German self-propelled gun Ferdinand. Self-propelled artillery installation "Ferdinand


As already mentioned in the last article, the remaining 47 self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" were withdrawn from the active armies and at the end of 1943 - the beginning of 1944 were modernized at the same "native" plant "Nibelungenwerke". The command took into account the errors as in organizational structure, as well as in the design of the machine. In the front sheet of the ACS, a machine gun was installed in a ball mount; gun barrels were replaced; the shield of the gun was turned back to front for better attachment to the barrel; an observation tower with seven periscopes was mounted on the roof of the cabin; changed the poles on the lighting generator and improved the sealing of the exhaust pipes; reinforced the bottom of the car in the front with a 30-mm plate; “shod” in wider tracks; increased the ammunition load by 5 shots; mounted on the hull mounts for tools and tracks; the hull and deckhouse were covered with zimmerite.
The order to rename the self-propelled guns to "Elephant" was issued on February 27, 1944 after the modernization was completed.
In January 1944, the first company of the 653rd battalion, consisting of 14 "Elephants", one repair and recovery vehicle, also based on the chassis Tiger tank(P) and two ammunition transporters was transferred to Italy to counter the advance of the Anglo-American troops. Heavy self-propelled guns participated in the battles near Nettuno, Anzio, Rome. Despite the dominance of Allied aviation and the difficult terrain, the company has proven itself from the very better side, so, according to German data, only on March 30-31 on the outskirts of Rome, two self-propelled guns destroyed up to 50 American tanks, armored personnel carriers and cars and were blown up by the crews after using up fuel and ammunition. On June 26, 1944, the company, in which two combat-ready Elefants remained, was withdrawn from the front and transferred first to Austria, and then to Poland to join the 653rd battalion.


The two remaining self-propelled gun companies in April 1944 were transferred to the Eastern Front, in the Ternopil region. In addition to 31 Elefant, the companies included two repair and recovery vehicles based on the chassis of the Tiger (P) tank and one based on the Panther tank, as well as three ammunition transporters. In heavy battles at the end of April, the companies suffered losses - 14 vehicles were disabled; however, 11 of them were quickly restored, and the number of combat-ready vehicles even increased due to the arrival of repaired vehicles of the 1st company from the factories. In addition, by June, the composition of the companies was replenished with two unique models of armored vehicles - the Tiger (P) tank with frontal armor reinforced to 200 mm and the Panther tank with the PzKpfw IV tank turret, which were used as command vehicles. In July, a large-scale offensive by the Soviet troops began, and both companies of the "Elephants" were embroiled in heavy fighting. On July 18, they were thrown without reconnaissance and training to help the SS division "Hohenstaufen" and suffered heavy losses from the fire of Soviet anti-tank and self-propelled artillery. The battalion lost more than half of the vehicles, and a significant part of them were to be restored, however, since the battlefield was left behind by the Soviet troops, the damaged self-propelled guns were destroyed by their own crews. On August 3, the remnants of the battalion were transferred to Krakow.


The 653rd battalion, which suffered heavy losses from the Soviet troops, began to receive new Jagdtigr self-propelled guns from October 1944, and the remaining Elefants were reduced to a separate 614th heavy self-propelled anti-tank company (sPzJgKp 614). Until February 1945, this company, which consisted of 13 self-propelled guns, was in reserve. On February 25, 1945, the company was transferred to Wünsdorf to strengthen the anti-tank defense of German units. Recent fights"Elephants" were held in Wünsdorf, Zossen and Berlin.
In the Soviet Union in different time there were at least eight captured complete Ferdinands. One vehicle was shot down near Ponyri in July-August 1943 while testing its armor; another one was shot in the fall of 1944 while testing new types of weapons. At the end of 1945, at the disposal various organizations there were six self-propelled guns. They were used for various tests, some of the machines were eventually dismantled in order to study the design. As a result, all of them, except for one, were scrapped, like all cars captured in a badly damaged condition.

Self-propelled guns Ferdinand occupies a place between weakly armored "precocious" like "Nashorn" and the most successful anti-tank self-propelled guns "Jagdpanther", created on the basis of the Panther tank. Developed on the basis of the "Tiger" designed by "Porsche" (originally called "Ferdinand", named after the creator - Ferdinand Porsche), self-propelled guns "Elephant" (elephant) became one of the first armored combat vehicles with a long-barreled 88-mm anti-aircraft gun. The full index of this gun is as follows: RaK 43/2 L / 71, it allows us to conclude that the length of the gun barrel is 71 calibers (that is, its length is 88 mm x 71).

Structurally, the Ferdinand hull remained the same as the Porsche Tiger hull, only 100-mm armor plates were bolted in front, which increased the total thickness of the frontal armor protection to 200 mm. The Ferdinand was equipped with two Maybach engines and had many electrical components, including an electric transmission and a turning mechanism served by two electric motors. All this made the self-propelled gun very difficult and unreliable in operation. In February 1943, Hitler ordered that 90 of these self-propelled guns, which were assigned the SdKfz 184 index, be put into active units as soon as possible. front.

Many of the Ferdinands fought on the Kursk Bulge, where they demonstrated the ability to destroy any Soviet tanks. However, self-propelled guns lacked cross-country ability on rough terrain, and the lack of protective weapons made them vulnerable to anti-tank infantry units armed with magnetic mines, RPGs and similar anti-tank weapons. If the battle was fought at short distances, the support of the Ferdinand infantry was simply necessary. At the end of 1943, 48 surviving self-propelled guns were modified at the factory, in particular, they were equipped with MG 34 course machine guns, commander's hatches and anti-magnetic coating. Then the "Elephants" were transferred to the Italian front, where, in off-road conditions and a lack of spare parts, they caused a lot of trouble for the Germans. For the most part, crews ended up either just dropping them or blowing them up before dropping them.

Soviet soldiers inspect a German heavy self-propelled artillery mount of the Ferdinand tank destroyer class, shot down during the Battle of Kursk. The photo is also interesting with a rare for 1943 steel helmet SSH-36 on a soldier on the left.

Modifications

In late 1943 - early 1944, all the remaining Ferdinands (47 units) by that time were repaired and modernized at the Nibelungenwerke plant. The work carried out included the installation of a machine gun in a ball mount in the front plate of the self-propelled guns, the replacement of gun barrels, turning the shield on the gun barrel “back to front” for better attachment to the barrel, mounting an observation turret with seven fixed periscopes on the roof of the cabin, changing the poles on the lighting generator and improving sealing exhaust pipes, strengthening the bottom in the front of the hull with a 30-mm armor plate to protect against mines, mounting wider tracks, increasing the ammunition load by 5 rounds, installing mounts for tools and caterpillar tracks on the hull. The hull and cabin of the self-propelled guns were covered with zimmerite.

Often, self-propelled guns that have undergone modernization are called "Elephant". In fact, the order to rename the self-propelled guns was issued on February 27, 1944, after the modernization was completed. However, the new name took root badly and until the end of the war, self-propelled guns both in the troops and in official documents more often called "Ferdinands" than "Elephants". At the same time, in the English-language literature, the name "Elephant" is more often used, which is associated with the fact that vehicles under this name took part in the battles with the Anglo-American troops in Italy.

Project evaluation

In general, the self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" is a very ambiguous object in terms of evaluation, which is largely a consequence of its design, which determined the subsequent fate of the machine. The self-propelled gun was an improvisation created in a big hurry, in fact, an experimental vehicle on the chassis of a heavy tank that was not adopted for service. Therefore, to evaluate the self-propelled guns, it is necessary to become more familiar with the design of the Tiger (P) tank, from which the Ferdinand inherited many of its advantages and disadvantages.

This tank was used a large number of new technical solutions that have not been previously tested in German and world tank building. The most significant of these include electric transmission and suspension using longitudinal torsion bars. Both of these solutions showed good performance, but turned out to be overly complex and expensive to manufacture and not mature enough for long-term operation. Although there were subjective factors in choosing the Henschel prototype, there were also objective reasons for the rejection of F. Porsche's designs. Before the war, this designer actively participated in the development complex structures racing cars, which were single prototypes not intended for high-volume production. He managed to achieve both reliability and efficiency of his designs, but through the use of a very highly skilled workforce, high-quality materials and individual work with each released model of equipment. The designer tried to transfer the same approach to tank building, where it was not applicable in the mass production of military equipment.

