694:
559:
466:
36:
1501:
993:. This is a very early L/48 model, and the only surviving example with the driver's machine gun slot welded over. It was previously part of a defensive line on the Bulgarian border. In February 2008 it was ordered recovered by the Bulgarian Defense Minister to be either preserved in a museum in Bulgaria, or sold to a private collector. As of 2020, the tank is at the Museum of Combat Glory in
724:. It was very successful as a tank destroyer due to its low profile, accurate gun and good armour protection, but performed poorly when used out of role as a substitute for tanks or assault guns to support infantry. This was increasingly necessary in the later stages of the war from late 1944 to 1945, because there was often nothing else available to the badly depleted German armoured units.
544:
627:. The most produced version, with 930–940 built in August 1944 - April 1945. Equipped with a long, powerful L/70 7.5cm anti-tank gun that could outrange opposing Allied tank weapons, the Panzer IV/70(V) Lang proved a formidable foe. The "Lang" (German for "long") in its name was added to distinguish it from its predecessor with a shorter L/48 7.5cm gun.
498:
operators, and the other one from the right side only. Later version
Jagdpanzer IVs carried only one MG 42 as internal secondary armament with about 1,200 rounds of ammunition. The Jagdpanzer IV secondary armament was exceptional, as other World War II era German tanks or other armored vehicles used
738:
after the war ended. They were officially known as TAs T4 in their army's inventory and were used until 1950 when they were phased out. German armour in
Romanian service, including the Jagdpanzer IV, was replaced entirely with Soviet vehicles in 1954. Bulgaria also received Jagdpanzer IVs from both
657:
IV superstructure to be mounted onto a standard Panzer IV chassis. The Vomag design used a modified chassis permitting a very low silhouette. Mounting the superstructure onto the original Panzer IV chassis required additional vertical steel plates mounted onto the chassis to counter height
739:
Germany and the Soviet Union (most coming from the latter post-war), and they saw limited service in the postwar
Bulgarian military before being stripped of all engine components, dug in and turned into fixed gun emplacements on its border with neighbouring Turkey, as part of the
674:
IV's gun had a muzzle brake installed, but because the gun was so close to the ground, each time it was fired, huge dust clouds would betray the vehicle's position, leading many crews to remove the muzzle brake in the field. Later variants dispensed with the muzzle brake.
404:
The new superstructure had 80 mm thick sloped armour, giving much greater protection than vertical armour of 100 mm. To make the manufacturing process as simple as possible, the superstructure was made from large, interlocking plates that were welded together.
353:, called for a new standard for heavy assault guns: 100 mm of armor to the front, 40–50 mm on the sides, wider tracks, ground clearance of 50 cm (20 in), top speed of 26 km/h (16 mph) and the lowest possible firing positions. The new
684:
applied to the hull to protect against magnetic mines, but this was discontinued after about
September 1944. Later vehicles had three return rollers rather than the original four, and adopted the twin vertical exhausts typical of the late Panzer IV series.
515:, Hitler received reports that StuG IIIs performed better than the Panzer IV within the constraints of how they were deployed. It was thus intended to stop production of the Panzer IV itself at the end of 1944 to concentrate solely on production of the
456:
IV was presented in
December 1943 and production started in January 1944, with the Pak 39 L/48 armed variant staying in production until November. Production of the Pak 42 L/70 armed variants started in August and continued until March/April 1945.
324:
Officially, only the L/48-armed vehicle was named
Jagdpanzer IV. The L/70-armed vehicle was named Panzer IV/70. In this article, both versions are referred to in general as Jagdpanzer IV, except in the variants and surviving vehicles section.
648:
IV. In order to send Pak 42 L/70 armed vehicles to the front as soon as possible, in July 1944 Hitler ordered an interim solution to speed up
Nibelungenwerke's transition from Panzer IV production to Panzer IV/70 production. "A" stands for
493:
which was protected by an armored cover plate (with the MG 42 retracted) when not in use. As the main gun was located between these machine guns one machine gun could be operated from the left side only, which is impractical for
809:, Syria acquired in the 1950s six Jagdpanzer IV L/48s. These were used in the conflicts with Israel up until 1967 when most were either destroyed, abandoned on the Golan Heights overlooking Israel, or scrapped.
662:
Minor modifications and improvements were made throughout the production runs of all variants, as well as several field improvements, the most common being the addition of armour sideskirts (or in German,
658:
differences. The resulting vehicle was about 40 cm taller and lacked the sharp edged nose of the Vomag variant. Only 278 were built by
Nibelungenwerke from August 1944 to March 1945.
