Template:Short description Template:About Template:Title lang Template:Infobox weapon

The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}, Template:Lit. Template:Gloss or Template:Gloss,<ref name="pzf60 iwm">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> plural: {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) was a development family of single-shot man-portable anti-tank systems developed by Nazi Germany during World War II. The weapons were the first single-use light anti-tank weapons based on a pre-loaded disposable launch tube, a weapon configuration which is still used today (a contemporary example being the 84mm AT4).

The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}-design consisted of a light recoilless launcher tube outfitted with a single pre-loaded high-explosive anti-tank warhead protruding from the muzzle. It was an inexpensive, easy-to-use anti-tank weapon for the common infantry man, being issued as a single unit of ammunition meant to be operated by a single soldier. Firing was done from under the arm at an upward angle as the effective firing range was barely beyond that of hand grenades (Template:Convert max). After use the launcher was discarded.

Development of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} started in 1942. The initial design was dubbed {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Template:Lit. "fist-cartridge") and was smaller than the later designs. Later dubbed {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("tank-fist small"), it entered service in 1943, the larger design being named {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("tank-fist big") and entering service in mid to late 1944. All types were used by Germany until the end of the war, with the design remaining in use in other countries for a number of years after the war.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

DevelopmentEdit

{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Edit

File:Panzerfaust 1.JPG
lang}} 60 (bottom)
File:Panzerfaust 2.jpg
CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Template:Lit. "fist cartridge") was the initial development of what eventually became the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}-family. The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}-design was much smaller than the later {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}-designs.

Development of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} started in the summer of 1942 at the German company Hugo Schneider AG (HASAG) with the development of a smaller prototype called {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("little Greta") by a team headed by Doctor Heinrich Langweiler in Leipzig. The basic concept was that of a recoilless gun; in the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, a propellent charge pushed the warhead out the front of the tube while the blast also exited the rear of the tube, balancing forces, and therefore there was no recoil force for the operator.

The following weapon, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, 30 m ("fist-cartridge small") weighed Template:Convert and a total length of Template:Convert; its projectile had a length of Template:Convert. The Template:Convert diameter of warhead was a shaped charge of Template:Convert of a 50:50 mix of TNT and tri-hexogen. The propellant was of Template:Convert of black powder, the metal launch tube had a length of Template:Convert and a diameter of Template:Convert (early models reportedly Template:Convert). Fitted to the warhead was a wooden shaft with folded stabilizing fins (made of Template:Convert thick spring metal). These bent blades straightened into position by themselves as soon as they left the launch tube. The warhead was accelerated to a speed of Template:Convert, had a range of about Template:Convert and an armour penetration of up to Template:Convert of plain steel.

Soon a crude aiming device similar to the one used by the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was added to the design; it was fixed at a range of Template:Convert. Several designations of this weapon were in use, amongst which {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 1 or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 30 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; however, it was common to refer to this weapon simply as the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. Of the earlier model, 20,000 were ordered and the first 500 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} were delivered by the manufacturer, HASAG, Werk Schlieben, in August 1943.

{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Edit

File:Panzerfaust.jpg
lang}} rocket (right)
File:Panzerfaust helsinki.jpg
lang}} 30s in their original shipping crate, on display at the Helsinki Military Museum.

Development began in 1942 on a larger version of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. The resulting weapon was the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 30, also known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Template:Lit. "tank-fist big") and the like, with a total weight of Template:Convert and total length of Template:Convert. The launch tube was made of low-grade steel Template:Convert in diameter, containing a Template:Convert charge of black powder propellant. Along the side of the tube were a simple folding rear sight and a trigger. The edge of the warhead was used as the front sight. The oversize warhead (Template:Convert in diameter) was fitted into the front of the tube by an attached wooden tail stem with metal stabilizing fins.<ref name="Rottman 2014">Template:Cite book</ref>

The warhead weighed Template:Convert and contained Template:Convert of a 50:50 mixture of TNT and hexogen explosives, and had armour penetration of Template:Convert.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} often had warnings written in large red letters on the upper rear end of the tube, the words usually being "{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}" ("Beware. Fire jet."). This was to warn soldiers to avoid the backblast.