Although the controllability and survivability of the entire engine-transmission unit received a very good assessment from the German military who operated it, the price for this was high technological costs for its production and an increase in the weight and size characteristics of the entire Tiger (P) tank as a whole. In particular, some sources mention the great need of the Third Reich for copper, and its abundant use in electrical engineering Tiger (P) was regarded as an excess. In addition, a tank with such a scheme had too much fuel consumption. Therefore, a number of promising projects of F. Porsche tanks were rejected precisely because of the use of electric transmission in them.

The suspension with longitudinal torsion bars was much easier to maintain and repair compared to the "checkerboard" torsion bar suspension of the Tiger I tank. On the other hand, it was very difficult to manufacture and less reliable in operation. All options for its subsequent development were steadily rejected by the leadership of the German tank building in favor of a more traditional and technologically advanced "chessboard" scheme, albeit much less convenient to repair and maintain.

Tank destroyer "Ferdinand" Sd.Kfz.184 (8,8 cm PaK 43/2 Sfl L / 71 Panzerjäger Tiger (P) of the 653rd battalion of heavy tank destroyers (Schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 653) of the Wehrmacht moves through the settlement before the start offensive operation"Citadel"

Therefore, from a production point of view, the German army leadership and the Ministry of Arms and Ammunition actually delivered a verdict on the uselessness of the Tiger (P) to the Wehrmacht. However, a significant stock of practically finished chassis of this vehicle made it possible to experiment on the creation of the world's first heavily armored tank destroyer. The number of self-propelled guns manufactured was strictly limited by the number of available chassis, which predetermined the small-scale production of the Ferdinands, regardless of the advantages and disadvantages of its design.

The combat use of the Ferdinands left an ambivalent impression. The most powerful 88-mm cannon was ideal for destroying enemy armored vehicles at any combat distance, and the crews of German self-propelled guns really scored very large numbers of destroyed and wrecked Soviet tanks. Powerful armor made the Ferdinand practically invulnerable to shells of almost all Soviet guns when fired head-on, the side and stern were not penetrated by 45-mm armor-piercing shells, and 76-mm shells (and only modifications B, BSP) pierced it only from extremely short distances (less than 200 m), strictly normal. Therefore, instructions for Soviet tankmen and gunners ordered to hit the Ferdinand undercarriage, the gun barrel, armor plate joints and viewing devices. More effective sub-caliber shells were available in very small quantities.

The effectiveness of the 57-mm ZIS-2 anti-tank guns on the side armor was somewhat better (normally, the side armor of the self-propelled guns penetrated the shells of these guns from about 1000 m). Artillery of the corps and army level could effectively hit the Ferdinands - heavy, low-mobility, expensive and slow-firing 122-mm guns A-19 and 152-mm howitzers-guns ML-20, as well as expensive and vulnerable due to the large size in height 85- mm anti-aircraft guns. In 1943, the only Soviet armored vehicle capable of effectively fighting the Ferdinand was the SU-152 self-propelled gun, which was much inferior to the German self-propelled guns in terms of armor, accuracy and effective firing range of an armor-piercing projectile (although good results were also achieved when firing at the Ferdinand with fragmentation and high-explosive - the armor did not break through, but the undercarriage, gun, internal components and assemblies were damaged, the crew was injured). Also quite effective against the side armor of the Ferdinand was the 122-mm cumulative projectile BP-460A self-propelled guns SU-122, but the range and accuracy of this projectile was very low.

Ferdinand tank destroyers Sd.Kfz.184 (8.8 cm PaK 43/2 Sfl L/71 Panzerjäger Tiger (P) of the headquarters company of the 654th battalion of heavy tank destroyers (Schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 654) of the Wehrmacht, lined 15-16 On July 1943, near the Ponyri station.On the left is staff vehicle No. II-03.It was burned with bottles of kerosene mixture after a shell hit the undercarriage.In the frame is an officer of the Red Army.

The fight against the Ferdinands became less difficult in 1944, with the entry into service with the Red Army of the IS-2, T-34-85 tanks, self-propelled guns ISU-122 and SU-85, which are very effective when firing at the Ferdinand in the side and stern on the most common combat distances. The task of defeating "Ferdinand" in the forehead was never completely solved. The issue of penetrating a 200-mm frontal armor plate is still controversial: there is evidence that the 100-mm BS-3 and self-propelled guns SU-100 coped with this, but Soviet reports from 1944-1945 indicate their lower armor-piercing ability compared to 122 mm guns A-19 or D-25. For the latter, the firing tables indicate the thickness of the pierced armor of about 150 mm at a distance of 500 m, but the armor penetration graph of those years claims that the Ferdinand forehead was pierced at a distance of 450 m. Ferdinand" and IS-2 or ISU-122 is many times more favorable for the German self-propelled guns. Knowing this Soviet tankmen and self-propelled gunners almost always fired at heavily armored targets at long distances with high-explosive 122-mm grenades. Kinetic energy The 25-kg projectile and its explosive action could, with a good probability, put the Ferdinand out of action without breaking through the frontal armor.

Front-line correspondent Konstantin Mikhailovich Simonov (1915-1979) sits on the barrel of a gun of a captured German self-propelled gun "Ferdinand", shot down on the northern face of the Kursk salient. Presumably, a vehicle with tail number "232", a photo of the same self-propelled gun from behind. A German gas mask tank is inserted into the muzzle brake of the gun.

The anti-tank and tank artillery of Great Britain and the United States was also ineffective against the frontal armor of the Ferdinand, only sub-caliber shells with a detachable pallet for the 17-pounder (76.2-mm) anti-tank gun (which was also installed on Sherman Firefly tanks, which appeared in the middle of 1944, ACS Achilles and Archer) could solve this problem. On board, the German self-propelled guns were confidently hit by armor-piercing shells of English and American 57-mm and 75-mm guns from a distance of about 500 m, 76-mm and 90-mm guns - from a distance of about 2000 m. Italy in 1943-1944 confirmed their very high efficiency when used for their intended purpose - as a tank destroyer.

On the other hand, the high security of "Ferdinand" to a certain extent played a negative role in his fate. Instead of a long-range tank destroyer, due to the massive and accurate fire of the Soviet artillery, the German command near Kursk used the Ferdinands as the tip of the ram of the Soviet defense in depth, which was a clear mistake. For this role, the German self-propelled guns were badly suited - the lack of a machine gun, low power for a large mass of the vehicle and high pressure on the ground. It is known that a significant number of Ferdinands were immobilized by explosions in Soviet minefields and artillery fire on the undercarriage, most of these vehicles were destroyed by their own crews due to the impossibility of quick evacuation due to the excessive mass of self-propelled guns. The Soviet infantry and anti-tank artillery, knowing the impenetrability of the Ferdinand and its weakness in close combat, let the German self-propelled guns get closer, trying to deprive them of the support of the German infantry and tanks, and then try to knock them out by firing at the side, on the undercarriage, the gun, as recommended instructions for combating enemy heavy tanks and self-propelled guns.

Burning German self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" from the 656th regiment on the Orlovsky face of the Kursk Bulge. The photo was taken through the hatch of the driver of the Pz.Kpfw control tank. III tanks-robots B-4.

Immobilized self-propelled guns became easy prey for infantry, armed means melee anti-tank combat, for example, Molotov cocktails. This tactic was fraught with heavy losses, but sometimes it led to success, especially if the German self-propelled guns lost the ability to turn. In particular, one "Ferdinand" that fell into a sandy pit could not get out on its own and was captured by the Soviet infantry, and its crew was captured. The weakness of "Ferdinand" in close combat was noted by the German side and served as one of the reasons for the modernization in "Elephant".

The large mass of the Ferdinand made it difficult to pass through many bridges, although it was not prohibitively large, especially compared to the heavy Tiger II tank and the Jagdtigr self-propelled guns. The large dimensions and low mobility of the Ferdinand are not in the best way affected the survivability of the machine in the conditions of air dominance of the Allied aviation.

