Showing posts with label Typen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Typen. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2015

Panzer IV Development



The Panzer IV would remain in production throughout the war. The most numerous and the most versatile tank the Wehrmacht developed, it is also usually considered one of the world’s classic armored vehicles, a strong contender for Top Ten status in any comparative listing. Its origins were unpretentious. The Weapons Office wanted armaments firms to gain experience designing and producing heavy tanks. Lutz and Guderian had from early days seen the need for a support tank. The result was a project for a “battalion commander’s vehicle” of 24 tons—the bridge weight limit—mounting a 75mm gun, which was really a howitzer, only 24 calibers long. Dubbed by its crews as the “cigar butt” and other, cruder names involving length, its high-explosive and smoke shells were intended to provide for close support—not only for tanks but for their accompanying infantry. In the war’s early years, however, a three-inch shell exploding on or near a tank could do significant damage—not least to crew morale. The Panzer IV would acquire from its early days an enduring reputation as a formidable opponent.

The Panzer IV suffered from an embryonic armament industry’s lack of experience producing even moderately large tanks, and from an increasingly overstrained manufacturing capacity. Only about 200 were on inventory by September 1, 1939. That was enough, however, to begin allocating a company to each battalion, and to test the three-to-one combination initially proposed by Lutz and Guderian. The design withstood prototype testing admirably. The Panzer IV’s suspension matched its eventual 20-ton weight, and was so reliable it became standard for all the later versions. Its superstructure was proportioned generously enough to allow for up-gunning. Its turret was electrically powered, improving exponentially the chances of getting off the first shot so often decisive in mobile war. Add standard frontal armor of up to 50mm, with 20mm on the sides and rear, plus a reliable Maybach engine giving a top speed of 20 miles per hour and a 100-mile range, and the Panzer IV was a crew’s delight when it began entering unit service in 1938.

The two-year seesaw conflict across North Africa has been so often described in so much detail that it is easy to exaggerate its actual impact on Hitler’s panzers. The campaign involved only three mobile divisions and never more than around 300 tanks at any one time. Technically the Germans maintained a consistent, though not overwhelming, superiority—reflecting as much the flaws in British tank design as the qualities of the German vehicles. The Panzer III, especially the L version with the 50mm/62-caliber gun, was the backbone of Rommel’s armor, admirably complemented by the Panzer IV, whose 75mm shells were highly effective against both unarmored “soft-skinned” vehicles and unsupported infantry, even when dug in.

The Sherman’s mid-velocity 75mm gun, able to fire both armor piercing and high-explosive rounds, made it the best tank in North Africa—except possibly for the later marks of Panzer IV, who brought their even higher velocity 75mm gun on line in numbers too small—never more than three dozen—to make a difference.

Replacing the panzers’ material losses was not a simple one-for-one process. The workhorse Panzer III was increasingly outclassed by its Soviet opponents—less from any qualitative improvement than because the Russians were beginning to learn how best to take tactical advantage in particular of the T-34’s powerful gun and high maneuverability. The Panzer III’s chassis was too light, its turret ring too small, to be a useful transition to the next panzer generation. They were issued as stopgaps, and by mid-1943 appeared in no more than company strength.

The Panzer IV, in contrast, had a future. Improved muzzle braking enabled it to carry the 43-caliber Tank Gun KwK 40, and a more powerful 48-caliber version introduced in late 1942. More than 1,700 of these F and G models were produced or upgraded before they gave way in March 1943 to the definitive late-war Panzer IVH. Its armor was significantly increased: 80mm on the front and 50mm on the turret, 30mm on the sides and 20mm in the rear—the latter reflecting Red Army infantrymen and antitank crews’ willingness to come to close quarters for a kill. The additional protection increased weight to 25 tons and reduced speed to 21 miles per hour, but the Model H could still move and maneuver well enough. Its 75mm, 48-caliber gun was roughly equivalent to the T-34’s main armament, and effective against almost anything it could reach.

The Panzer IVH/J integrated a useful set of upgrades into a state-of-the-art light medium tank, intended to equip one battalion in each panzer division. More than 3,000 would be built in 1943, and more than 3,100 in the war’s final 18 months. They were nevertheless regarded as stopgaps, holding the line for a new generation of exponentially more powerful armored fighting vehicles.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf H Part I

Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf H (SdKfz 161/2)
Technical data and statistics:
Type
medium tank
Engine
Maybach HL120TRM with 300 hp at 3,000 rpm
Gearbox
6 forward, 1 reverse
Crew total
5
Turret crew
3 (with 360° Commanders cupola)
Length
7.02 m
Width
2.88 m
Height
2.68 m
Weight
25 tons
Maximum speed
23.6 mph
Cross-country speed
12 mph
Fuel consumption per 100 miles
400 litres on road,
600 litres cross-country
Fuel
470 litres
Road radius
110 miles
Cross-country radius
75 miles
Vertical obstacle
0.60 m
Trench crossing
2.30 m
Fording depth
0.80 m
Turning circle
6 m
Gradient
30 °
ARMOUR
mm / angle
Turret front
50 / 10 °
Turret side
80 / 10 °
Turret rear
30 / 15 °
Turret top
15 / 84-90 °
Superstructure front
80 / 10 °
Superstructure side
30 / 0 °
Superstructure rear
20 / 11 °
Superstructure top
12 / 85-90 °
Hull front
80 / 14 °
Hull side
30 / 0 °
Hull rear
20 / 8 °
Hull bottom
10 / 90 °
Gun mantlet
50 / 0-30 °
ARMAMENT
7.5cm KwK40 L/48
with 87 rounds
Traverse
360° (electric),
Elevation -8° to +20°
Muzzle velocity
Pzgr: 790 m/s
Pzgr40: 990 m/s (available only in limited numbers)
Shell weight
Pzgr: 6.8 kg
Pzgr40: 4.1 kg
Penetration 100 yds at 30°
Pzgr: 106 mm
Pzgr40: 143 mm
Penetration 500 yds at 30°
Pzgr: 96 mm
Pzgr40: 120 mm
Penetration 1000 yds at 30°
Pzgr: 85 mm
Pzgr40: 97 mm
Penetration 1500 yds at 30°
Pzgr: 74 mm
Pzrg40: 77 mm
Penetration 2000 yds at 30°
Pzgr: 64 mm
Secondary armament
one 7.92mm MG34 coaxially to gun, one 7.92mm MG34 in front hull, one 7.92mm MG34 on commander's cupola, together 3,150 rounds
Radio
FuG5 (2.5 miles range)
Telescopic sight
TZF5f/1 (2.5 miles aiming)
Production
from April 1943 to July 1944

Combat delivery
immediately after production delivery
Price per tank
115,962 RM (Ausf G)
= 52,183 $ = 11,056 £
Total production figure
3,774

Service statistics of all Panzer IV variants

Available Production Losses
before 1939
-
115
-
1939
211 (1.9.)
141
?
1940
280
(10.5.)
278
?
1941
517
(1.6.)
467
369
1942
513
(1.1.)
994
502
1943
1,077
(1.1.)
3,013
2,352
1944
1,668
(1.1.)
3,126
2,643
1945
1,684
(1.1)
385 (Jan-March)
287 (Jan.)
Total (losses only for January 1941 - January 1945, production until March 1945)
-
7,419
6,153

PzKpfw.IV Ausf. D and E



Ausf D


History: In January 1938, Krupp-Gruson received an order to produce 200 in the 4th Series BW and 48 in the 5th Series. Of this total, only 229 were completed as gun-armed Pz Kpfw. The other 19 chassis were utilized to produce 16 bridge-laying tanks, 2 self-propelled guns and a Munitionsschlepper for Karl. Later in 1941, in an endeavour to seek a more powerful armament, an Ausf D was rebuilt with a 5cm KwK39 L/60. 

Specific features: The main improvements incorporated in the Ausf D were the increase in the side and rear armour from 15 to 20mm, and the provision of an external mantlet for the 7.5cm KwK. The superstructure front was stepped so that the plate in front of the radio operator was farther back than that in front of the driver. The driver had a pistol port to the right front, and the hull MG was reintroduced in front of the radio-operator. Ausf D, produced late in the series, had additional 30mm plates bolted and welded to the superstructure and hull front, and 20mm plates bolted to the hull and superstructure sides. Later, in 1943, several Ausf D were refitted with 7.5cm KwK L/48 for use with training and replacement units. 

Combat service: By May 1940, Pz Kpfw production had been sufficient for every tank detachment to have a medium tank company of from six to eleven pz Kpfw IV. On 10 May 1940, at the start of the campaign in France, there were 280 Ausf A, B, C and D in the Panzer divisions. The Ausf D saw service in France, the Balkans, Africa and Russia. The last few were phased out by attrition early in 1944.


Ausf E



History: In January 1938, the order for 223 6th Series BW was issued to Krupp-Gruson, and this total was completed. 

Specific features: The main improvements introduced with the Ausf E were a new cupola design, modifications to the turret, and increased armour protection. The turret now had a single bent plate for the turret rear, and an exhaust fan to extract gun fumes. While all Ausf E had a 50mm hull front and 20mm plate bolted to the hull and superstructure sides, several of the early Ausf E were minus the extra 30mm plate on the superstructure front. Minor modifications included a simplified sprocket design, glacis hatches countersunk level with surface of glacis, new design of driver's visor (pivoting), single signal post on turret roof and an armoured cover for the smoke-candle rack.

Combat service: With the continued production of the Ausf D, and the completion of the Ausf E, sufficient Pz Kpfw IV became available to furnish each medium tank company with ten Pz Kpfw IV for the campaigns in the Balkans, North Africa and Russia. Forty Ausf D and E were taken to North Africa with the 5th and 8th Panzer Regiments, and 438 Ausf B-F were with the seventeen Panzer divisions which attacked the Russians in June 1941. The last Ausf E were phased out by attrition early in 1944.