Panzerschreck
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Panzerschreck | |
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Canadian sergeant posing with a captured Panzerschreck |
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Type | anti-tank rocket launcher |
Place of origin | Nazi Germany |
Service history | |
In service | 1943 - 1945 |
Production history | |
Number built | 289,151 |
Variants | RPzB 43, RPzB 54, RPzB 54/1 |
Specifications | |
Weight | 11 kg empty (RPzB 54) |
Length | 164 cm |
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Caliber | 88 mm |
Effective range | 150 m (RPzB 54) |
Panzerschreck (German: tank terror) was the popular name for the Raketenpanzerbüchse ('rocket tank rifle', abbreviated to RPzB), an 88 mm calibre reusable anti-tank rocket launcher developed by the Germans in World War II. Another popular nickname was Ofenrohr ("stove pipe").[1]
It was given to infantry to bolster their anti-tank capability. The weapon was shoulder-launched and fired a rocket-propelled, fin-stabilized grenade with a shaped charge warhead. It was made in much smaller numbers than the highly successful Panzerfaust, which was a disposable recoilless rifle firing an anti-tank warhead.
Contents |
[edit] History
In 1941 the Germans encountered the new Soviet tank designs such as the T-34 they quickly discovered the effectiveness of the HEAT round against this new threat which many of their early tanks such as the Panzer IV were equipped with. The need of a more effective infantry anti-tank weapon than the Panzerbüchsen anti-tank rifles was paramount for the German army. Development for such a weapon which used the HEAT principle quickly ensued. The first development was a converted anti-tank grenade launcher version of the P.z.b 39 anti-tank rifle called the G.z.b 39 development for a more practical anti-tank launcher give way to the Faustpatrone and later the Panzerfaust which were highly effective against Allied armor but lacked the range and multi-purpose nature of the M1A1 "Bazooka". Later in the fighting in Africa, German troops captured many Allied bazooka in the North Africa as well as some lend-lease versions on the Eastern front. The German army quickly assimilated an improved German version of the M1A1 Bazooka, the Raketen-Panzerbüchse, which had double the penetrative performance and used a bigger 88 mm round. Although this was a much heavier round than its Allied counter part, it proved itself against Allied armor on all fronts, earning the nickname "tank terror".
The first model was the RPzB- 43 which was 164 cm long and weighed about 9.25 kg when empty. Operators of the RPzB 43 had to wear a protective poncho and a gas mask without a filter to protect them from the heat of the backblast when the weapon was fired. In October 1943, it was succeeded by the RPzB 54 which was fitted with a blast shield to protect the operator. This was heavier and weighed 11 kg empty. This was followed by the RPzB-54/1 with an improved rocket, shorter barrel and a range increased to about 180 meters.
Firing the RPzB generated a lot of smoke both in front and behind the weapon. Because of the weapon's tube and the smoke, the German troops nicknamed it the Ofenrohr ("Stove Pipe"). This also meant that Panzerschreck teams were revealed once they fired, making them targets and, therefore, required them to shift positions. This type of system also made it problematic to fire the weapon from inside closed spaces (such as bunkers or houses), filling the room with toxic smoke and revealing the firing location immediately. This was in contrast to the British PIAT's cumbersome, but non-smoking system, or the Panzerfausts short burst launch system.
The Panzerschreck was an effective weapon. Allied bazookas had problems with new up-armored German armor present on German tanks, most notably the Tiger tank and the Panther tank. By comparison the Panzerschreck rocket could penetrate over 200 mm of armor, which was not found on any Allied designs, but paid for this extra hitting power with extra weight. The rocket projectile weighed 7.25lb, 3.3Kg. Hogg notes the penetration at "about 100mm". [2] One direct hit was usually enough to destroy any Allied armored vehicle. When handled by well-trained crews, this weapon became the bane of Allied armored units, who frequently attempted to add improvised protection to their tanks, e.g. sandbags, spare track units, logs and so on. Most of this make-shift protection had little actual effect. [3]
Triple Panzerschrecks were mounted on some SdKfz 251s, Volkswagen Kübelwagens and captured Universal Carriers. [4]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Bishop, Chris (1998), The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II, New York: Orbis Publiishing Ltd, ISBN 0-7607-1022-8.
- ^ Ian V. Hogg 'The Encyclopedia of Infantry Weapons of World War II' pg. 155, 1977 Bison Books ISBN 086124155X
- ^ Belton Y. Cooper Death Traps pg. 229, 1998
- ^ Panzerschreck