Blown up on a mine "Ferdinand" No. 501, from the 654th division. The car in the list examined by the GABTU commission is listed under the number "9". It was this machine that was repaired and sent to the NIBT training ground. It is currently on display at the Museum of Armored Vehicles in Kubinka. Kursk Bulge, near the village of Goreloe.

Heavy assault gun "Ferdinand", tail number "731", chassis number 150090 from the 654th division, blown up by a mine in the defense zone of the 70th army. Later, this car was sent to an exhibition of captured equipment in Moscow. Kursk Bulge.

In general, despite some shortcomings, the Ferdinands proved to be very good, and when used correctly, these self-propelled guns were an extremely dangerous opponent for any tank or self-propelled guns of those times. The heirs of the Ferdinand were armed with an equally powerful weapon, but lighter and weaker armored Jagdpanther and Jagdtigr, the most powerful and heaviest tank destroyer of World War II.

There were no direct analogues of Ferdinand in other countries. In terms of concept and armament, they are closest to it Soviet fighters tanks SU-85 and SU-100, but they are twice as light and much weaker armored. Another analogue is the Soviet heavy self-propelled gun ISU-122, with powerful weapons, it was much inferior to the German self-propelled gun in terms of frontal armor. British and American anti-tank self-propelled guns had an open cabin or turret, and were also very lightly armored.

Heavy assault gun "Ferdinand", tail number "723" from the 654th division (battalion), shot down in the area of ​​​​the state farm "May 1". The caterpillar was destroyed by shell hits and the gun was jammed. The vehicle was part of Major Kal's strike group as part of the 505th heavy tank battalion of the 654th division.

Tactical and technical characteristics of self-propelled guns Elephant

Layout scheme: control compartment and transmission front, engine in the middle, combat rear
- Developer: Ferdinand Porsche
- Manufacturer: Porsche
- Years of development: 1942-1943
- Years of production: 1943
- Years of operation: 1943-1945
- Number of issued, pcs.: 91

Weight ACS Elephant

Combat weight, t: 65.0

Crew: 6 people

Overall dimensions of ACS Elephant

Case length, mm: 8140
- Width, mm: 3380
- Height, mm: 2970
- Clearance, mm: 485

Booking ACS Elephant

Armor type: rolled and forged surface hardened
- Forehead of the hull (top), mm / city: 200 (100 + 100) / 12 °
- Forehead of the hull (bottom), mm / city: 200 / 35 °
- Hull board (top), mm/deg.: 80 / 0°
- Hull board (bottom), mm/deg.: 60 / 0°
- Hull feed (top), mm / city: 80 / 40 °
- Hull feed (bottom), mm / city: 80 / 0 °
- Bottom, mm: 20-50
- Hull roof, mm: 30
- Forehead felling, mm/deg.: 200 / 25°
- Gun mask, mm / city: 125
- Cutting board, mm/deg.: 80 / 30°
- Cutting feed, mm/deg.: 80 / 30°
- Cabin roof, mm / city: 30 / 85 °

Armament self-propelled guns Elephant

Gun caliber and make: 88mm Pak 43
- Type of gun: rifled
- Barrel length, calibers: 71
- Gun ammunition: 50-55
- Angles HV, degrees: −8…+14°
- GN angles, degrees: 28°
- sights: periscope Sfl ZF 1a

Machine guns: 1 × 7.92 MG-34

Engine ACS Elephant

Engine type: two V-shaped 12-cylinder carburetor
- Engine power, l. s.: 2×265

Speed ​​ACS Elephant

Highway speed, km/h: 35 (on tests in the USSR)
- Cross-country speed, km / h: 10-15 for soft plowing 5-10

Range on the highway, km: 150
- Power reserve over rough terrain, km: 90

Specific power, l. s./t: 8.2
- suspension type: torsion bar
- Specific ground pressure, kg/cm²: 1.2

Climbability, degrees: 22°
- overcome wall, m: 0.78
- Crossable ditch, m: 2.64
- Crossable ford, m: 1.0

Photo self-propelled guns Ferdinand (Elephant)

Heavy assault gun "Ferdinand", destroyed by a direct hit of an aerial bomb from a Soviet Pe-2 dive bomber. Tactical number unknown. The area of ​​the Ponyri station and the May 1 state farm.

The German heavy assault gun "Ferdinand" of the 653rd battalion (division), captured in good condition along with the crew by the soldiers of the Soviet 129th Orlovskaya rifle division. The left front corner of the self-propelled guns had to be hit by an HE shell (“chrysanthemum” is clearly visible in the photo). Therefore, there is no fender and wing. But the self-propelled guns themselves were in perfect working order, the guns and instruments were in perfect order the radio was on. Even the “kinizhechka” magic according to Fedya was available.

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The birth of the most famous German self-propelled gun of the period of the Second World War "Ferdinand" is due, on the one hand, to the intrigues around the heavy tank \/K 4501 (P), and on the other hand, to the appearance of the 88-mm anti-tank gun Cancer 43. Tank \/K 4501 (P) - simply speaking, the "Tiger" designed by Dr. Porsche - was shown to Hitler on April 20, 1942, simultaneously with his competitor VK 4501 (H) - "Tiger" by Henschel. According to Hitler, both cars should have been put into mass production, which was opposed in every possible way by the Arms Department, whose employees could not stand the Fuhrer's obstinate favorite, Dr. Porsche.

Tests did not reveal obvious advantages of one vehicle over another, but Porsche was more ready for the production of the Tiger - by June 6, 1942, the first 16 VK 4501 (P) tanks were ready for delivery to the troops, for which Krupp was completing the assembly of towers . Henschel could deliver only one car by this date, and that one without a turret. The first battalion, equipped with Porsche Tigers, was supposed to be formed by August 1942 and sent to Stalingrad, but suddenly the Ordnance Department stopped all work on the tank for a month.

The managers took advantage of Hitler's instructions to create an assault gun based on the Pz.IV and VK 4501 tanks, armed with the latest 88-mm Pak 43/2 anti-tank gun with a barrel length of 71 calibers. At the suggestion of the Armaments Directorate, it was decided to convert all 92 finished and assembled in the workshops of the Nibelungenwerke VK 4501 (P) chassis into assault guns.

In September 1942, work began. The design was carried out by Porsche together with the designers of the Berlin plant Alkett. Since the armored cabin was to be located aft, the layout of the chassis had to be changed, placing the engines and generators in the middle of the hull. Initially, it was planned to assemble new self-propelled guns in Berlin, but this had to be abandoned due to the difficulties associated with transportation by rail, and because of the unwillingness to suspend the production of StuG III assault guns, the main product of the Alkett factory. As a result, the assembly of the self-propelled guns, which received the official designation 8.8 cm Pak 43/2 Sfl L / 71 Panzerjäger Tiger (P) Sd.Kfz. 184 and the name Ferdinand (assigned personally by Hitler in February 1943 as a sign of respect for Dr. Ferdinand Porsche), was produced at the Nibelungenwerke plant.

The frontal 100-mm hull plates of the Tiger(P) tank were also reinforced with 100-mm armor plates fixed to the hull with bullet-proof bolts. Thus, the frontal armor of the hull was brought up to 200 mm. The frontal cutting sheet had a similar thickness. The thickness of the side and stern sheets reached 80 mm (according to other sources, 85 mm). The armor plates of the cabin were connected “into a spike” and reinforced with dowels, and then scalded. The cabin was attached to the body with brackets and bolts with a bulletproof head.

In front of the hull there were places for the driver and radio operator. Behind them, in the center of the car, two 12-cylinder liquid-cooled carbureted V-engines Maybach HL 120TRM with a power of 265 hp were installed parallel to each other. (at 2600 rpm) each. The engines drove the rotors of two Siemens Type aGV generators, which, in turn, supplied electricity to two Siemens D1495aAC traction motors with a power of 230 kW each, installed in the aft part of the vehicle under the fighting compartment. Torque from electric motors via electromechanical final drives was transmitted to the driving wheels of the aft location. In emergency mode or in the event of combat damage to one of the branches of the power supply, its duplication was provided.

