Francais | English | Espanõl

Panther tank

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Panther Ausf. A painted in one of many camouflage patterns

Panther Ausf. A

Panther Ausf. A
General characteristics
Crew 5 (Driver, radio-operator, commander, gunner, loader)
Length 6.87 m, 8.66 m with gun forward
Width 3.42 m
Height 2.99 m
Weight 44.8 tonnes
Armour and armament
Armour 120 mm
Main armament 1x 7.5 cm KwK 42 L/70

79 rounds

Secondary armament 7.92 mm Maschinengewehr 34

5,100 rounds

Mobility
Power plant V-12 petrol Maybach HL230 P30
700 hp (520 kW)
Suspension double torsion bar, interleaved road wheels
Road speed 55 km/h
Power/weight 16 hp/tonne
Range 250 km

The Panther (listen ) was a tank of Germany in World War II that served from mid-1943 to end of the war in Europe in 1945. It was intended as a counter to the T-34, and to replace the Panzer IV and III, though it served along with them and the heavier Tiger I and Tiger II tanks until the end of the war. The Panther's excellent combination of firepower, mobility and protection served as a benchmark for other nations' late war and immediate post-war tank designs and it is frequently regarded (along with the Soviet T-34-85) as the best tank design of World War II.

Until 1944 it was designated as the Panzerkampfwagen V Panther and had the Ordnance inventory designation of Sd.Kfz. 171. On 27 February 1944, Hitler ordered that the tank only be known as Panther.

Contents

[edit] Development and production

The Panther was a direct response to the Soviet T-34. First encountered on 23 June 1941, the T-34 decisively outclassed the existing Panzer IV and Panzer III. At the insistence of General Heinz Guderian a team was dispatched to the Eastern Front to assess the T-34. Among the features of the Soviet tank considered most significant were the sloping armor, which gave much improved shot deflection and also increased the apparent armor thickness against penetration, the wide track and large road wheels which improved mobility over soft ground, and the 76.2mm gun, which had good armour penetration and fired an effective high-explosive round. Daimler-Benz (DB) and Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg AG (MAN) were tasked with designing a new thirty to thirty-five-ton tank, designated VK3002, by April 1942 (apparently in time to be shown to Hitler for his birthday).

The two proposals were delivered in April 1942. The Daimler-Benz (DB) design was a direct homage to the T-34, side-stepping the German propensity for over-engineering, and hence complexity, to produce a clean, simple design resembling the T-34 in hull and turret form, diesel engine, drive system, leaf spring suspension, track layout, and other features. The MAN design was more conventional to German thinking: it was higher and wider with a substantial turret placed far back on the hull, a petrol engine, torsion-bar suspension and a characteristically German internal crew layout. The MAN design was accepted in May 1942, in spite of Hitler's preference for the DB design. One of the principal reasons for this was that the MAN design used an existing turret designed by Rheinmetall while the DB design would have required a brand new turret to be designed and produced, substantially delaying the commencement of production.

A mild steel prototype was produced by September 1942 and after testing at Kummersdorf was officially accepted. It was put into immediate production with the very highest priority. The start of production was delayed however, mainly because there were too few specialized machine tools needed for the machining of the hull. Finished tanks were produced in December and suffered from reliability problems as a result of this haste. The demand for this tank was so high that the manufacturing was soon expanded out of MAN to include Daimler-Benz and in 1943 the firms of Maschinenfabrik Niedersachsen-Hannover (MNH) and Henschel & Sohn in Kassel.

The initial production target was 250 tanks per month at MAN. This was increased to 600 per month in January 1943. Despite determined efforts, this figure was never reached due to disruption by Allied bombing, manufacturing bottlenecks and other difficulties. Production in 1943 averaged 148 per month. In 1944, it averaged 315 a month (3,777 having been built that year), peaking with 380 in July and ending around the end of March 1945 with at least 6,000 built in total. Strength peaked on September 1, 1944 at 2,304 tanks, but that same month a record number of 692 tanks were reported lost (source: T.L. Jentz (1999) Die deutsche Panzertruppe Band 2).

[edit] Design characteristics

Early Panther Ausf. A

If the over-hanging gun and sloping armor are ignored, the Panther was a conventional German design. The tank's weight had increased to 43 tonnes from the planned 35.