863:
2111:
1517:
441:
IV was nose-heavy, especially with the heavy frontal armour. This made them less mobile and more difficult to operate in rough terrain, leading their crews to nickname them
321:
III). Guderian objected against the (in his eyes) needless diversion of resources from Panzer IV tank production, as the StuG III was still more than adequate for its role.
1005:
2064:
2140:
449:"). To prevent the rubber rims of the roadwheels being dislocated by the weight of the vehicle, some later versions had steel roadwheels installed on the front.
743:(now fallen into disrepair). Most of these ex-German vehicles have been dug up recently, with some scrapped while others await restoration locally or abroad.
1532:
1283:
Waffen-SS Armour in
Normandy: The Combat History of SS Panzer Regiment 12 and SS Panzerjager Abteilung 12, Normandy 1944, based on their original war diaries
740:
1175:
1140:. The vehicle was used in 1944-45 by Free French forces. The vehicle is displayed with damage resulting from a direct hit by an armor-piercing shell.
2135:
1527:
1302:
Die Träger des
Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939–1945 – Die Inhaber der höchsten Auszeichnung des Zweiten Weltkrieges aller Wehrmachtsteile
1434:
1050:
523:
IV. VoMAG in Plauen switched completely from Panzer IV production to Jagdpanzer IV in Spring 1944, Krupp-Grusonwerk in Magdeburg switched to
397:
plates. Internally, the layout was changed to accommodate the new superstructure, moving the fuel tanks and ammunition racks. Since the
1080:
693:
1425:
769:
for battlefield bravery and credited with 36 tank kills. He was killed by an American sniper while looking out of the hatch of his
624:
419:
1887:
1115:
378:
III. The Marder series were tall and had open crew compartments. The new design had a low silhouette and completely enclosed,
2130:
1309:
1290:
1271:
1344:
794:, but few other fixed-casemate self-propelled guns were built in the postwar era. An innovative exception was the Swedish
422:
75 Ă— 640mm R ammunition, originally intended to be the Pak 42 L/70. Due to shortages, older guns were initially used, the
1844:
766:
1356:
2079:
1070:
962:
2145:
401:
lacked a turret, the auxiliary engine which powered the Panzer IV's turret traverse mechanism could be eliminated.
1367:
1610:
1087:, now in storage at Ft. Benning, GA. This vehicle was previously part of the Shrivenham Study Collection in the
727:
430:
for the initial production variant. These were shorter and less powerful than the Pak 42, and also carried a
2095:
1605:
1418:
721:
217:
61:
1183:
558:
2100:
2054:
1791:
1819:
1814:
2049:
1403:
1202:
845:
1509:
1411:
762:
1864:
926:. The vehicle is a preproduction model with rounded front plates. It was previously part of the
712:
sections of Panzer and SS Panzer divisions. The vehicle fought against Western Allied forces in
2044:
2039:
1801:
1249:
Naud, Phillipe (2011), "Les Blindes de Damas 1948-1967", in Steel Masters nº105, May–June, 2011
1132:
972:
949:
928:
918:
552:
1948:
1377:
623:
was one of two variants armed with the same Pak 42 L/70 gun. The (V) stands for the designer,
954:
923:
1905:
1572:
1102:
340:
301:(tank destroyer, literally "hunting tank") designs, it was developed against the wishes of
1595:
823:
806:
312:
8:
1094:
1084:
1060:
717:
563:
1600:
957:. It is an early version with 60 mm armor. This vehicle is on loan from the WTS in
827:
519:
IV, but the Panzer IV continued to be produced until the end of the conflict along with
486:
1998:
1953:
1910:
1537:
1074:
966:
833:
774:
713:
581:
with 7.5 cm Pak 39 L/43: a small number of these were built as the preproduction (
465:
182:
49:
2034:
1577:
1567:
1305:
1286:
1267:
1019:
875:
790:
359:("tank hunter") design would be armed with the same 7.5 cm gun as fitted to the
1013:
2059:
1943:
1937:
1931:
1859:
1542:
958:
839:
1648:
1653:
1054:
512:
367:. Initially a new chassis was planned, but that of the Panzer IV had to be used.