Chassis "Ferdinand" in relation to one side consisted of six road wheels with internal shock absorption, interlocked in pairs in three bogies with the original, very complex, but highly efficient piston suspension scheme with longitudinal torsion bars, tested on the experimental chassis VK 3001 (P). The drive wheel had removable gear rims with 19 teeth each. The idler wheel also had gear rims, which eliminated the idle rewinding of the tracks.

Each track consisted of 109 tracks 640 mm wide.

In the cabin, in the trunnions of a special machine, an 88-mm cannon Pak 43/2 (in the self-propelled version - StuK 43) with a barrel length of 71 calibers, developed on the basis of the Flak 41 anti-aircraft gun, was installed. The horizontal pointing angle did not exceed the 28 ° sector. Elevation angle +14°, declination -8°. The weight of the gun is 2200 kg. The embrasure in the frontal sheet of the cabin was covered with a massive pear-shaped cast mask connected to the machine. However, the design of the mask was not very successful and did not provide full protection against lead bullet splashes and small fragments that penetrated the body through the gaps between the mask and the frontal sheet. Therefore, armor shields were reinforced on the masks of most of the Ferdinands. The gun ammunition included 50 unitary shots placed on the walls of the cabin. In the aft part of the cabin there was a round hatch designed to dismantle the gun.

According to German data, the PzGr 39/43 armor-piercing projectile weighing 10.16 kg and an initial speed of 1000 m/s pierced 165-mm armor at a distance of 1000 m (at a meeting angle of 90 °), and the PzGr 40/43 sub-caliber projectile weighing 7.5 kg and an initial speed of 1130 m / s - 193 mm, which provided Ferdinand with an unconditional defeat of any of the tanks that existed then.

The assembly of the first car began on February 16, and the last - the ninetieth "Ferdinand" left the factory floors on May 8, 1943. In April, the first production vehicle was tested at the Kummersdorf test site.

The Ferdinands received their baptism of fire during Operation Citadel as part of the 656th tank destroyer regiment, which included the 653rd and 654th divisions (schwere Panzerjäger Abteilung - sPz.Jäger Abt.). By the beginning of the battle, the first had 45, and the second had 44 Ferdinands. Both divisions were under operational control of the 41st tank corps, participated in heavy fighting on the northern face of the Kursk Bulge in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe Ponyri station (654th division) and the village of Teploe (653rd division).

Particularly heavy losses were suffered by the 654th division, mainly in minefields. 21 Ferdinands remained on the battlefield. The German equipment knocked out and destroyed in the area of ​​the Ponyri station was examined on July 15, 1943 by representatives of the GAU and NIBTPolygon of the Red Army. Most of the "Ferdinands" were in a minefield stuffed with land mines from captured large-caliber shells and bombs. More than half of the cars had chassis damage; broken tracks, broken road wheels, etc. In five Ferdinands, damage to the undercarriage was caused by hits of shells of 76-mm caliber or more. In two German self-propelled guns, the gun barrels were shot through by shells and bullets from anti-tank rifles. One vehicle was destroyed by a direct hit by an aerial bomb, and another by a 203-mm howitzer shell hitting the roof of the wheelhouse.

Only one self-propelled gun of this type, which was fired from different directions by seven T-34 tanks and a battery of 76-mm guns, had a hole in the side, in the area of ​​the drive wheel. Another "Ferdinand", which had no damage to the hull and chassis, was set on fire by a Molotov cocktail thrown by our infantrymen.

The only worthy opponent of heavy German self-propelled guns was the Soviet SU-152. On July 8, 1943, the SU-152 regiment fired on the attacking "Ferdinands" of the 653rd division, knocking out four enemy vehicles. In total, in July - August 1943, the Germans lost 39 Ferdinands. The last trophies went to the Red Army on the outskirts of Orel - several damaged assault guns prepared for evacuation were captured at the railway station.

The first battles of the "Ferdinands" on the Kursk Bulge were, in fact, the last ones where these self-propelled guns were used in mass quantities. From a tactical point of view, their use left much to be desired. Designed to destroy Soviet medium and heavy tanks at long ranges, they were used as an advanced "armor shield", blindly ramming engineering obstacles and anti-tank defenses, while incurring heavy losses. At the same time, the moral effect of the appearance on the Soviet-German front of largely invulnerable German self-propelled guns was very large. “Ferdinandomania” and “Ferdinandophobia” appeared. Judging by the memoirs, there was not a fighter in the Red Army who did not knock out or, in extreme cases, did not participate in the battle with the Ferdinands. They crawled into our positions on all fronts, from 1943 (and sometimes even earlier) until the end of the war. The number of “padded” “Ferdinands” is approaching several thousand. This phenomenon can be explained by the fact that the majority of the Red Army soldiers were poorly versed in all sorts of “marders”, “bison” and “nashorns” and called any German self-propelled gun “Ferdinand”, which indicates how great his “popularity” was among our fighters. Well, besides, for the lined "Ferdinand" they gave the order without talking.

(caterpillar chain conditionally not shown):

1 - 88 mm gun; 2 - armor shield on the mask; 3 - periscope sight; four - commander's cupola; 5 - fan; 6 - hatch of the periscope observation device; 7 - laying 88-mm rounds on the wall of the fighting compartment; 8 - electric motor; 9 - drive wheel; 10 - suspension trolley; 11 - engine; 12 - generator; 13 - gunner's seat; 14 - driver's seat; 15 - guide wheel; 16 - course machine gun

After the inglorious completion of Operation Citadel, the Ferdinands that remained in service were transferred to Zhytomyr and Dnepropetrovsk, where their current repairs and replacement of guns began, caused by a strong fire of barrels. At the end of August, the personnel of the 654th division was sent to France for reorganization and rearmament. At the same time, he transferred his self-propelled guns to the 653rd division, which in October - November took part in defensive battles in the area of ​​Nikopol and Dnepropetrovsk. In December, the division left the front line and was sent to Austria.

During the period from July 5 (the beginning of Operation Citadel) to November 5, 1943, the Ferdinands of the 656th regiment knocked out 582 Soviet tanks, 344 anti-tank guns, 133 guns, 103 anti-tank rifles, three aircraft, three armored vehicles and three self-propelled guns*.

In the period from January to March 1944, the Nibelungenwerke plant modernized the 47 Ferdinands remaining by that time. A ball mount for a MG 34 machine gun was mounted in the frontal armor of the hull on the right. A commander’s turret appeared on the roof of the cabin, borrowed from the StuG 40 assault gun. did not have. Ammunition brought up to 55 shots. The name of the car was changed to Elefant (elephant). However, until the end of the war, self-propelled guns were often called the familiar name "Ferdinand".

At the end of February 1944, the 1st company of the 653rd division was sent to Italy, where it participated in the battles near Anzio, and in May - June 1944 - near Rome. At the end of June, the company, in which two serviceable Elefants remained, was transferred to Austria.

In April 1944, the 653rd division, consisting of two companies, was sent to the Eastern Front, in the Ternopil region. There, during the fighting, the division lost 14 vehicles, but 11 of them were repaired and re-commissioned. In July, the division, which was already retreating across the territory of Poland, had 33 serviceable self-propelled guns. However, on July 18, the 653rd division, without reconnaissance and training, was thrown into battle to the rescue of the 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen, and within a day the number of combat vehicles in its ranks had more than halved. Soviet troops very successfully used their heavy self-propelled guns and 57-mm anti-tank guns against the "elephants". Part of the German vehicles was only damaged and was completely subject to restoration, but due to the impossibility of evacuation, they were blown up or set on fire by their own crews. The remnants of the division - 12 combat-ready vehicles - were taken to Krakow on August 3. In October 1944, the Jagdtiger self-propelled guns began to enter the division, and the remaining “elephants” were consolidated into the 614th heavy anti-tank company.

Until the beginning of 1945, the company was in the reserve of the 4th Panzer Army, and on February 25 it was transferred to the Wünsdorf area to strengthen anti-tank defenses. At the end of April, the “elephants” fought their last battles in Wünsdorf and Zossen as part of the so-called Ritter group (Captain Ritter was the commander of the 614th battery).

