40M Nimród


The 40M Nimród was a World War II Hungarian Self-propelled [anti-aircraft weapon|self-propelled anti-aircraft gun] based on a license-built copy of the Swedish Landsverk L-62 Anti I SPAAG but with a new turret, and developed independently. Originally, it was intended to be used both in the anti-aircraft and tank destroyer roles, but it proved to be ineffective against heavily armored Soviet tanks like the KV-1. Therefore, it was primarily used against lightly armored vehicles and for air defense.

Design

The 40M Nimród was a modified, license-built variant of the Landsverk L-62 Anti I SPAAG. The L-62 Anti I was based on the chassis of the Landsverk L-60 tank – the same tank that the Hungarian Toldi light tanks were also based on.
The L-62 did differ though from the original L-60 chassis. It was longer and wider and had one more roadwheel per side. The 40M Nimród also differed from the original L-62 Anti I design. While the chassis was basically the same as the L-62 Anti I, although utilizing parts from the 38M Toldi, the turret was modified to house one more crew member from the original 5 of the L-62 Anti I. The crew of the 40M Nimród consisted of six men: commander, driver, two loaders and two gunners.
The vehicle's armament consisted of a Hungarian license-built Bofors [40 mm L/60 gun], in Hungarian service designated as 40 mm 36M, a gravity fed gun which had a rate of fire of 120 to 140 rounds per minute depending on the firing angle, which fired conventional ammunition at a muzzle velocity of almost. Ammunition for the gun consisted primarily of conventional high-explosive fragmentation and armor-piercing rounds, but also a specialized anti-tank round developed indigenously in Hungary. Hungarian armor-piercing ammunition for the gun could penetrate of rolled homogeneous armor at a range of, and at. The Nimrod carried 640 rounds, split into 4 stowages of 160 rounds each.
Late in the war, the vehicle was issued with a muzzle loaded rifle grenade designated 42M. This was a German Stielgranate 41 which had been modified to mount the 40 mm 36M gun instead of the German 3.7 cm Pak 36. It consisted of a German 15 cm hollow charge artillery shell mounted on a fin-stabilized tube meant to fit over the muzzle of the gun, and was launched by the use of a specialized blank cartridge loaded in the main gun. The 42M is often found under the name "Kerngranate", which is German for Core Shell.

Service history

The 40M Nimród was manufactured by the Manfréd Weiss Works. A first batch of 46 vehicles powered by a German Büssing-NAG L8V/36TR engine was followed by another batch of 89 vehicles powered by a Hungarian Ganz IP VGT 107 Type II.
Although it was originally intended for anti-tank use, and it did see some success in destroying Soviet tanks, in 1943 the 40M Nimród was reclassified for anti-aircraft use as it was unable to penetrate the thick armor of the tanks in use by the Red Army by that point.
A total of 135 Nimrods were built, most of which were deployed by the 51st and 52nd Armored Autocannon Battalions of the 1st and 2nd Hungarian Armoured Divisions, respectively. Nimrod batteries attached to armored and motorized battalions were allocated six vehicles each. A platoon consisted of two vehicles.
The following units used the 40M Nimród:
During the fighting south of the Battle of Voronezh, in Korotoyak, Nimróds of the 51st Battalion shot down between 38 and 40 Soviet aircraft. The Battalion's Nimróds painted white kill rings on the barrel to represent each destroyed aircraft, and red rings for destroyed tanks.
Four Nimróds took part in the counter-attack from the Baracska-Pettend line on 7 December 1944 as part of the Horváth Battle Group. By 10 December 1944 none of the Nimróds were still in operational condition.

43M Lehel

In 1942 the Hungarian Ministry of Defence requested the domestic production of an Armoured personnel carrier. The 40M Nimród was used as the basis for the new APC, named the 43M Lehel. Two prototypes were developed; the Lehel A, and the Lehel S. Neither prototype went into full scale production.

Survivors

There exist at least two surviving 40M Nimróds. The Nimród with the registraion numner 1H-631 was stored in the in Budapest. It was put on display in 2018. The other survivor, registration number H-094, is on display in the Kubinka Tank Museum in Russia.

Comparable vehicles

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