The primary round was the 6.76 kg (14.9 lb) M48 high explosive round, which travelled at 594 m/s (1950 ft/s) using the supercharge from the longer barreled M3 and contained 1.5 pounds (680 g) of TNT filling (2845 kilojoules of
explosive energy) and a choice of two fuzes, the super quick (SQ) and the delay (PD), which had delays of 0.05 and 0.15 seconds respectively. SQ was the standard setting, with PD used against structures, gun positions or lightly protected vehicles. The field gun origins of the ordnance and ammunition ensured that the M2/3/6 series HE round was highly effective for its caliber. The M48 was available in two versions, standard and supercharge, which had an increased propellent charge for greater muzzle velocity ( vs. ) and range (2,300 yards greater) using the M2 gun. The M3 gun with a longer barrel had an muzzle velocity of 594m/s (1950 ft/s) Vs 463m/s (1520ft/s) Other rounds fired by the 75mm tank guns included the T30
canister shot for use against troops in the open at short range. This, which was essentially a giant shotgun shell full of large numbers of steel balls, was used primarily in the Pacific. There was also the M89 base-ejecting
hexachloroethane (HC) smoke round and the M64 white phosphorus (WP or "Willy Pete") round, which proved highly effective in the
bocage fighting around
Normandy. Finally, there were two different
armor-piercing rounds. The first armor-piercing round was the M72 AP-T, a plain uncapped armor-piercing round whose performance dropped off as range increased due to poor
aerodynamics. The M72 was replaced by the 6.63 kg (14.62 lb) M61 armor-piercing ballistic capped high explosive with tracer (APCBC-HE-T) shell. The blunt armor-piercing cap, made of a softer metal, helped to prevent shell shatter at higher velocities and against sloped and
face-hardened armor. The aerodynamic ballistic cap acted as a windscreen and improved ballistic performance, maintained velocity, and hence increased penetration at longer ranges. Once the projectile had penetrated the target, a small explosive charge contained in a cavity at the base of the shell would detonate, shattering the shell and increasing damage inside the enemy vehicle. The tracer helped in the aiming of a second shot. In practice, the majority of M61 rounds were shipped without the explosive filler. The M61A1 used an improved method of attaching the ballistic cap to the shell. The M61 had a muzzle velocity of 617 m/s (2024.28 ft/s) and was able to penetrate of rolled homogeneous armor plate at 0° from vertical at 500 yards range, and the 50 mm front plating of the
Panzer III and
IV Ausf. F2 current in early 1942 at 1,500 m. However, in March 1942, the Germans introduced the Ausf. G version of the Panzer IV, armed with the
KwK 40 gun, and with frontal hull armour of 80 mm. This was somewhat compensated by the M4 Sherman's improved armor over the earlier M3 Lee making up for the 75mm M3's diminishing battlefield dominance; the German weapons testing agency
Wa Pruef 1 estimated that the
M4's standard 56º-angled glacis was impenetrable to the KwK 40 from 100 m when standing at a 30-degree side angle, while the 75 mm M3 could penetrate the Ausf G's hull in the same situation. ==Variants==