Panzerwurfkanone 10H64
The 10 cm PAW 1000 - later re-designated 10H64 - was a lightweight anti-tank gun that utilized a high-low pressure system to fire hollow charge warheads.
Description
Background
By 1943, it was becoming obvious to the German army that conventional anti-tank gun design had reached its practical limits. Traditional high-velocity guns that relied on kinetic energy to defeat heavily armored targets were becoming so bulky in order to deal with the new generation of tanks that they were becoming too heavy for front line use, and too expensive to produce.Rheinmetall
Rheinmetall Borsig proposed a new medium velocity gun with a smoothbore barrel that relied on hollow charge ammunition to defeat tanks. The design used the High-Low Pressure principle where the high pressures generated by the propellant did not act directly on the projectile but instead seeped into the main chamber at a controlled rate. This allowed a very simple light-weight barrel with a conventional heavy breech. A simple light-weight carriage was designed for the weapon.The resulting 8 cm PAW 600 gun fired a warhead based on the 8.1 cm mortar hollow charge bomb that could penetrate 140mm of armor plate to a maximum effective range of 750 meters. Some 260 pieces were produced between December 1944 and the end of the war.
Krupp
Meanwhile, Krupp was developing a 10 cm design known as the 10 cm PAW 1000 or 10H64, although by the end of the war they had produced only prototypes. Its shaped charge shell weighed 6.6 kg and with an effective range of 1,000 meters was able to penetrate 200 mm steel at 60°.Steel quality
The steel quality used for such measurements in World War II is also not necessarily identical to RHA, as it is used to measure the armor penetration capability of post-World War II munitions.A ratio of 2 between caliber and penetration was good by World War II standards and is explained by the late design and lack of penetration degrading spin. 200mm penetration would have been enough to defeat all existing tanks of World War II unless the angle of impact prevented proper fusing.
Caliber and gun carriage
The exact caliber is somewhat uncertain. Officially, it was 10 cm, but in the German designation system this typically meant 10.5 cm. The basis for the caliber and ammunition would likely have been the 10 cm Nebelwerfer 35, a mortar of 105mm caliber used in small numbers by mountain troops.The gun carriage for the prototypes was that of the 5 cm Pak 38 or the Sonderlafette V1. Both were only waist-high and would have easily been sited and camouflaged well within their maximum effective range.