35:
878:(also known as "Jagdpanzer Kanone 90mm", or "tank destroyer, gun") was a German
481:
Early versions of the Jagdpanzer IV carried two standard (no modification made)
1973:
1968:
1630:
1348:
1325:
1137:
976:
933:
882:
795:
528:
302:
286:
164:
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355:
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2013:
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1360:
1333:
1034:
886:
664:
427:
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1872:
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2008:
2003:
1993:
1957:
1854:
1547:
1480:
1465:
1460:
1030:
894:
532:
431:
394:
360:
283:
71:
1338:
604:
SturmgeschĂĽtz neuer Art mit 7.5 cm Pak L/48 auf Fahrgestell PzKpfw IV
1978:
1915:
1829:
1824:
1786:
1781:
1776:
1771:
1766:
1698:
1587:
983:
490:
474:
370:
Previous efforts to mount bigger guns on smaller chassis resulted in the
1615:
1988:
1983:
1963:
1877:
1761:
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1713:
1673:
1668:
1639:
1620:
1470:
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334:
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349:
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290:
115:
1009:
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H chassis, but the almost-vertical front hull plate was replaced by
1721:
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998:
990:
879:
735:
680:
653:, a manufacturer of the StuG III, that was ordered to redesign the
379:
371:
294:
119:
485:
machine guns on both sides of the main gun mantlet/glacis, firing
1882:
1683:
1678:
1485:
857:
778:
524:
1400:
tanks and prototypes based on Pz IV) still existing in the world
1809:
1693:
1442:
1109:
1098:
1064:
994:
819:
650:
364:
2112:
German armored fighting vehicle production during World War II
1500:
2074:
1522:
1023:
851:
482:
202:
111:
1834:
1037:, Israel. It is unknown if this vehicle still resides here.
543:
446:
260:
1207:
781:, the last major German offensive on the Western Front.
606:, with 769–784 produced in January 1944 - November 1944.
339:
With experience gained during the initial phases of the
293:
chassis and built in three main variants. As one of the
1231:
1219:
1088:
602:
with 7.5 cm Pak 39 L/48, developed under the name
1101:, Ontario, Canada. This vehicle was previously at the
418:
Armament consisted of a 7.5 cm main gun firing
1264:The Ardennes, 1944-1945: Hitler's Winter Offensive
893:tanks. Its design was very similar to that of the
437:Installing the much heavier Pak 42 meant that the
1435:German armoured fighting vehicles of World War II
986:. It is a late model with 80 mm front armor.
473:preproduction vehicle with 2 opened front facing
2122:
1380:- A PDF file presenting the Panzer IV variants (
2141:Military vehicles introduced from 1940 to 1944
1012:. It was excavated in 2009 in the vicinity of
1419:
979:. It is an early model with 60 mm armor.
503:for internal secondary or co-axial armament.
310:
1004:A wreck of Jagdpanzer IV L/48 is stored in
864:Gun Carrier, 3-inch, Mk I, Churchill (A22D)
1426:
1412:
1299:
1213:
969:. It was returned to Germany in the 1960s.
784:After the war, West Germany continued the
1280:
1261:
1237:
1225:
692:
557:
542:
464:
2136:World War II tank destroyers of Germany
1339:Jagdpanzer IV/70 in Kubinka tank museum
700:IV with infantry support, Hungary, 1944
2123:
1116:Australian Armour and Artillery Museum
1103:Canadian Forces Base/Area Support Unit
812:
1563:10.5 cm leFH18/3 (Sf) auf G.W. B-2(f)
1407:
1077:, now in storage at Ft Lee, Virginia.
798:, more widely known as the "S-Tank".
773:IV on December 17 in 1944 during the
720:, and Soviet tanks and troops on the
535:continued with Panzer IV production.
460:
154:4 (driver, commander, gunner, loader)
1170:
1168:
1166:
1164:
1162:
1160:
1158:
1051:National Museum of Military History
13:
1203:Jagdpanzer IV at Tank Encyclopedia
1071:United States Army Ordnance Museum
963:United States Army Ordnance Museum
265:35 km/h (22 mph) on road
138:3.17 m (10 ft 5 in)
130:8.5 m (27 ft 11 in)
14:
2157:
1319:
1300:Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer (1986).