The Panther was the first Axis tank design where modern features were more prominent than early WWII-era ones. The rule-of-thumb among Allied tank crews of Sherman-to-Panther ratio necessary for destruction of a single Panther was 5:1, or the same as with the Tiger. Once the problems caused by the vulnerability of the engine and the transmission were solved, it proved to be a very effective fighting vehicle, being as effective as the Tiger, but less demanding to produce and logistically far less troublesome.

[edit] Engine

The Panther was powered by a 700 horsepower (515 kW)/3000 rpm, 23.1 litre Maybach HL 230 P30 V-12 petrol engine that drove two front drive sprockets via the gearbox and steering unit. The engine was generally considered reliable and had a fatigue life of up to 2000 kilometers. In order to minimize engine failures the Panther engines were fitted with a governor in late 1943 that limited the engine revolutions to 2500 rpm and power to 600 hp. The installation of the governor also dropped the tank's top speed from 55 km/h to 46 km/h.

[edit] Suspension

The suspension consisted of front drive sprockets, rear idlers and eight double-interleaved rubberized steel bogie wheels on each side suspended on dual torsion bar suspension that had of two torsion bars per each swing arm. The Panther's suspension was costly and time-consuming to manufacture but it provided the tank with the best cross-country mobility of its time.

[edit] Steering

Tank control was accomplished through a seven-speed AK 7-200 synchromesh gearbox, designed by ZF, and a MAN single radius steering system, operated by steering levers. The steering system allowed a single, fixed radius of turn at each gear. The higher the gear, the bigger was the turning radius. If the radius was bigger than desired, the steering brakes could be used to tighten the turn.

The weakest part in the tank were, throughout its career, the final drive units. The main reason for this was that the units could not be manufactured using hollow gears due to the shortage of suitable gear cutting machinery in Germany during the war. The final drives were in fact so weak that their fatigue life was sometimes as low as 150 km.

[edit] Crew

The crew was made up of five members: driver, radio operator (who also fired the bow machine gun), gunner, loader, and commander.

[edit] Armor

The armor consisted of a thick homogeneous steel glacis (ie frontal hull) plate sloped back at 55 degrees from the vertical, welded but also interlocked for strength. The combination of thick 80mm armor with a high degree of slope made the Panther's glacis armor extremely effective, very few Allied or Soviet weapons could penetrate it. The front of the turret was covered by a 100mm thick cast mantlet made in the shape of a semi-circle. The curved shape of the mantlet meant that it was more likely to deflect shells but it was discovered that the rounded mantlet created a shot-trap: if a non-penetrating hit bounced off the lower mantlet it may penetrate the thin forward hull roof armor down into the driver compartment. From September 1944 a redesigned mantlet with a much thicker "chin" design was fitted to the Panther G, the chin being intended to prevent such deflections.

The main weakness of the Panther tank was its much thinner (40-50mm thick) side armor. The thinner side armor was necessary to keep the tank's overall weight within reasonable bounds but it made the Panther vulnerable to attacks from the side by most Allied and Soviet tank and anti-tank guns. German tactical doctrine for the use of the Panther thus emphasised the importance of flank protection. Five millimeter skirt armor, Schürzen, intended to provide protection for the lower side hull from Soviet anti-tank rifle fire was fitted on the hull side. Zimmerit coating against magnetic mines also became standard with the Ausf. A and retrofitted to older versions until deleted from new Panthers from about September 1944.

[edit] Armament

The main gun was a semi-automatic 75 mm Rheinmetall KwK 42 (L/70) with 79 rounds (82 on Ausf. G). The main gun used three different types of ammunition, APCBC-HE (Pzgr. 39/42), HE (SprGr. 42) and APCR (Pzgr. 40/42), the last of which which was usually in short supply. While the gun was not of very large caliber for its time, nonetheless, the Panther's gun was one of the most powerful tank guns of WWII, due to the large propellant charge and the long barrel, which gave it a very high muzzle velocity and excellent armor-piercing qualities. The flat trajectory also made hitting targets much easier, since accuracy was less sensitive to range. The 75 mm gun actually had more penetrating power than the 88 mm KwK 36 L/56 gun fitted to the Tiger I, although not the 88 mm KwK 43 L/71 fitted to the Tiger II and Jagdpanther.

An MG 34 machine gun was located co-axially with the main gun on the gun mantlet; another MG 34 was located on the glacis plate and fired by the radio operator. Initial Ausf D and early Ausf A models used a 'letterbox' flap opening through which the machine gun was fired. Later Ausf A and all Ausf G models use a more conventional ball mount in the glacis for this machine gun. The Ausf A introduced a new cast commander's cupola. It featured a steel hoop to which a third MG 34 could be mounted for use in the anti-aircraft role though it was rare for this to be used in actual combat situations.

