MontyB
All-Blacks Supporter
I will admit that it's hard to stand next to a Tiger and not be in awe of it. I'm a tanker myself and something about the Tiger just stirs my blood. They have a cutaway Tiger on display at the Patton Museum at Ft Knox (which is where all of us 19 series people train) and it's pretty amazing. The thickness of the frontal armor is unbeleivable. As for putting more effort into the Panther, they tried. Unfortunately for the Germans, the war ended before it was done, and the only surviving Panther II is on display at the Patton Museum as well. It looks like a very promising design and if you've never seen it before here it is:
http://www.peachmountain.com/5star/Tanks_Patton_Tanks_PantherII_tank.aspx
Click the link right below it that says King Tiger to see the cutaway of the front armor that I was talking about. If you've never been to the Patton Museum and you love tanks, it's worth the trip. As a side note, the Sherman is sitting facing the Tiger. I remember my first trip to the museum, I was standing in between the two looking back and forth amazed that anyone would get in a Sherman and fight Nazi tanks. There is also a really good condition T-34 there and a lot of other good stuff there. If you look at the M1 Abrams page 2, disregard all those shots that look like they were taken of the commanders station. It's actually a semi scaled mock up and not real. The rest of the tank pics on that page are of a tank that was actually in the spearhead element for the strike on Baghdad in 2003. It was the platoon leader's tank for the lead company of the lead battalion during the drive to seize the city center. As a side note, if you want to just some completely absurd tanks then click the links for the T-28 and look at the gun on the M-29. I remember seeing the T-28 and thinking.... "what the hell happens if you throw track?"
Hehe thanks to the Patton Tank Museum, Bovington and the Deutsches Panzermuseum I am no longer allowed to pick our vacation destinations.

Personally I think it is hard to fault the Tiger I as heavy tank when you consider that it began its design phase in 1937 and between 1942 and 1945 there were few tanks that could match it 1 on 1.
There is no doubt that it had its problems but no more so than any other tank of the period.
As far as developing the Panther goes I think one of the problems with German thinking of the period was that they never stopped long enough to iron out the problems with existing designs, essentially the Panther Ausf G was an excellent vehicle, as I said I would have stopped all tank production in late 1943 and just built the Panther as the offensive force in small numbers, mass produced the Jagdpanzer IV as anti-armour defensive vehicles and focused on the Pz-IV chassis for all other armoured variants (Tank recovery, mobile anti-aircraft etc.).
This would have streamlined German armour production during those years and allowed a far greater number of vehicles to be produced.