1155:
989:In storage in a military area in
961:, and previously belonged to the
688:
169:10–80 mm (0.39–3.15 in)
146:1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
47:) with 7.5 cm Pak 39 L/48 at the
1499:
767:Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross
511:On 19–22 August 1943, after the
102:Specifications (Panzer IV/70(V))
34:
1925:Experimental/prototype vehicles
1255:
305:, the inspector general of the
1359:. AFV Database. Archived from
1347:. AFV Database. Archived from
1243:
1196:
328:
91:
1:
1144:
506:
389:IV used a modified Panzer IV
382:-style fighting compartment.
2131:Self-propelled anti-tank gun
2096:List of Sd.Kfz. designations
1378:Surviving Panzer IV variants
1262:Bergström, Christer (2014).
1149:
900:
644:the other Pak 42 L/70 armed
585:) probably in December 1943.
527:in early 1944, and only the
426:for pre-production, and the
374:, II and III series and the
62:Self-propelled anti-tank gun
18:Self-propelled anti-tank gun
7:
2101:List of VK-designated tanks
1374:IV at the Canada War Museum
1334:Panzer IV/70 at Panzerworld
1281:Számvéber, Norbert (2018).
538:
489:rifle ammunition through a
452:The final prototype of the
413:
408:
309:, as a replacement for the
10:
2162:
1497:
1118:Restored to running order.
869:
332:
251:210 km (130 mi)
86:December 1943 – April 1945
2109:
2088:
2022:
1924:
1898:
1843:
1800:
1712:
1629:
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1176:"Jagdpanzer IV and IV/70"
551:preproduction vehicle at
259:
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106:
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68:Place of origin
67:
57:
33:
23:
2146:Tanks introduced in 1943
1510:Self-propelled artillery
343:, in September 1942 the
255:120 km (75 mi)
229:11.6 PS (8.6 kW) / tonne
1820:Sd.Kfz. 231/32/33/34/63
1815:Sd.Kfz. 221/22/23/60/61
1266:. Casemate Publishers.
1006:Armoured Warfare Museum
763:12th SS Panzer Division
221:300 PS (296 hp, 221 kW)
1285:. Helion and Company.
950:Deutsches Panzermuseum
919:Deutsches Panzermuseum
765:, who was awarded the
753:(Senior squad leader)
701:
566:
555:
553:Deutsches Panzermuseum
478:
311:
50:Deutsches Panzermuseum
1578:15cm sFH13/1 (Sf) LrS
1573:10.5cm leFH18(Sf) 39H
1568:10.5cm leFH18(Sf) LrS
885:equipped with a 90mm
696:
561:
546:
468:
333:Further information:
982:Thun Tank Museum in
562:Panzer IV/70 (V) at
477:next to the main gun
347:'s arms bureau, the
341:Battle of Stalingrad
1949:GeschĂĽtzwagen Tiger
1899:Demolition vehicles
1095:Canadian War Museum
1085:Fort Knox, Kentucky
1061:Kubinka Tank Museum
813:Comparable vehicles
718:Battle of the Bulge
678:Early vehicles had
564:Kubinka Tank Museum
2080:Flakpanzer Mareșal
1999:Flakpanzer Coelian
1954:Entwicklung series
1847:anti-aircraft guns
1075:Aberdeen, Maryland
967:Aberdeen, Maryland
834:Semovente da 75/34
807:SturmgeschĂĽtz IIIs
775:Ardennes Offensive
751:SS-OberscharfĂĽhrer
702:
567:
556:
479:
461:Secondary armament
428:7.5 cm Pak 39 L/48
424:7.5 cm Pak 39 L/43
297:-style turretless
183:7.5 cm Pak 42 L/70
78:Production history
2118:
2117:
2065:Gep. MTW Kätzchen
1351:on 13 March 2010.
1329:IV at Panzerworld
1311:978-3-7909-0284-6
1304:. Podzun-Pallas.
1292:978-1-912174-80-5
1273:978-1-61200-277-4
1133:Musée des Blindés
1020:Khmeimim Air Base
973:Musée des Blindés
929:Musée des Blindés
876:Kanonenjagdpanzer
791:Kanonenjagdpanzer
788:concept with the
757:from the 12th SS
730:received several
708:IV served in the
313:SturmgeschĂĽtz III
269:
268:
218:Maybach HL120 TRM
2153:
2060:VK 16.02 Leopard
2023:Proposed designs
1944:Panzer VIII Maus
1938:Panzer I Ausf. F
1932:Panzer I Ausf. C
1860:Flakpanzer 38(t)
1503:
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1421:
1414:
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1182:, archived from
1172:
1126:IV L/70 late (A)
1083:once located at
1073:once located in
1022:near Lattaquié,
959:Koblenz, Germany
955:Munster, Germany
924:Munster, Germany
862:United Kingdom:
840:Type 3 Ho-Ni III
749:IV aces include
741:Krali Marko Line
487:7.92Ă—57mm Mauser
316:
262:
93:
38:
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1631:Tank destroyers
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1548:Panzerwerfer 42
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1363:on 11 May 2009.