In surrounded Berlin, the last two Elefant self-propelled guns were shot down in the area of ​​​​Karl-August Square and the Church of the Holy Trinity.

Two self-propelled guns of this type have survived to this day. In the museum armored weapons and equipment in Kubinka, the Ferdinand captured by the Red Army during the Battle of Kursk is exhibited, and the Elephant, which the Americans got in Italy, near Anzio, is exhibited in the Aberdeen Proving Ground Museum in the USA.

PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS OF ACS "FERDINAND"

Combat weight, t……………………….65

Crew, people………………………………6

Overall dimensions, mm:

length……………………………….8140

width…………………………….3380

height……………………………..2970

clearance……………………………..480

Armor thickness, mm:

forehead of the hull and cabin…………….200

board and stern ………………………..80

roof………………………………….30

bottom………………………………….20

Maximum speed, km/h:

along the highway……………………………..20

by area………………………..11

Power reserve, km:

along the highway………………………………150

by area………………………..90

Overcome obstacles:

elevation angle, deg………………..22

ditch width, m……………………2.64

wall height, m………………..0.78

fording depth, m…………………….1

Support length

surface, mm………………..4175

Specific pressure, kg / cm 2 ……..1.23

Specific power, hp / t .... about 8

M. BARYATINSKY

The weapon is damaged! Shooting accuracy is halved! :) Ferdinand No. 614 after a direct hit by an air bomb from a Pe-2 dive bomber, Goreloy settlement, July 9, 1943.

Panzerjager Tiger (P) mit 8,8 cm PaK43/2 "Ferdinand" (since early 1944 - "Elefant"), Sd.Kfz.184- German heavy anti-tank self-propelled artillery (ACS) during the Second World War. This combat vehicle, armed with an 88 mm cannon, is one of the most heavily armed and heavily armored representatives of German armored vehicles of that period. Despite his small numbers, Ferdinand is the most famous representative of the class of self-propelled guns, and a large number of legends are associated with him.

Self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" was developed in 1942-1943, being largely an improvisation based on the chassis of a heavy tank that was not adopted for service Tiger designs Dr. Ferdinand Porsche. Initially, the self-propelled guns had good potential, but the tactics of use and the unfavorable terrain conditions on which the Ferdinands were used largely prevented the benefits of this self-propelled guns from being realized. Ferdinands took part in the battles on the northern face of the Kursk Bulge, in the autumn battles of 1943 on the Eastern Front, in Italy and in western Ukraine in 1944, and the few self-propelled guns remaining in service took part in the hostilities in Poland and Germany in 1945. In the Soviet Army "Ferdinand" often referred to as any German self-propelled artillery piece.

History of creation

BREM based on VK 4501(P) chassis

The history of the creation of "Ferdinand" is closely intertwined with the history of the creation of the famous tank "Tiger I". This tank was developed by two competing design bureaus - Porsche and Henschel. In the winter of 1942, the production of prototype tanks began, which were named VK 4501 (P) (“Porsche”) and VK 4501 (H) (“Henschel”). On April 20, 1942 (the Fuhrer's birthday), the prototypes were demonstrated to Hitler by conducting demonstration firing. Both samples showed similar results, and the decision to select a sample for mass production was not made. Hitler insisted on the parallel production of both types, the military leadership leaned towards the Henschel machine. In April - June, the tests were continued, in parallel, the Nibelungenwerke company began assembling the first serial Porsche Tigers. On June 23, 1942, at a meeting with Hitler, it was decided to have only one type of heavy tank in mass production, which was the Henschel machine. The reason for this is considered to be problems with the electromechanical transmission of the Porsche tank, the tank's low cruising range, and the need to start mass production of engines for the tank. The conflict between Ferdinand Porsche and the German Ordnance Department also played a certain role.

Despite the fact that the military preferred the Henschel Tiger, work on the VK 4501 (P) did not stop. So, on June 21, 1942, F. Porsche was instructed to equip his tank with a more powerful 88-mm cannon with a barrel length of 71 calibers, created on the basis of the Pak 41 anti-aircraft guns. did not want to give up the tank of his favorite Porsche, which he liked very much. However, this was not achieved, and on September 10, 1942, the management of the Nibelungenwerke plant sent a letter to the Reichsministry. in which it was reported that it was impossible to install a turret with an 88-mm cannon with a barrel length of 71 calibers on the VK 4501 (P). In parallel with this task, the Porsche design bureau considered arming its Tiger with a captured French 210-mm mortar in a fixed wheelhouse. This idea also belonged to A. Hitler, who spoke about the need to have large-caliber self-propelled artillery mounts in service with the Panzerwaffe, which are necessary to support tank units.

At a meeting on September 22, 1942, where, among other issues, the fate of the VK 4501 (P) was raised, Hitler spoke of the need to remake this chassis into a heavy assault gun armed with an 88-mm cannon with a barrel length of 71 calibers or a 210-mm French mortar, installed in a fixed cabin. In addition, the Fuhrer expressed the wish to strengthen the frontal armor of the vehicle up to 200 mm - such protection could not be penetrated even by the Tiger's gun. At the same time, he proposed using "sea armor plates" for this. However, no official decision on the fate of VK 4501 (P) was made at this meeting. Only a week later. September 29, was followed by an official instruction to Porsche from the Army Ordnance Department to convert the tank of its design into a "heavy assault gun." However, the designer, to put it mildly, ignored this, since he still did not give up hope of seeing his tank in service. Moreover, on October 10, 1942, the Krupp and Rheinmetall firms received an order to develop a turret with an 88-mm cannon in 71 caliber for its installation on the chassis of the Tiger Porsche and Henschel tanks. However, at a meeting on October 14, 1942, A. Hitler demanded, without waiting for the completion of the design, to immediately begin work on the development and production of assault guns with 88-mm guns on the chassis of the VK 4501 (P) and Pz.IV tanks.

To speed up work on the alteration of the "Tiger" Porsche, the Alkett company (Almerkische Kettenfabrik or Alkett for short) in the Berlin suburb of Spandau was involved - the only one in the Reich that had experience in manufacturing assault guns. And at the Nibelungenwerke plant, under the leadership of F. Porsche, the design was hastily reworked power plant and electric transmission for installation in a new self-propelled gun. At the same time, in addition to armament - an 88-mm cannon and armor thickness in the frontal part - 200 mm, only the combat weight of the vehicle was limited - no more than 65 tons. The remaining characteristics were left at the discretion of the designers. Despite Porsche's statement about its readiness to start serial production of "tigers" from May 12, 1942, the Nibelungenwerke and Oberdonau plants were ready for the production of VK 4501 (P) only by the end of July - it took time to work out technological process, the necessary documentation, tools and fixtures. But. despite this, by the beginning of August, these enterprises had a reserve for assembling several dozen chassis (armored hulls, cutting armor plates, chassis parts). After the decision was made to convert the "Tiger" designed by F. Porsche into a heavy assault gun, work on assembling the hulls and chassis intensified. In mid-October 1942, two chassis (No. 15010 and 15011) were handed over to Alkett to facilitate the design of a new machine.

The alteration project developed by Alkett was ready on November 30, 1942 (in any case, this date is on the draft design of the new assault gun). On December 11, 1942, it was considered at a meeting of representatives of the Reich Ministry of Armaments and Ammunition and the Armaments Directorate of the Ground Forces. The most significant alteration was the overall layout of the machine. The large reach of the artillery system barrel did not allow the installation of a wheelhouse with weapons in place of the fighting compartment of the VK 4501 (P) tank in front of the hull. Therefore, a scheme was adopted with an aft location of the cabin with a gun, for which it was necessary to move forward the engines of the power plant with generators, which ended up in the middle of the hull. Because of this, the driver and radio operator were "cut off" from the rest of the crew in the wheelhouse. I had to abandon the use of air-cooled engines Tour 101 designed by F. Porsche, installed on the VK4501 (P) - they turned out to be quite capricious, and besides, they were not in mass production. As a result, it was necessary to resort to installing proven and reliable Maybach engines (Maybach HL 120TRM) with a power of 265 hp, which required a complete redesign of the cooling system (such engines were installed on Pz.III tanks and StuG III assault guns). In addition, to increase the power reserve, it was necessary to redesign the gas tanks of increased capacity.