After firing, the tube was discarded, making the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} the first disposable anti-tank weapon. The weapon, when correctly fired from the crook of the arm, could penetrate the armour of any armoured fighting vehicle of the period.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Comparison of modelsEdit

Designation Weight Propellant
weight
Warhead
diameter
Projectile
velocity
Effective
range
Penetration
performance
lang}} 30
{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 30m
Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert
lang}} 30
{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 30m
Template:Convert Template:Convert 149 mm 30 m/s 30 m 200 mm
lang}} 60 6.8 kg 120–134 g 149 mm 45 m/s 60 m 200 mm
lang}} 100 Template:Convert Template:Convert 149 mm 60 m/s Template:Convert Template:Convert
lang}} 150 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert

Combat useEdit

To use the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the soldier removed the safety, tucked the tube under their arm, and aimed by aligning the target, the sight and the top of the warhead. Unlike the original American M1 60 mm bazooka and the Germans' own heavier 88 mm {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} tube-type rocket launchers based on the American ordnance piece, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} did not have the usual trigger. It had a pedal-like lever near the projectile that ignited the propellant when squeezed. Because of the weapon's short range, not only enemy tanks and infantry, but also pieces of the exploding vehicle, posed dangers to its operator. Consequently, the use of a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} required a degree of personal courage.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The backblast from firing went back around 2 m behind the operator.

When used against tanks, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} had an impressive beyond-armour effect. Compared to the bazooka and the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, it made a larger hole and produced massive spalling that killed or injured the crew, due to burns and shrapnel, and destroyed equipment. One informal test found that the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} made an entry hole Template:Convert in diameter, whereas the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} made an entry hole at least Template:Convert in diameter. By contrast, the bazooka made an entry hole that was only Template:Convert in diameter).<ref>White, Isaac D. United States vs. German Equipment: As Prepared for the Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary Force (1997). CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 70. Template:ISBN.</ref> Much of that can be attributed not only to the size of the warhead of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, but also its horn-like shape, as opposed to the traditional cone-shaped warheads of rockets used in the bazooka and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Citation needed The design was later copied in the modern-day AT-4 anti-tank weapon, producing the same effect against modern main battle tanks.

GermanyEdit

In the Battle of Normandy, only 6% of British tank losses were from {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} fire, despite the close-range combat in the thick bocage landscape. However, the threat from the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} forced Allied tank forces to wait for infantry support before advancing. The portion of British tanks taken out of action by {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} later rose to 34%, a rise probably explained by the lack of German anti-tank guns late in the war and the increased numbers of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} that were available to defending German troops.<ref> Template:Cite book</ref>

During urban combat in eastern Germany later in the war, about 70% of tanks destroyed were hit by {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}s. Soviet and Western Allied tank crews modified their tanks in the field to provide some protection against Panzerfaust attacks. Defensive measures included the use of logs, sandbags, track links, and concrete and wire mesh, along with bed frames with springs (bedsprings), similar to expanded metal-type German tank sideskirts. In practice, about a meter of air gap was required to substantially reduce the penetrating capability of the warhead, so sideskirts and sandbags, along with other improvised armor, were virtually ineffective against both the Panzerschreck and Panzerfaust. Moreover, the added weight from add-on armor overburdened the vehicle's engine, transmission and suspension.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite bookTemplate:Page needed</ref>

Later on, each Soviet heavy tank (IS) and assault gun (ISU-152) company was assigned a platoon of infantry in urban battles to protect them from infantry-wielded anti-tank weapons, often supported by flamethrowers. That order remained intact even during 1950s, including during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

During the last stages of the war, due to the lack of available weapons, many poorly-trained conscripts, mainly elderly men and teenage Hitler Youth members, were often given a single {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, plus any type of obsolete pistol or rifle. Some only had a Panzerfaust. That led several German generals and officers to comment sarcastically that the empty launch-tubes could then be used as clubs in hand-to-hand combat.

