Panzerjäger
Panzerjäger is a term used for an anti-tank vehicle, as well as anti-tank units. The term was first used in the Wehrmacht, and also post-war by the German Federal Republic Bundeswehr. The term Panzerjäger was used in the Bundeswehr as a designation of rank.
Wehrmacht
Development
From 1940, the Panzerjäger troops were equipped with vehicles produced by mounting an existing anti-tank gun complete with the gun shield on a tracked chassis to allow higher mobility.The development of Panzerjägers into the fully protected Jagdpanzer armored vehicle designs began before the war with the Sturmgeschütz-designated armored artillery vehicles, the initial German turretless tanks to use completely closed-in armored casemates, and continued until 1944, resulting in the fully enclosed Jagdpanzer "hunting tanks", purpose-built heavy-gun tank destroyers. These usually used upward extensions of both the glacis plate and hull sides to comprise three sides of their closed-in casemates. Panzerjäger continued to serve as a separate branch of the Heer until the end of the war, often replacing tanks due to production shortages.
Initially, the chassis of captured light tanks were used after turrets were removed, providing a cost-effective solution to the German shortage of mobile anti-tank weapons in infantry divisions. Despite the shortcomings of light armour and high silhouette, they were successfully used in their intended role of a self-propelled anti-tank gun. Neither anti-tank guns nor Panzerjägers had any real armor to speak of, and while the Panzerjäger had a higher silhouette and was more visible than an anti-tank gun, it was also much more mobile, and was able to relocate or retreat far more rapidly than conventional anti-tank gun crews. The lack of armor meant little until the self-propelled guns began to take on more and more of the offensive duties of tanks as the war progressed and production lagged.
Organisation
From 1943, the Type 44 infantry divisions included the following divisional Panzerjäger-Abteilung :- Staff company
- 1. Panzerjäger-Kompanie equipped with 9-12 towed Anti-tank guns
- 2. Sturmgeschütz-Batterie equipped with ten fully-casemated StuG III, StuG IV assault guns or Hetzer vehicles
- 3. Light anti-aircraft company equipped with 12 towed 20 mm FlaK autocannon
Combat use
Vehicle designs
Designs of the Panzerjäger vehicles varied based on the chassis used, which could be of three types:- Early war open-topped superstructure on a light tank chassis
- Mid-war fully enclosed crew compartment on a medium or heavy tank chassis, as an added-on entity not usually integral to the original hull armor
- Late war unarmoured or shielded mounting on a half-track chassis
- Panzerjäger I – Czech 4,7cm KPÚV vz. 38 on Panzer I chassis.
- 4,7 cm Pak auf Panzerjäger Renault R35 - 47 mm Pak on Renault R35
- Marder I – 75 mm PaK 40 on captured French chassis, the Lorraine 37L.
- Marder II – 75 mm PaK 40 or 7.62 cm Pak 36 on Panzer II light tank chassis.
- Marder III – 75 mm PaK 40 or 7.62 cm Pak 36 on Czech-built Panzer 38 chassis.
- 10.5 cm K gepanzerte Selbstfahrlafette "Dicker Max" – two prototype as self-propelled bunker buster on Panzer IV chassis tested as anti-tank weapon.
- Sturer Emil – 12.8 cm Selbstfahrlafette auf VK 30.01, reuse of two prototype heavy tank chassis as experimental self-propelled gun.
- Hornisse, later renamed Nashorn – 88 mm PaK 43 on composite Panzer III/Panzer IV chassis.
- Ferdinand, later renamed Elefant – the last Panzerjäger vehicle so designated, incorporating a fully enclosed, casemate added to VK 45.01 hulls from the rejected Tiger I chassis design.
- Jagdpanzer 38
- Jagdpanther
- Jagdpanzer IV
- ''Jagdtiger''