[edit] Combat Use

The Panther was intended to supplement the Panzer IV and replace the Panzer III medium tanks. Each German Panzer (armored) Division had two tank battalions; the intent was to equip one battalion in each division with Panthers, retaining the lighter, older, but still useful Panzer IV in the other battalion. Beginning in mid-1943, battalions were gradually converted to Panthers. This is in contrast with the Tiger tank, which was employed mostly with separate, specialized heavy tank battalions.

Image:Panthers de-train01.jpg The Panther first saw action at Kursk on 5 July 1943. Early tanks were plagued with mechanical problems: the track and suspension often broke and the engine was dangerously prone to over-heating and bursting into flames. Initially, more Panthers were disabled by their own failings than by enemy action. For example, the XLVIII Panzer Corps reported on July 10, 1943, that they had 38 Panthers operational and 131 awaiting repair, out of about 200 they had started with on July 5. Heinz Guderian, who had not wanted Hitler to order them into combat so soon, later remarked about the early Panther's performance in the battle: "they burnt too easily, the fuel and oil systems were insufficiently protected, and the crews were lost due to lack of training." However, Guderian also stated that the firepower and frontal armor were good. While many of the Panthers used at Kursk were damaged or suffered from mechanical difficulties, only a small number were lost for good and the tanks also achieved success, destroying 263 Soviet tanks. After Kursk, the problems of early Ausf. D models were fixed, making the Panther a formidable tank. Later in 1943, and especially into 1944, Panthers appeared in increasing numbers on the Soviet-German front. By June 1944, Panthers were about one-half of the German tank strength both in the east and the west.

[edit] The Allied response

The Soviet response to the large numbers of Panthers on their front was swift. In 1943 the Red Army was still equipped with T-34 tanks armed with the same 76.2mm gun as in 1941. This gun was ineffective against the Panther's frontal armor meaning the Soviet tanks had to try to flank the Panther to be able to successfully destroy it while the Panther's main gun could penetrate the T-34 at long range from any aspect. Plans were made to improve the T-34 with an 85mm gun and new and more spacious three-man turret, producing the T-34-85. Although this tank was not the equal of the Panther, it was much better than the 76.2mm-armed versions. New self-propelled anti-tank vehicles such as the SU-85 and SU-100 were developed. By mid-1944 the Red Army was deploying far more T-34-85s than the Germans had Panthers.

A German comparison of German tanks with the new Soviet T-34-85 and IS-2 heavy tank (with a 122 mm gun), from March 23, 1944, stated that "the Panther is far superior to the T-34/85 for frontal fire (Panther Ausf G could penetrate frontal armor of T-34/85 at 2,000 m, while T-34/85 could penetrate frontal armor of Panther Ausf G at 500 m), approximately equal for side and rear fire, superior to the JS1 for frontal fire and inferior for side and rear fire." In 1943 and 1944, a Panther was able to destroy any allied enemy tank in existence at ranges of 2,000 m, while in general veteran Panther crews reported 90 percent hit rate at ranges up to 1,000 m. The Panther weighed about as much as the new Soviet IS-2 heavy tank, and indeed this vehicle is a closer match than the much lighter T-34.

In the west, the Allied response was inconsistent. The Panther was not employed against the western Allies until early 1944 at Anzio, and even there they were employed only in very small numbers. The US Army had encountered the Tiger in the North African campaign and correctly concluded that the tank would be seen only in small numbers. The Panther was thought to be another heavy tank that would not be built in large numbers. Thus the US Army entered the Battle of Normandy expecting to face a few German heavy tanks alongside large numbers of Panzer IVs. In fact, almost half the German tanks in Normandy were Panthers, and the 75mm guns of the US Sherman tanks could not penetrate their frontal armor.

US forces eventually responded with large numbers of 76mm-armed Shermans, 90mm-armed tank destroyers, and eventually the Pershing heavy tank. Even with these better weapons it was still difficult to penetrate the frontal armor of the Panther. According to US Army Ground Forces statistics, destruction of a single Panther was achieved after destruction of an average of five M4 Shermans or some nine T-34s.[citation needed]

British forces responded to the heavier German tanks with the 17-pounder gun mounted in the Sherman, as well as towed 17-pounders. By the conclusion of the Normandy campaign British forces were fielding roughly a 1:4 ratio of 17-pounders to 75mm guns in their tank units. Eventually they deployed the Comet tank in 1945.