Other countriesEdit

Many {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} were sold to Finland, which urgently needed them, as Finnish forces did not have enough anti-tank weapons that could penetrate heavily armoured Soviet tanks like the T-34 and IS-2. The Finnish experience with the weapon and its adaptability to Finnish needs was mixed, with only 4,000 of 25,000 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} delivered expended in combat.<ref> Template:Cite book</ref> The manual that came with the weapon upon delivery to the Finns included depictions of where to aim the weapon on the Soviet T-34 and US Sherman tank (which also saw service with Soviet troops from US Lend-Lease-supplied stocks).Template:Citation needed

The Italian Social Republic (RSI) and the Government of National Unity (Hungary) also used the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. Several RSI army units became skilled in anti-tank warfare and the Hungarians themselves used the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} extensively, especially during the Siege of Budapest. During this brutal siege, an arms factory, the Hungarian Manfred Weiss Steel and Metal Works, located on Csepel Island (within the city) kept up production of various light armaments and ammunition, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} included, all the way until the very last moment, when attacking Soviet troops seized the factory by the first days of 1945.

The US 82nd Airborne Division captured some {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in the Allied invasion of Sicily and later during the fighting in Normandy. Finding them more effective than their own bazookas, they held onto them and used them during the later stages of the French Campaign, even dropping with them into the Netherlands during Operation Market Garden. They captured an ammunition dump of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} near Nijmegen and used them through the Ardennes Offensive toward the end of the war.<ref name="courage">More Than Courage: Sicily, Naples-Foggia, Anzio, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace ..., Phil Nordyke, p. 299</ref>

The Soviet Red Army only incidentally used captured {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in 1944, but from the beginning of 1945, many became available and were actively used during the Soviet offensives of 1945, mostly in street fighting against buildings and protective covers.<ref name="perzyk1"/> In February 1945, such use of captured {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was recommended in a directive by Marshal Georgy Zhukov.<ref name="perzyk1"/> Similarly, they were used by the Polish People's Army.<ref name=perzyk1/> After the war, some 4,000 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} were adopted by the Polish Army in 1949, which designated them as PG-49.<ref name=perzyk1/>

Plans and technical materials on the Panzerfaust were supplied to the Empire of Japan to assist with their development of an effective anti-tank weapon. However, the Japanese went with a different design, the Type 4, loosely based upon the American bazooka. Examples of the American weapon were captured by the Japanese at Leyte in 1944.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

VariantsEdit

File:Tali-Ihantala.jpg
lang}}-armed Finnish soldiers (soldier in foreground is also armed with a Suomi KP/-31) passing the wreckage of a Soviet T-34 tank, destroyed by detonation, in the Battle of Tali-Ihantala
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}} 30 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("small") or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}:This was the original version, first delivered in August 1943 with a total weight of Template:Convert and overall length of Template:Convert. The "30" was indicative of the nominal maximum range of Template:Convert. It had a Template:Convert diameter tube containing Template:Convert of black powder propellant launching a Template:Convert warhead carrying Template:Convert of explosive. The projectile traveled at just Template:Convert per second and could penetrate Template:Convert of armour.<ref name="Rottman 2014"/>
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}} 30:An improved version also appearing in August 1943. This version had a larger warhead for improved armour penetration, Template:Convert of steel and Template:Convert of armoured steel, but the same range of 30 meters. It has an explosive charge of Template:Convert of explosive material. Its barrel has a caliber of Template:Convert and a length of Template:Convert. It has a weight of Template:Convert and a muzzle velocity of Template:Convert.<ref>Weapons of World War II by Alexander Ludeke</ref>
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}} 60:This was the most common version, and was completed in early 1944. However, it did not reach full production until September 1944, when 400,000 were to be produced each month.<ref name="Gordon L. Rottman">Template:Cite book</ref> It had a much more practical range of Template:Convert, although with a muzzle velocity of only Template:Convert per second it would take 1.3 seconds for the warhead to reach a tank at that range. To achieve the higher velocity, the tube diameter was increased to Template:Convert and Template:Convert of propellant used while being a total length of Template:Convert. It also had an improved flip-up rear sight and trigger mechanism. The weapon now weighed Template:Convert. It could defeat Template:Convert of armour.
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}} 100:This was the final version produced in quantity, and was completed in September 1944. However, it did not reach full production until November 1944.<ref name="Gordon L. Rottman"/> It had a nominal maximum range of Template:Convert. Template:Convert of propellant launched the warhead at Template:Convert per second from a Template:Convert diameter tube. The sight had holes for 30, 60, Template:Convert, and had luminous paint in them to make counting up to the correct one easier in the dark. This version weighed Template:Convert and could penetrate Template:Convert of armour.
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}} 150:A major redesign of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 150 featured a new pointed warhead (with a diameter of 105 mm compared to the 140 mm warhead of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 30/60/100 series) with increased armour penetration and two-stage propellant ignition which gave a higher velocity of Template:Convert per second. A fragmentation sleeve was developed for the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 150 to increase its lethality against infantry. The projectile had a delay pellet to the base detonating primer which meant that the projectile exploded after three seconds if it didn't hit its target or a hard surface. This was meant to eliminate duds and also allowed for air bursts to be achieved when combined with the fragmentation sleeve. Production the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 150 started in February 1945 and continued until May of that year when the facility in Döbeln, Saxony producing the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 150 was captured by the Soviets. Although 100,000 were produced, none were issued to field units beyond limited troop trials. No known examples of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 150 survived the end of the war.<ref>Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck by Rottman, Gordon L. Shumate, Johnny, pp. 23-24.</ref> A further development of the Panzerfaust 150 was meant to make it a reloadable weapon, capable of firing ten shots before the black powder fouling built up to the point that the weapon needed to be inspected and cleaned. This development was to be completed in May 1945, with production of the improved {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 150 scheduled to commence in the summer of that year. "The reloadable Pzf 150 might have received a new designation if it had been produced."<ref>Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck by Rottman, Gordon L. Shumate, Johnny, pp. 23.</ref>
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}} 250:The last development of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} series was the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 250. Intended to replace the heavier {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in German service, this design never left the drawing board. It was to use a reloadable tube and featured a pistol grip. The projectile was to be based on the one used by the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 150, but the internal propellant charge was to be larger. Projected muzzle velocity was 120–150 m/s.<ref>Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck by Rottman, Gordon L. Shumate, Johnny, pp. 24-25.</ref> Serial production was scheduled to begin in September 1945. The Soviet RPG-2 anti-tank weapon took some inspiration from the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 250 design (it was also a reloadable, recoilless anti-tank weapon with a trigger grip and electrical firing system). Plans for the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} 250 had fallen into both American and Soviet hands.<ref>Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck by Rottman, Gordon L. Shumate, Johnny, p. 75.</ref>

