Panzergranate 39
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Panzergranate 39 or Pzgr. 39 was a German armor-piercing shell used during World War II. It was manufactured in various different calibers and was the most common anti-tank shell used in German tank and antitank guns of 50 to 88 mm calibers.
The shell was of APCBC-HE-T construction meaning that it consisted of the shell body fitted with penetrating and ballistic caps, an explosive filler and a tracer unit that was incorporated into the base fuze]. Phlegmatized PETN or RDX were commonplace as the explosive filling. Pzgr. 39 was only used in guns firing fixed ammunition. Exactly the same Pzgr. 39 shells of a certain caliber could be fitted to different cartridge cases. For example the 7.5 cm Pak 40 L/46 antitank gun and the 7.5 cm KwK 40 L/48 tank gun fired the same projectile, even though they had completely different cartridge cases.
Different versions of the shell were made, but the changes were usually minor. For instance, in the 88 mm Pzgr. 39-1 version the quality of steel was improved. The 75 mm Pzgr. 39/42 of KwK 42 and Pak 42 guns had two driving bands instead of one. In the Pzgr. 39/43 of KwK and Pak 43 guns, the driving bands were made wider than those of Pzgr. 39-1. The widening took place because the high gas pressure in these long-barreled guns presented certain problems when firing the older Pzgr. 39–1 shells with narrower driving bands. The abbreviation 'FES', found on many Pzgr. 39 rounds indicates the presence of sintered iron driving bands.
Technical data of 75 mm Pzgr. 39 FES
- Weight, complete with fuze: 6,8 kg
- Explosive filler: 18 g of RDX and wax (90/10)
- Number of driving bands: 1
- Material of driving band: sintered iron
- Shell diameter at driving band: 77,4 mm
- Shell body diameter: 74,5 mm
- Fuze: Bd.Z. 5103
- Type: base fuze
- Weight with tracer unit: 107 g
- Tracer burning time: 2 s