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1214:Fellgiebel 1986
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1187:
1180:Achtung Panzer!
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1055:Sofia, Bulgaria
903:
897:Jagdpanzer IV.
872:
856:United States:
815:
734:IV/70 from the
691:
670:Originally the
541:
513:Battle of Kursk
509:
496:non-left-handed
463:
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253:Cross-country:
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204:Maschinengewehr
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2055:P.1500 Monster
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2020:
2019:
2017:
2016:
2011:
2006:
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1976:
1974:Neubaufahrzeug
1971:
1969:Heuschrecke 10
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1941:
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1869:Flakpanzer IV
1867:
1865:Flakpanzer III
1862:
1857:
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1845:Self-propelled
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1533:Sturmpanzer II
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1370:Photos of the
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1321:
1320:External links
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1316:
1310:
1297:
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1272:
1257:
1254:
1252:
1251:
1242:
1240:, p. 172.
1238:Bergström 2014
1230:
1228:, p. 168.
1226:Számvéber 2018
1218:
1216:, p. 366.
1206:
1195:
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1141:
1138:Saumur, France
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977:Saumur, France
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945:
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936:
934:Saumur, France
914:
913:
902:
899:
889:from obsolete
883:tank destroyer
871:
868:
867:
866:
860:
854:
850:Soviet Union:
848:
842:
836:
830:
814:
811:
796:Stridsvagn 103
690:
689:Combat history
687:
660:
659:
641:
640:
629:
628:
620:
619:
608:
607:
599:
598:
587:
586:
578:
577:
540:
537:
529:Nibelungenwerk
508:
505:
469:Jagdpanzer IV
462:
459:
415:
412:
410:
407:
330:
327:
303:Heinz Guderian
287:tank destroyer
267:
266:
263:
261:Maximum speed
257:
256:
247:
242:
239:
238:
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230:
227:
223:
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210:
196:
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55:
54:
39:
31:
30:
17:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
2158:
2147:
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2142:
2139:
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2134:
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2129:
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2126:
2113:
2108:
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2058:
2056:
2053:
2051:
2048:
2046:
2043:
2041:
2038:
2036:
2033:
2031:
2030:Panzer III/IV
2028:
2027:
2025:
2021:
2015:
2014:VK 30.02 (DB)
2012:
2010:
2007:
2005:
2002:
2000:
1997:
1995:
1992:
1990:
1987:
1985:
1982:
1980:
1977:
1975:
1972:
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1967:
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1962:
1959:
1955:
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1927:
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1907:
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1903:
1901:
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1725:
1723:
1720:
1719:
1717:
1715:
1711:
1705:
1702:
1700:
1697:
1695:
1692:
1690:
1689:Jagdpanzer IV
1687:
1685:
1682:
1680:
1677:
1675:
1672:
1670:
1667:
1665:
1662:
1660:
1657:
1655:
1652:
1650:
1649:Panzerjäger I
1647:
1646:
1644:
1641:
1637:
1632:
1628:
1622:
1619:
1617:
1614:
1612:
1609:
1607:
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1602:
1599:
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1585:
1579:
1576:
1574:
1571:
1569:
1566:
1564:
1561:
1559:
1556:
1554:
1553:Wurfrahmen 40
1551:
1549:
1546:
1544:
1541:
1539:
1536:
1534:
1531:
1529:
1528:Sturmpanzer I
1526:
1524:
1521:
1519:
1516:
1515:
1513:
1511:
1507:
1502:
1492:
1489:
1487:
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1234:
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1222:
1215:
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1199:
1186:on 2009-07-21
1185:
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1125:
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1121:
1117:
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1082:
1081:Patton Museum
1079:
1076:
1072:
1069:
1066:
1062:
1059:
1056:
1052:
1049:
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1044:
1041:
1040:
1036:
1035:Golan Heights
1032:
1028:
1025:
1021:
1018:
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1007:
1003:
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992:
988:
985:
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964:
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956:
952:
951:
947:
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942:
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930:
925:
921:
920:
916:
915:
912:
908:
905:
904:
898:
896:
892:
888:
887:anti-tank gun
884:
881:
877:
865:
861:
859:
855:
853:
849:
847:
843:
841:
837:
835:
831:
829:
825:
821:
817:
816:
810:
808:
804:
799:
797:
793:
792:
787:
782:
780:
776:
772:
768:
764:
761:Battalion of
760:
756:
752:
748:
744:
742:
737:
733:
729:
725:
723:
722:Eastern Front
719:
715:
711:
707:
699:
695:
686:
683:
682:
676:
673:
668:
666:
656:
652:
647:
643:
642:
638:
634:
631:
630:
626:
622:
621:
617:
613:
610:
609:
605:
601:
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592:
589:
588:
584:
580:
579:
576:
572:
569:
568:
565:
560:
554:
550:
545:
536:
534:
530:
526:
522:
518:
514:
504:
502:
497:
492:
488:
484:
476:
472:
467:
458:
455:
450:
448:
445:("Guderian's
444:
443:Guderian-Ente
440:
435:
433:
429:
425:
421:
406:
402:
400:
396:
392:
388:
383:
381:
377:
376:SturmgeschĂĽtz
373:
368:
366:
362:
358:
357:
352:
351:
346:
342:
336:
326:
322:
320:
315:
314:
308:
307:Panzertruppen
304:
300:
296:
292:
289:based on the
288:
285:
281:
277:
275:
264:
258:
248:
240:
236:
232:
228:
224:
219:
216:
212:
207:
205:
201:
197:
189:
184:
180:
172:
168:
166:
162:
157:
153:
149:
145:
141:
137:
133:
129:
125:
121:
117:
113:
109:
105:
100:
96:
89:
85:
81:
76:
73:
70:
66:
63:
60:
56:
52:
51:
46:
42:
37:
32:
27:
22:
16:
2089:Designations
2075:VK 20 series
2070:VK 45.02 (P)
2050:P.1000 Ratte
2009:VK 45.01 (P)
2004:VK 30.01 (P)
1994:Pz. Sfl. IVc
1958:Panzer E-100
1855:Flakpanzer I
1802:Armored cars
1688:
1588:Assault guns
1466:Panzer 38(t)
1461:Panzer 35(t)
1397:
1393:
1389:
1385:
1381:
1371:
1361:the original
1349:the original
1326:
1301:
1282:
1263:
1256:Bibliography
1245:
1233:
1221:
1209:
1198:
1188:, retrieved
1184:the original
1179:
1131:
1123:
1042:
1031:Mount Hermon
948:
940:
927:
917:
910:
906:
895:World War II
873:
800:
789:
785:
783:
770:
758:
750:
746:
745:
731:
726:
705:
703:
697:
679:
677:
671:
669:
661:
654:
645:
637:Sd.Kfz.162/1
636:
632:
616:Sd.Kfz.162/1
615:
611:
603:
594:
590:
582:
574:
570:
548:
533:St. Valentin
520:
516:
510:
480:
475:firing ports
470:
453:
451:
442:
438:
436:
432:muzzle brake