The Panther remained a major German tank until the end of the war. Later versions of the Panzer IV with long 75 mm KwK 40 L/48 guns were slightly cheaper to produce and more reliable and so they remained in production alongside the Panther. However the main reason for the prolonged Panzer IV production was that the reorganization of the German tank industry to manufacture Panthers rather than Panzer IVs would have resulted in such a temporary decrease in overall tank production that it would have been unbearable for Germany when the tide of war had already turned.

Around the time of the Battle of the Bulge a number of Panther tanks were disguised to look roughly like an M10 Wolverine, as part of a larger operation that involved paradropping soldiers disguised as Americans, and other activities. These deception attempts were uniformally unsuccessful and the disguised Panthers were detected and destroyed.

Captured Panthers proved to be extremely popular vehicles among Soviet troops, who received them as rewards for extraordinary achievements in combat, and who sought to keep them in service as long as possible, contrary to regulations that captured Tigers and Panthers should not be repaired but abandoned and destroyed after mechanical failure. Even the humorous instruction manual for German Panther crews, called the Pantherfibel (Panther Primer), was translated into Russian and provided to crews of captured Panthers.

[edit] Further development

Design work on the Panther II began in February 1943. The main aim was to secure maximum interchangeability of parts with the Tiger II heavy tank in order to ease manufacturing. The Panther II had a hull similar to the Tiger Ausf. B, and also shared identical wheels, track, suspension and brakes. One of the parts to be changed was the gun-mantlet, which had to become smaller. This was referred to in German as "Turm mit schmaler Blende" (narrow-mantlet turret).

The Panther II project never got further than one single chassis, that now can be seen in the Patton museum. (See photo at axishistory.com)

The only difference between the Panther and the Panther II was running gear, and increased armor protection. The turret was exactly the same on both types. The Panther II was only designed with the 7.5 cm KwK L/70 in mind, and the 8.8 cm KwK L/71 idea didn't enter into consideration after the Panther II project had been dropped.

Later in the war, in March 1944, work started again on a Panther turret with a smaller forward aspect. This led to the development of the Schmalturm (narrow turret). In August a Versuchsturm (trials turret) was completed. This was mounted on the chassis of a regular Panther Ausf. G. The Schmalturm featured thicker armour, a built-in stereoscopic rangefinder, the capability to carry the 88mm KwK L/71 and eliminated the shot-trap under the mantle, but weighed less than the original turret.

In that same period, development of the Panther led to the Ausf. F, slated for production in April 1945. The key points for this mark of Panther were the new Schmalturm with its improved armor protection and an extended front hull roof which was also slightly thicker. A number of Ausf. F hulls were built at Daimler-Benz and Ruhrstahl-Hattingen steelworks, however there is no evidence that any completed Ausf F saw service before the end of the war.

[edit] Designs based on chassis

  • Jagdpanther - heavy tank destroyer with the 88 mm cannon of the King Tiger
  • Befehlspanzer Panther - command tank with extra radio equipment
  • Beobachtungspanzer Panther - observation tank for artillery spotters, dummy gun; only two MG 34
  • Bergepanther - armored recovery vehicle

[edit] Production

  • Ausf. A: 20 produced in 11/42 (Prototypes, sometimes called Ausf. A1)
  • Ausf. D: 842 produced (1/43 to 9/43)
  • Ausf. A: 2,192 produced (8/43 to 6/44, sometimes called Ausf. A2)
  • Ausf. G: 2,953 (3/44 to 4/45)
  • Befehlspanzer Panther: 329 Converted (5/1943 to 2/1945)
  • Beobachtungspanzer Panther: 41 Converted (1944/1945)
  • Bergepanther: 347 (1943 to 1945)

[edit] Panther use after the Second World War

After 1945, fifty Panther tanks had been used by French 503e Régiment de Chars de Combat stationed in Mourmelon le Grand. Before the end of 1950, the Panther tanks had been replaced by French-built ARL 44 heavy tanks.