Related developmentEdit

PAPI
Argentine-made antitank weapon, similar to the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. The acronym stands for proyectil antitanque para infanteria (Spanish for "infantry anti-tank projectile").Template:Citation needed
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}} m/45 and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} m/46: Swedish-made copies of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. The Royal Swedish Army Materiel Administration ordered a copy of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} design from Bofors, examples of which were acquired from Finland and the Danish resistance movement. The resulting weapon, a copy of an early model {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, was designated {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} m/45 and 10,000 were ordered by the Swedish Armed Forces in late 1945. Albeit judged effective against tanks of the day, the muzzle velocity was low and the effective range was only about 70 meters. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} m/45 was quickly upgraded by replacing the black powder propellant charge with smokeless powder. The resulting weapon, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} m/46, had an effective range of about 90 meters.<ref name="slagf">Jansson, Henrik in Slagfjädern nr 2-2018 Årgång 100, p.11</ref>
{{#invoke
Lang|lang}}: Polish-made copy of the Panzerfaust 100, manufactured in 1951–1952. Despite large-scale orders, a production encountered technological difficulties and only 5000 combat and 940 training Pc-100 were made in 1952, before the Polish Army switched to more modern Soviet RPG-2.<ref name=perzyk2>Perzyk, Bogusław: Panzerfaust w Wojsku Polskim 1944-1955 cz.II. Projekt PC-100 in: Poligon 4/2011, pp. 68–80 (in Polish)</ref> It is erroneously known as PT-100 in foreign publications.<ref name=perzyk2/>

UsersEdit

Panzerfaust

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Derivatives
  • Template:Flagcountry: Argentine-made PAPI and possibly Swedish made {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} m/46<ref>Julio S. Guzmán, Las Armas Modernas de Infantería, Abril de 1953</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • Template:Flagcountry: Polish-made copy Pc-100<ref name=perzyk2/>
  • Template:Flagcountry: Manufactured and used copies of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in two variants; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} m/45 and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} m/46<ref name="slagf" />

See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

NotesEdit

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BibliographyEdit

External linksEdit

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