The project as a whole was approved, however, the military demanded to reduce the weight of the vehicle to 65 tons, as planned on the assignment. On December 28, 1942, a revised and simplified project for a heavy assault gun on the Porsche Tiger chassis was considered. According to the more accurate calculations given by the Alkett representatives, the combat weight of the vehicle was to be 68.57 tons: a converted hull, including 1000 liters of fuel - 46.48 tons, an armored cabin - 13.55 tons, a gun with an armored spherical shield - 3 .53 tons, additional protection of the frontal part and front of the bottom - 2.13 tons, ammunition and shells - 1.25 tons and a crew with tools and spare parts - about 1.63 tons. Some engineers and the Nibelungenwerke. and Alketta feared that the undercarriage, designed for a 55-ton combat vehicle, might not be able to withstand the additional mass. As a result of the discussion, it was decided to lighten the self-propelled gun by reducing the ammunition load, removing the machine gun in the frontal cabin sheet, part of the tool and spare parts, as well as additional 30-mm armor on the lower front hull plate. As a result of these measures, it was possible to meet the target of 65 tons, the project was approved and recommended for mass production. At the same time, an order was received to manufacture 90 such vehicles and form two battalions from them.

The inspectors of the armaments department of the ground forces in April 1943 accepted 30 Ferdinands, the remaining 60 vehicles were accepted in May. One of them remained at the disposal of the military acceptance (WafPruef) at the Nibelungenwerk for testing and testing weapons, and 89 were transferred to the disposal of the artillery and technical property of the ground forces. There, the "Ferdinands" will receive ammunition, tools, spare parts and radio stations. 29 vehicles were handed over to the troops in April. 56 - in May, the remaining 5 were sent in June, when the units were already advancing to the front line. On May 1, 1943, the Nibelungenwerke company received an order for the manufacture of five vehicles on the Porsche Tiger chassis, designed to evacuate damaged or stuck Ferdinands. The project, designated Bergepanzer Tiger (P), was completed in early July 1943. It was a Ferdinand chassis, but without additional armor, in the aft part of which there was a small cabin in the form of a truncated pyramid with hatches and a ball machine gun mount in the front sheet. The machine did not have any equipment, except for a 10-ton winch, which could be mounted on the hull from the outside.

List of official SPG names

  • StuG mit der 8,8 cm lang - Fuhrer's meeting November 22, 1942
  • StuG 8,8 cm K. auf Fgst. Tiger (P) - 12/15/42
  • Tiger-Sturmgeschutz
  • Sturmgeschutz auf Fgst. Porsche Tiger mit der langen 8.8 cm
  • Name proposal "Ferdinand" for 8.8 cm StuK 43/1 auf Fgst Tiger P1
  • Ferdinand (StuK43/1 auf Tiger)
  • StuG 8,8 cm K. auf Fgst. Tiger P (Ferdinand)
  • Panzerjager Tiger (P) Sd.Kfz.184
  • 8.8 cm Pz.Jg. 43/2 L/71 Tiger P
  • Panzerjager Tiger (P)
  • Ferdinand
  • Tiger (P) Sd.Kfz.184
  • Panzerjager Ferdinand
  • StuG 8,8 cm PaK43/2 (Sf.) Sd.Kfz.184
  • StuG m. 8.8 cm PaK43/2 auf Fgst. Tiger P (Ferdinand)
  • Name proposal "Elefant" for 8.8 cm StuG Porsche
  • Elefant
  • schwere Panzerjager VI (P) 8,8 cm PaK43/2 L/71 "Elefant" (Fruher Ferdinand)
  • Panzerjager Tiger (P) mit 8.8 cm PaK43/2 Sd.Kfz.184
  • Elefant 8.8 cm StuG mit 8.8 cm PaK43/2 Sd.Kfz.184

Modifications

View 3/4 from above in front of the hull and cabin of Ferdinand

View 3/4 from above in front of the hull and wheelhouse Elephanta

On November 29, 1943, A. Hitler suggested that the OKN change the names of armored vehicles. His naming proposals were accepted and legitimized by the order of February 1, 1944, and duplicated by the order of February 27, 1944. In accordance with these documents, "Ferdinand" received a new designation - "Elephant" 8.8-cm Porsche assault gun "(Elefant fur 8.8 cm Sturmgeschutz Porsche). From the dates of the modernization, it can be seen that the change in the name of the self-propelled gun happened by accident, but time, as the repaired "Ferdinands" returned to service. This facilitated the distinction between the machines: the original version of the machine was called "Ferdinand", and the modernized one was called "Elephant". So, on the frontal sheet of the cabin, grooves appeared for draining rainwater, on some machines the spare parts box and the jack with a wooden beam for it were transferred to the stern of the machine, and spare tracks began to be mounted on the upper frontal sheet of the hull.

In the period from January to April 1944, the Ferdinands that remained in service underwent modernization. First of all, they were equipped with an MG-34 course machine gun mounted in the frontal hull plate. Despite the fact that the Ferdinands were supposed to be used to fight enemy tanks at long distances, combat experience showed the need for a machine gun to defend self-propelled guns in close combat, especially if the car was hit or blown up by a landmine. For example, during the battles on the Kursk Bulge, some crews practiced firing from the MG-34 light machine gun even through the gun barrel.

In addition, to improve visibility, a turret with seven observation periscope devices was installed in place of the self-propelled gun commander's hatch (the turret was completely borrowed from the StuG42 assault gun). In addition, on self-propelled guns they strengthened the fastening of the wings, welded on-board viewing devices for the driver and gunner-radio operator (the real effectiveness of these devices turned out to be close to zero), abolished the headlights, moved the installation of the spare parts box, jack and spare tracks to the stern of the hull, increased the ammunition load for five shots, they installed new removable grilles on the engine compartment (the new grilles provided protection from bottles of KS, which were actively used by the infantry of the Red Army to fight enemy tanks and self-propelled guns). In addition, self-propelled guns received a zimmerite coating that protected the armor of vehicles from magnetic mines and enemy grenades.

Differences between "Ferdinand" and "Elephant". The "Elephant" had a course machine-gun mount, covered with additional patch armor. The jack and wooden stand for it were moved to the stern. The front fenders are reinforced with steel profiles. Attachments for spare tracks have been removed from the front fender liner. Removed headlights. A sun visor is installed above the driver's viewing devices. A commander's turret was mounted on the roof of the cabin, similar to the commander's turret of the StuG III assault gun. On the frontal wall of the cabin, gutters are welded to drain rainwater.

Combat use

The result of shelling "Ferdinand" with armor-piercing shells of the ML-20S self-propelled guns SU-152 from a distance of 1200m. One shell hit the area of ​​the machine gun embrasure, tore off the 100 mm overhead armor, and broke the second 100 mm armor plate, knocking out the plug of the machine gun port. Above you can see the marks of hits in the cabin of shells that did not penetrate the armor.

