Brummbär

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Sturmpanzer IV

Sturmpanzer IV, displayed at the Musée des Blindés, Saumur, France.
Type Assault gun
Place of origin Flag of Nazi Germany Nazi Germany
Specifications
Weight 28.2 tonnes
Length 5.93 m
Width 2.88 m
Height 2.52 m
Crew 5 (driver, commander,
gunner , 2× loader)

Armor 100 mm (front)
Primary
armament
15 cm StuH43 L/12
Secondary
armament
1 x MG34,
Engine Maybach HL 120 TRM, liquid-cooled gasoline
300 PS (296 hp, 220 kW)
Power/weight 10.64 PS/tonne
Suspension two-wheel leaf-spring bogies
Operational
range
210 km (road)
Speed 40 km/h (road)
24 km/h (off-road)

The Sturmpanzer IV (also known as Sturmpanzer 43 or Sd.Kfz. 166) was an armoured infantry support gun based on the Panzer IV chassis used in the Second World War. It was known by the nickname Brummbär ("grizzly bear") by Allied intelligence[citation needed], a name which was not used by the Germans[citation needed]. German soldiers nicknamed it the "Stupa".

Contents

[edit] Development

The Sturmpanzer IV was a development of the Panzer IV tank and designed to provide direct infantry fire support, especially in urban areas. Earlier vehicles like the StuG III were not completely adequate for this role and therefore it was decided in early 1942 to develop a new vehicle.

The result was the Sturmpanzer IV, which used a Panzer IV chassis with a new, fixed superstructure housing the 150 mm Sturmhaubitze (StuH) 43 L/12 gun. This fired both high explosive and shaped charge anti-tank rounds. Thirty eight rounds, with separate propellent cartridges, could be carried.

The original design of the Sturmpanzer IV suffered from a series of flaws, which were gradually solved during the production process. The most important flaw was the high weight and recoil of the StuH 43 gun, which overloaded the Panzer IV chassis and made the entire vehicle top-heavy. Furthermore, early vehicles suffered from transmission failures and were underpowered.

Another significant flaw was the absence of a machine gun which made it easy for enemy infantry to attack the vehicle at close range. Early vehicles carried a MP 40 sub-machine gun inside, which could be fired through firing ports in the side of the superstructure.

In October 1943 it was decided that the Sturmpanzer IV's superstructure as well as the StuH 43 gun needed to be redesigned to fix these flaws. A new and lighter version of the StuH 43 gun was produced, the StuH 43/1 L/12. This gun was used from the second production series onwards.

A new superstructure was added in mid-1944 which featured a redesigned gun collar, as well as a general reduction in height of the superstructure. This redesign also introduced a ball mount in the front superstructure for a MG34 machine gun with 600 rounds.

[edit] Production

Production began in May 1943 and continued until March 1945. A total of 298 Sturmpanzer IV were built, in four series. At first, new Panzer IV chassis were used, but from the second production series onwards, rebuilt Panzer IV Ausf. F, Ausf. G and Ausf. H were used.

[edit] Combat history

Brummbär on display at the Deutsches Panzermuseum Munster, Germany
Brummbär on display at the Deutsches Panzermuseum Munster, Germany

They saw action in the Eastern Front, most notably the great tank battle of Kursk, the Western Front, and Italy during their time in service.

After some teething trouble with early production models, the Sturmpanzer IV proved itself to be an excellent fire support vehicle.

[edit] Surviving vehicles

Four Sturmpanzer IVs survive. They may be seen at the Musée des Blindés in Saumur, France, the Deutsches Panzermuseum in Germany, the Kubinka Tank Museum near Moscow and the United States Army Ordnance Museum near Aberdeen, Maryland.

[edit] External links

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