417:
403:
398:
395:sloped armor
390:
386:
384:
375:
369:
361:Panther tank
354:
348:
338:
323:
318:
306:
279:
273:
272:
270:
237:Leaf springs
226:Power/weight
209:1,200 rounds
203:
186:55-60 rounds
72:Nazi Germany
48:
44:
40:
25:
15:
1979:Sturer Emil
1916:Borgward IV
1830:Sd.Kfz. 247
1825:Sd.Kfz. 234
1714:Half-tracks
1699:Jagdpanther
1636:Panzerjäger
1396:, StuG IV,
1345:"Jagdpz.IV"
1097:located in
1045:IV L/70 (V)
1014:the Citadel
984:Switzerland
801:Along with
759:Panzerjäger
635:IV/70 (A) (
614:IV/70 (V) (
491:firing port
365:Pak 42 L/70
356:Panzerjäger
329:Development
280:Sd.Kfz. 162
243:Operational
97:About 2,000
94: built
2125:Categories
1989:Pz.Sfl. II
1984:Dicker Max
1964:Panther II
1940:(VK 18.01)
1888:Kugelblitz
1878:Wirbelwind
1873:Möbelwagen
1674:RSO/PaK 40
1640:Jagdpanzer
1621:Sturmtiger
1558:Karl-Gerät
1471:Panzer III
1398:Flakpanzer
1382:Jagdpanzer
1372:Jagdpanzer
1368:Jagdpanzer
1357:"Pz.IV/70"
1327:Jagdpanzer
1190:2011-07-27
1145:References
941:Jagdpanzer
907:Jagdpanzer
891:M47 Patton
803:Panzer IVs
786:Jagdpanzer
771:Jagdpanzer
755:Rudolf Roy
747:Jagdpanzer
732:Jagdpanzer
706:Jagdpanzer
698:Jagdpanzer
672:Jagdpanzer
655:Jagdpanzer
646:Jagdpanzer
595:Sd.Kfz.162
591:Jagdpanzer
571:Jagdpanzer
521:Jagdpanzer
517:Jagdpanzer
507:Production
454:Jagdpanzer
439:Jagdpanzer
399:Jagdpanzer
387:Jagdpanzer
335:Jagdpanzer
299:Jagdpanzer
274:Jagdpanzer
234:Suspension
116:short tons
45:Sd.Kfz.162
41:Jagdpanzer
26:Jagdpanzer
2040:Panzer IX
1934:(VK 6.01)
1727:Sd.Kfz. 2
1704:Jagdtiger
1611:StuIG 33B
1476:Panzer IV
1456:Panzer II
1150:Citations
901:Survivors
844:Romania:
818:Germany:
710:anti-tank
350:Waffenamt
345:Wehrmacht
291:Panzer IV
192:Secondary
120:long tons
2045:Panzer X
1911:Springer
1722:Maultier
1659:Marder I
1616:Brummbär
1596:StuG III
1491:Tiger II
1451:Panzer I
1394:Brummbär
999:Bulgaria
991:Bulgaria
880:Cold War
824:StuG III
736:Red Army
716:and the
714:Normandy
681:zimmerit
665:SchĂĽrzen
539:Variants
420:Fixed QF
414:Main gun
409:Armament
380:casemate
372:Marder I
295:casemate
282:, was a
194:armament
177:armament
83:Produced
1906:Goliath
1883:Ostwind
1684:Elefant
1679:Nashorn
1606:StuH 42
1601:StuG IV
1486:Tiger I
1481:Panther
1390:Nashorn
943:IV L/48
911:0-Serie
870:Related
858:M10 GMC
846:Mareșal
838:Japan:
832:Italy:
828:StuG IV
779:Belgium
728:Romania
583:0-Serie
575:0-Serie
549:0-Serie
525:StuG IV
471:0-Serie
200:7.92 mm
118:; 25.4
1810:Kfz 13
1694:Hetzer
1654:35R(f)
1543:Hummel
1538:Grille
1386:Hummel
1308:
1289:
1270:
1124:Panzer
1110:Canada
1099:Ottawa
1065:Russia
1043:Panzer
1010:Poznań
995:Yambol
820:Hetzer
651:Alkett
633:Panzer
612:Panzer
363:: the
284:German
249:Road:
214:Engine
143:Height
127:Length
114:(28.4
112:tonnes
1523:Wespe
1518:Bufla
1443:Tanks
1106:Shilo
1029:Near
1024:Syria
852:SU-85
625:Vomag
501:MG 34
483:MG 42
391:Ausf.
245:range
165:Armor
135:Width
110:25.8
2035:Löwe
1835:ADGZ
1384:IV,
1306:ISBN
1287:ISBN
1268:ISBN
874:The
805:and
704:The
593:IV (
547:The
499:the
447:duck
385:The
319:StuG
271:The
175:Main
151:Crew
107:Mass
58:Type
43:IV (
1792:sWS
1787:254
1782:253
1777:252
1772:251
1767:250
1669:III
1136:in
1108:in
1063:in
1053:in
1008:in
975:in
965:in
953:in
932:in
922:in
909:IV
777:in
667:).
573:IV
531:in
198:1Ă—
181:1Ă—
92:No.
28:IV
2127::
1762:11
1757:10
1664:II
1638:,
1392:,
1388:,
1178:,
1157:^
1089:UK
1033:,
997:,
826:,
822:,
434:.
278:/
276:IV
206:42
1960:)
1956:(
1752:9
1747:8
1742:7
1737:6
1732:4
1642:)
1634:(
1427:e
1420:t
1413:v
1314:.
1295:.
1276:.
1112:.
1091:.
1067:.
1057:.
1026:.
1016:.
1001:.
639:)
618:)
597:)
317:(
122:)
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.