The formation of units on the Ferdinands began on April 1, 1943, when the 197th division of the StuG III assault guns, located in the Brook-on-Leith training camp in Austria, received an order to reorganize into the 653rd heavy tank destroyer battalion (scwere Panzeijager Abteilung 653 ), which according to the state should have been armed with 45 self-propelled guns "Ferdinand". The 197th division had personnel that operated on the Soviet-German front from the summer of 1941 to January 1943 and had rich combat experience. During the formation, the future self-propelled crews were sent to the Nibelungenwerke plant, where they were trained and participated in the assembly of the Ferdinands. At the end of April, the 653rd battalion was armed with 45 vehicles, but in early May, by order of the command, they were transferred to staff the 654th battalion, which was being formed in Rouen. By mid-May, the 653rd battalion already numbered 40 Ferdinands and was intensively engaged in combat training. On May 24 and 25, the battalion was visited by the Inspector General of the Panzer Troops G. Guderian, who conducted exercises at the training ground in Neusiedel. During their conduct, the Ferdinands covered 42 km, in addition, interaction with a company of BIV Borgward radio-controlled explosive transporters, which were intended for making passages in minefields, was practiced. On June 9-12, 1943, the 653rd battalion of heavy tank destroyers left the Austrian station Pandorf in 11 trains for the Soviet-German front. They proceeded through Modlin, Brest, Minsk, Bryansk. Karachev and Orel, having unloaded at the Zmievka station (35 km south of Orel). The 654th heavy tank destroyer battalion began its formation at the end of April 1943 on the basis of the 654th anti-tank battalion, formed at the end of August 1939. At first, the division was armed with 37-mm Pak35 / 36 cannons, then received the Marder II self-propelled guns. He participated in the French campaign and battles on the Soviet-German front. At first, the battalion was supposed to receive 88-mm anti-tank self-propelled guns "Hornisse" (Hornisse), but at the last moment the decision was changed, and the battalion began to prepare for "Ferdinands". Until April 28, he was in Austria, and by April 30, 1943 he was transferred to France, to Rouen. In mid-May, the first Ferdinands arrived from the 653rd battalion. Having unloaded, they proceeded through the city, causing panic: "the characteristic noise of running engines was mistaken for an air raid by Allied aircraft." And the passage of cars on the old bridge over the Seine caused it to subside by 2 cm. The battalion was located at the airfield near Rouen, where the crews were trained. At the end of May, the last, 45th Ferdinand, arrived, and on June 6, in the presence of G. Guderian, the Ferdinands exercised together with units of the 24th Panzer Division. At the same time, Guderian said that the main task of the battalion is to "ensure a breakthrough of well-fortified enemy positions and open the way tank units behind enemy lines."

Kursk Bulge, summer 1943

Arriving at the front, the 653rd and 654th battalions became part of the 656th tank regiment (Panzer Regiment 656), whose headquarters was formed on June 8, 1943. In addition to the 653rd and 654th heavy tank destroyer battalions, it included the 216th assault tank battalion (Sturmpanzer Abteilung 216) armed with Brummbars (Sturmpanzer IV "Brummbar"), as well as two companies (213th and 214th) radio-controlled conveyors B4. The regiment was part of the 9th field army and was supposed to provide a breakthrough of the Soviet defense in the direction of the Ponyri station - Maloarkhangelsk. On June 25, the Ferdinands began to advance to the front line. All movements were carried out only at night along a specially designed route. The bridges on it were reinforced and marked with the letter F. To mask the advance of the Ferdinands, Luftwaffe aircraft flew over the concentration zone. By July 4, the 656th tank regiment deployed as follows: 654th battalion (Arkhangelskoye region) to the west of the Orel-Kursk railway, 653rd battalion (Glazunov region) to the east, and behind them - three companies of the 216th battalion . Each Ferdinand battalion was assigned a company of Borgward radio-controlled explosive transporters. Thus, the 656th regiment operated at a front of up to 8 km.

In the photo, General K. Rokossovsky and his staff inspect the captured Ferdinand.

July 5, 1943 at 3:40, after artillery and aviation training, 653 and 654th battalions, supporting units of the 86th and 292nd infantry divisions, moved forward in two echelons - two companies in the first, one in the second. The 653rd battalion on the first day fought hard battles near the Soviet positions in the area of ​​​​height 257.7, which the Germans called "Tank height". Actions hampered huge amount minefields, in which the "borgguards" did not have time to make passages. As a result, at the very beginning of the battle, more than 10 Ferdinands were blown up by mines, damaging the rollers and tracks. Heavy losses were also in the personnel of the crews. So, when examining his damaged car, he was blown up by anti-personnel mine and the commander of the 1st company, Hauptmann Shpilman, was seriously wounded. Soon, Soviet artillery fire was added to the mines, which turned out to be quite effective. As a result, by 17:00 on July 5, only 12 Ferdinands out of 45 remained on the move. Over the next two days - July 6 and 7 - the remnants of the 653rd battalion participated in the battles to capture the Ponyri station.

The beginning of the attack of the 654th battalion was even more unsuccessful. Attached sappers prepared two passes through their minefields for the 6th and 7th companies (the 5th was in the second echelon behind the 7th). However, when the "Ferdinands" began to move, the 6th company and the platoon of "borgguards" attached to it fell into a German minefield that was not marked on the maps. As a result, part of the B4 detonated, while destroying several of their control vehicles. Within a few minutes, most of the Ferdinands of the 6th company were blown up by mines and went out of order. Soviet artillery opened heavy fire on self-propelled guns, which forced the German infantry, which had risen to attack, to lie down. Several sappers, under the cover of the Ferdinand guns, managed to clear the way, and the four vehicles of the 6th company that remained on the move managed to reach the first line of Soviet trenches. Having occupied the first line of trenches and waited for their infantry, the remnants of the 654th battalion moved on towards Ponyri. At the same time, some of the vehicles were blown up by mines, and Ferdinand No. 531 was hit by artillery fire and burned down. At dusk, having reached the hills north of Ponyri - and completed the task of the day - the battalion stopped to rest and regroup.

Due to problems with the supply of fuel and, mainly, ammunition, on July 6, the Ferdinands entered the battle only at 14:00. However, due to heavy artillery fire, the German infantry suffered heavy losses and fell behind, the attack bogged down.

Aleksandrovka settlement, Podmaslovo district. Abandoned in the period 15-18 July 1943. Immersed right caterpillar in soft ground. Our infantry attack prevented the crew from destroying their vehicle.

On the rise, the engines overheated, a fire in the engine room.

The next day, the remnants of the 653rd and 654th battalions were pulled back to Buzuluk as a corps reserve, on July 8, 1943, 6 Ferdinands and several Brummbars participated in the attack on Ponyri, but to no avail. At 06:00 on July 9, Major Kagl's battle group (505th heavy tank battalion "Tigers", 654th (and part of the vehicles of the 653rd), 216th battalions and assault gun division) began another assault on Ponyri. According to the testimony of the crew of one of the "Ferdinands", "the resistance of the enemy was simply terrifying", and, despite the fact that the group reached the outskirts of the village, it was not possible to develop success. After that, the 653rd and 654th battalions were taken to the reserve in the Buzuluk-Maloarkhangelsk region.

With the beginning of the Soviet counter-offensive, all the Ferdinands in service were actively used in battles. So, on July 12-14, 24 self-propelled guns of the 653rd battalion supported units of the 53rd Infantry Division in the Berezovets area. At the same time, repelling the attack of Soviet tanks near Krasnaya Niva, the crew of Ferdinand, Lieutenant Tiret, reported the destruction of 22 of them. reported the destruction of 13 enemy combat vehicles. Subsequently, the remnants of the battalions were pulled back to Orel, although the 6th company of the 654th battalion supported the withdrawal of the 383rd Infantry Division. During the Soviet offensive, which began on July 12, 1943, another 20 Ferdinands were lost (as of August 1). Most of them were blown up by their own crews due to the inability to evacuate after failure for combat and technical reasons. Total irretrievable losses The 653rd and 654th battalions during the operation "Citadel" amounted to 39 "Ferdinands". At the same time, the headquarters of the 656th tank regiment reported that during this period it disabled 502 enemy tanks and self-propelled guns, 20 anti-tank and about 100 other guns. By July 30, all Ferdinands were withdrawn from the front, and by order of the headquarters of the 9th Army, they were sent to Karachev - self-propelled guns by rail, and the rest of the materiel under their own power.

In early August, the 654th battalion transferred 19 of its remaining Ferdinads to the 653rd battalion, and without equipment left for France to replenish (in April 1944, the 654th battalion received its first Jagdpanthers).

The 653rd battalion with 50 Ferdinands repaired damage to equipment in Dnepropetrovsk at an accelerated pace. On September 19, 1943, the battalion received an order to provide all 14 self-propelled guns that were combat-ready at that time for the defense of the Dnieper. After a series of heavy fighting in the Nikopol-Kryvyi Rih region, the remnants of the battalion - 7 Ferdinands - were ordered to return to Austria for repairs and rest. However, the situation at the front and weather conditions did not allow the battalion to leave the battle until January 10, 1944.

Italy, 1944

Sdkfz 184 "Ferdinand" lost during the fighting in Italy, spring-summer 1944.

March 1, 1944 Sat on soft ground. An attempt to pull out the forces of the Tiger from 508 tb under continuous fire ended in failure. Destroyed by the crew.

