier vehicles. O-Ho can feel really akward at first and is arguably harder to play than other Japanese super-heavy tanks, but after one knows how to work around the limited gun depression on front, it can be very rewarding.
The O-Ho leads to the Type 4 Heavy.
Modules / Available Equipment and Consumables
Modules
Tier | Engine | Engine Power (hp) |
Chance of Fire on Impact (%) |
Weight (kg) |
Price ()
| |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VII | 2x Kawasaki Type 98 V-12 (550) | 1100 | 20 | 1020 | 51000 | |
VIII | 2x Kawasaki Type 98 V-12 (600) | 1200 | 20 | 1020 | 77500 |
Tier | Suspension | Load Limit (т) |
Traverse Speed (gr/sec) |
Rmin | Weight (kg) |
Price ()
| |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VII | O-Ho | 122 | 17 | B/2 | 28000 | 19000 | |
VIII | O-Ho Kai | 130 | 19 | B/2 | 28000 | 38500 |
Tier | Radio | Signal Range (m) |
Weight (kg) |
Price ()
| |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
VI | Type 96 Mk. 4 Bo | 425 | 50 | 14000 | |
VIII | Type 3 Otsu | 550 | 240 | 22000 | |
X | Type 3 Ko | 750 | 560 | 54000 |
Compatible Equipment
Compatible Consumables
Player Opinion
Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Very thick frontal armor with many well angled parts that can create lots of troll bounces and 2nd highest HP of all tier 8 tanks after KV-5; tied with KV-4 and VK 100.01 P
- The top 10cm gun has a very fast reload for its caliber
- 15 cm gun has extremely good gun handling compared to similar guns and O-Ho is one of the few tanks with 15cm howitzer that gets access to VSTabs to improve gun handling even further
- Very heavy mass and engine power let you easily push others and makes O-Ho resistant to ramming
- Great gun depression over sides
- Very easy stock grind as all of the modules apart from top radio, top 10cm and tracks are researchable from earlier tanks
- Gun is located extremely high on turret which means that O-Ho can shoot over almost any allied tank and many hills that other tanks wouldnt be able to
Cons:
- Mini-turrets heavily limit forward gun depression to as little as -1°
- Both guns have below average accuracy and aim time, 15cm cannon barely has improved rate of fire over O-Ni after update 1.5
- Huge profile; priority target to artillery and terrible camo values
- Armor is very flat, making it vulnerable to guns with high penetration
- Ammo rack is large and easily damaged.
Performance
O-Ho is natural evolution of O-Ni, with some major improvements. Armor is all around tougher, miniturrets and cheeks are now tough as front itself, and health is increased. Most notably, both guns have significantly quicker reload than similar guns on O-Ni.
You have two gun options: the 10cm and 15cm. The 10cm gun has above average DPM, making it very effective when top tier. Penetration is average at tier 8 considering the top gun, at 215. This is great at top tier matches, but might come back to bite you at higher tiers, where premium shells might have to be utilized to compensate for the pen of standard rounds. Among with that, the 10cm gun has horrendous aim time and accuracy, with gun handling being only marginally better than that of the 15cm derp, other than the accuracy which is still better. Also the 10cm has 2 extra degrees of gun depression than the 15cm above the miniturrets, which makes the gun depression slightly less wonky, though -3 is still utterly abysmal considering the extremely high gun placement.
The derp gun gives O-Ho unique play style as bulky support tank. The derp has significantly better stats than O-I and O-Ni, and on top of that, can mount VStabs unlike either of them. The derp gun actually has pretty good gun handling, which allows O-Ho to snapshot effectively. The raw accuracy is still very low, however. With right skills and equipment, the reload can be decreased to 13.5 seconds. The 150mm can hurt even tier 10 heavies, if shots are aimed carefully. O-Ho's extreme height and gun location allows it to hit most roofs or engine decks of tanks, doing nice damage. One of the most major issues of O-Ho is gun depression on front. Face hugging can be tricky, but with some practice by angling the tank just right amount, it's still possible. The mini-turrets are located more on left than right, so it is recommended to fight always on your right side if possible.
Early Research
Most of modules are shared with O-Ni. Mount derp gun and engine instantly. Neither of them requires tracks to be mounted. Then Research 10 cm expirimental gun. You can go ahead to Type 4 without researching tracks. But, If you want to equipping some equipment for this tank, Tracks is necessary. You can use either 15cm or 10cm by your own preference.
Suggested Equipment
Gallery
Historical Info
The "O-Ho" is based on misconceptions of the O-I super-heavy tank. Post-war speculations about the mysterious O-I resulted in that it was commonly accepted that there were at least two variants of the tank:
- 100 ton O-I, 3 turrets, built in 1941-1943 (known in-game as "O-Ni")
- 120 ton O-I, 4 turrets, built in 1944 and shipped to Manchuria. (known in-game as "O-Ho")
The 120 ton O-I supposedly mounted a 105 mm gun on it's main turret, had two turrets in front and one in back, and up to 200 mm thick armor.
However, with more information now available to public, it is known that all of this is false, and that there is only one version of the O-I - the 150 tonne O-I with 15 cm howitzer (with prototype being "only" 97 tons, as it lacked turrets, main armament and additional 75 mm armor plates). The 100 ton O-I is based on misleading information of the O-I combined with it's design being based on very early sketch of the O-I.
It is however interesting to note how the information of the O-I 120t came up. It has been mentioned on multiple ocassions that it was supposedly "shipped to Manchuria in 1944" and "had 200 mm armor" - neither of these fitting the description of the O-I. It is possible that this misleading information might actually refer to Type 4/5 super-heavy tanks that may have existed, as a turret that possibly was originally meant to be used on these tanks was used in Manchuria on a bunker.
Historical Gallery
Historical Accuracy Errata
* O-Ho is based on the drawings from the book “Imperial Japanese Army Ground Weapon Guide 1872-1945”. Unlike the drawings of "O-I 100t", which is what the tier 7 Japanese heavy tank O-Ni is based on, the dawings of the "O-I 120t" has basically no basis on them; they are *purely* based on false information and rumors. Due to this, the O-I 120t/O-Ho never actually existed.
- In-game name is incorrect. The name "O-Ho" means "fifth (super) heavy tank". There however are no third and fourth super-heavy designs, as the O-I was the first and the Type 4/5, if they existed, the second design. If the O-Ho actually existed, a more realistic designation would be "O-I III" (as the both O-I 100t (O-Ni) and O-I 120t are based on designs that were earlier designs than the Type 4/5, they most likely would have been referred as "altnerate" designs to the O-I - O-I 100t and O-I 120t as O-I II and O-I III, respectively).
Sources and External Links
Light Tanks | IRenault Otsu • IIType 95 Ha-Go • IIType 97 Te-Ke • IIIType 97 Chi-Ha • IIIType 98 Ke-Ni • IVType 5 Ke-Ho |
Medium Tanks | IIChi-Ni • IIType 89 I-Go/Chi-Ro • IVType 1 Chi-He • VType 3 Chi-Nu • VType 3 Chi-Nu Kai • VIType 4 Chi-To • VIIType 5 Chi-Ri • VIIISTA-1 • VIIISTA-2 • IXType 61 • XSTB-1 |
Heavy Tanks | IIIType 91 Heavy • IVType 95 Heavy • VO-I Experimental • VIHeavy Tank No. VI • VIO-I • VIIO-Ni • VIIIO-Ho • IXType 4 Heavy • XType 5 Heavy |
Tank Destroyers | |
Self-Propelled Artillery |