[edit] Extended specification

  • Crew: 5
  • Combat weight: Ausf. A 45.5 tonnes; Ausf. D 43.0 t; Ausf. G 44.8 t, 46.58 t with steel bogies
  • Dimensions
    • Length (including gun): 8.66 m
    • Length (excluding gun): 6.87 m
    • Width: 3.27 m, 3.42 m with skirt plates
    • Height: 2.99 m
  • Road speed: 55 km/h at 3,000 rpm (46 km/h at 2,500 rpm)
  • Road range: 200 km
  • Tracks: Kgs 64/660/150
    • Type: dual center guide
    • Width: 660 mm
    • Ground contact length: 3.92 m
    • Track links: 86
    • Ground pressure: 0.88 kg/cm²
  • Suspension: dual torsion-bar
  • Shock absorbers: on 2nd and 7th swing arms on either side
  • Vertical obstacle: 0.9 m
  • Trench: 1.9 m
  • Fording: 1.7 m
  • Engine: Maybach HL 230 P30
    • Type: V-12, four-stroke
    • Power: 700 hp at 3,000 rpm, 600 hp at 2,500 rpm
    • Displacement: 23.095 litres
    • Compression ratio: 6.8:1
    • Fuel: gasoline, 74 octane
    • Fuel consumption (road): 3.5 l/km
    • Fuel capacity: 720 litres
  • Transmission: ZF AK 7-200
    • Type: synchromesh manual
    • Gears: 7 forward, 1 reverse
  • Steering: MAN single-radius clutch-brake
  • Main clutch: Fichtel & Sachs LAG 3/70H
  • Steering ratio: 1:1.5
  • Armament
    • Main gun: 7.5 cm Kwk 42 L/70
    • Maximum muzzle velocity: 1,120 m/s
    • Breech: semiautomatic
    • Traverse: 360°, 24°/second
    • Elevation: +18°/-8°
    • Rounds carried: 79, Ausf. G: 82
  • Primary gun sight: Ausf. A and G: TZF 12a; Ausf. D: Leitz TZF 12
    • Magnification: 2.5×/5×
    • Field of view: 28°/14°
  • Radio equipment
    • Fu 5 transmitter/receiver
    • Fu 2 receiver
  • Armor:
    • Hull front, lower: 60 mm at 35° from horizontal; upper: 80 mm at 35°
    • Hull side, lower: 40 mm at 90°; upper: 40 mm at 50° (Ausf. G: 50 mm at 60°)
    • Hull rear: 40 mm at 60°
    • Turret front: Ausf. D: 80 mm at 78°; Ausf. A: 110 mm at 78°; Ausf: G: 100 mm at 80°
    • Turret side: 45 mm at 65°
    • Turret rear: 45 mm at 65°
    • Turret, top: 15 mm at 5°; Ausf. G: 30 mm at 5°
    • Gun mantlet: 120 mm rounded

[edit] External links

[edit] References

Germany's Panzerkampfwagen V, Panther, SdKfz 171. World War II Vehicles. Retrieved on 24 June, 2005.


German armored fighting vehicles of World War II
Tanks
Panzer I | Panzer II | Panzer III | Panzer IV | Panther | Tiger III | Panzer 35(t) | Panzer 38(t)
Self-propelled artillery
Wespe | Hummel | Grille | Panzerwerfer | sIG 33 | Wurfrahmen 40
Assault guns
StuG III | StuG IV | StuH 42 | Brummbär | Sturmtiger
Tank destroyers
Panzerjäger I | Marder I , II , III | Hetzer | Jagdpanzer IV | Jagdpanther | Nashorn | Jagdtiger | Elefant
Half-tracks Armored cars
SdKfz 4 | 6 | 7 | 10 | 11 | 250 | 251 | 252 | 253 | 254 Sdkfz 221/22/23 | Sdkfz 231/32/34/63
Self propelled anti-aircraft
Flakpanzer IV: Möbelwagen, Wirbelwind, Ostwind, Kugelblitz | Gepard
Prototypes
Maus | E- series | Panther II | Waffenträger | Neubaufahrzeug
Proposed designs
Panzer VII 'Löwe'
German armored fighting vehicle production during World War II
cs:Panther

da:Panther de:Panzerkampfwagen V Panther es:Panzer V Panther fr:Panzerkampfwagen V Panther hr:Panzer V it:Panzer V lt:Panther ms:Kereta kebal Panther nl:Panzerkampfwagen V Panther ja:V号戦車 no:Panzer V pl:PzKpfw V Panther pt:Panther sk:Panther (tank) sl:Panzerkampfwagen V Panter sr:Панцер V Пантера fi:Panther sv:Panther tr:Panzerkampfwagen V Panther zh:豹式坦克

Personal tools