In connection with the difficult situation at the front that developed in Italy at the beginning of 1944, 11 Ferdinands, repaired by that time, were brought together in the 1st company and sent to Anzio. Upon arrival, they were assigned to the 216th Assault Gun Battalion and formed part of the 508th Heavy Tank Battalion armed with Tigr tanks. The battalion was given the task of throwing the Allied troops from the occupied bridgeheads. However, the soft Italian soil was not suitable for the Ferdinands and Tigers, and many vehicles simply bogged down in it, while it was impossible to evacuate them due to the heavy artillery fire. Soon Elephanty (recently renamed by order of the Fuhrer) were transferred to the reserve, and covered the withdrawal of German troops. However, here they also failed - several machines were disabled by American fighter-bombers. The remnants of the company - 5 Elefants - had to move only at night, naturally, there was no talk of any combat effectiveness. On August 6, the last 3 Elefants of the 1st company arrived in Vienna for rest and repairs.

Sat on soft ground. An attempt to pull out Bergferdinand's forces failed. Destroyed at night by a crew led by a commander.

Eastern Front, 1944-45

During the battles in the Ukraine, a self-propelled gun from the 2nd company of the 653rd battalion received a 152mm hit from our self-propelled gun to the right of the gun. The photo shows a mark. The armor is not pierced, however, due to internal damage, the ACS is sent for factory repairs.

At this time, the 2nd and 3rd companies of the battalion with 30th Elephants in April 1944 were sent to Ukraine, to the Lvov region, to help the troops surrounded in the Tarnopol region. However, in the conditions of spring thaw, the actions of multi-ton monsters were seriously complicated, and after the loss of 3 self-propelled guns, the battalion was withdrawn to the reserve until better times.

July 13 in southern Poland began the so-called. Lvov-Sandomierz operation of the Soviet army. Most of the troops of the army group "Northern Ukraine" was sent to the north, to help the hard-hit army group "Center". As a result, Soviet tank wedges easily ripped open the German defenses. The battles in the army group "Northern Ukraine" once again clearly demonstrated all the weaknesses of the Elefants: under the constant pressure of the advancing Soviet army, the battalion could not successfully evacuate the wrecked vehicles. There was no question of any major repairs. At the same time, during the retreat, it was necessary to constantly look for bridges that could withstand heavy vehicles, and the Elefants had to wind extra kilometers, losing more and more vehicles along the way due to technical malfunctions. In total, during the summer battles, the battalion irrevocably lost 19 self-propelled guns Elefant.

The remnants of the 653rd battalion were withdrawn to Krakow in August, at the same time a decision was made: to collect all combat-ready Elefants in the 2nd company, and take the 1st and 3rd to France and reorganize them into a new self-propelled gun Jagdtigr. The 2nd company with the 14th self-propelled guns went to Poland in September 1944. On December 15, 1944, it was renamed the 614th separate heavy tank destroyer company, and in January took part in repelling the Vistula-Oder offensive of the Soviet army. And again, under bad weather conditions, insufficient supplies, with the complete dominance of the Soviet Air Force in the air, the number of combat-ready self-propelled guns was reduced to only 4 by the end of January. All of them were sent to the Berlin area for repairs, which were greatly delayed in the chaos of the last months of the war in Europe.

By the beginning of the battles for Berlin, the Germans managed to repair only two self-propelled guns, which took part in the last battles and were captured by Soviet and Polish soldiers on May 1, 1945 in Berlin on Karl-August Square.

Photos and drawings

Panzerjager Tiger (P) in modern times

In the Soviet Union at different times there were at least eight captured complete Ferdinands:

  • No. 331 - Captured 15-18 July 1943. near p. Aleksandrovka, district Podmaslovo. Immersed right caterpillar in soft ground. Our infantry attack prevented the crew from destroying their vehicle.
  • No. 333 - Captured by soldiers of the 129th Oryol Rifle Division in the period July 15-18, 1943. near p. Aleksandrovka, district Podmaslovo. Not far a day later, Ferdinand #331 will be captured.
  • No. II02 - captured in the area of ​​​​st. Ponyri - farm "May 1st". This self-propelled gun was examined by Rokossovsky.
  • No. 501 - captured in the area of ​​​​st. Ponyri - farm "May 1st".
  • No. 502 - captured in the area of ​​​​st. Ponyri - farm "May 1st". The self-propelled gun was blown up by a mine, the sloth was torn down. Later it was tested by shelling.
  • No. 624 - Captured on July 12, 1943 in the Teploe - Olkhovatka area. When leaving the battle, he sat down on loose ground. The car was delivered to the exhibition in TsPKiO them. M. Gorky in Moscow
  • Another heavily damaged Ferdinand was captured on the platform of the Oryol railway station on August 2, 1943, and another unidentified vehicle.

One self-propelled gun was shot near Ponyri in July - August 1943 when testing its armor; another one was shot in the fall of 1944 while testing new types of weapons. At the end of 1945, various organizations had six self-propelled guns at their disposal. They were used for various tests, some of the machines were eventually dismantled in order to study the design. As a result, all of them, except for one, were scrapped, like all the cars captured in a badly damaged condition.

So far, the only self-propelled gun Ferdinand has survived.

Ferdinand №501 from the headquarters of 1./s.Pz.Jg.Abt.654, the so-called. "Kommando Noak", named after the commander of the 654th battalion Maj. Karl-Heinz Noak. The self-propelled guns were blown up by a mine near the railway station Ponyri - State Farm "May 1". The undercarriage was slightly damaged. The ACS was repaired and sent for testing at NIIBT in Kubinka. So far, it has reached in good condition, although in Soviet times it was plundered from the inside.

Camouflage is typical for the 654th Battalion - dark yellow (Dunkelgelb RAL 7028) background with a "mesh" applied in dark green (Olivgrün RAL 6003) or red-brown (Rotbraun RAL 8017). Marking white color- tactical number 501 and a letter on the left fender liner N, denoting belonging to the Noak tactical group.

"Ferdinand" from the Kubinka Museum

Elephant №102 from the composition of 1./s.Pz.Jg.Abt.653, the so-called. "Kommando Ulbricht", named after its commander Hptm. Hellmut Ulbricht. This commander's self-propelled gun was abandoned on the Cisterna-Cori road in Italy on May 24, 1944. due to the impossibility of evacuation after a fire in the engine compartment. Later discovered by US troops, and taken to the United States. Exhibited at the site of the BTT Museum in Aberdeen, USA. After the "Elephant" arrived in the United States, specialists carried out external cosmetic repairs and painting. No work was carried out inside, because ACS burned out badly. In this state, the Elephant stood in the open air for several decades, and only at the end of the 1990s was it brought to a tolerable state - the original camouflage was restored. True, the Americans could not or did not want to repeat the zimmerite coating.

Camouflage is typical for the 1st company on the Italian theater - dark yellow (Dunkelgelb RAL 7028) background with randomly applied small spots of dark green (Olivgrün RAL 6003) and red-brown (Rotbraun RAL 8017). White marking - tactical number 102 and letter U, denoting belonging to the tactical group "Ulbricht".

The self-propelled guns bear marks of combat damage - hits on the gun mantlet and on the frontal armor of the cabin are clearly visible.

"Elephant" from the Aberdeen Museum

Sources of information

  • M.V. Kolomiets. "Ferdinand". Professor Porsche's armored elephant. - M.: Yauza, KM Strategy, Eksmo, 2007. - 96 p. - ISBN 978-5-699-23167-6
  • M. Svirin. Heavy assault gun "Ferdinand". - M.: Armada, issue No. 12, 1999. - 52 p. - ISBN 5-85729-020-1
  • M. Baryatinsky. Armored vehicles of the Third Reich. - M.: Armor collection, special issue No. 1, 2002. - 96 p.
  • Ferdinand, German tank destroyer. - Riga: Tornado, issue 38, 1998.
  • Shmelev I.P. Armored vehicles of Germany 1934-1945: An illustrated guide. - M.: AST, 2003. - 271 p. - ISBN 5-17-016501-3
  • Chamberlain P., Doyle H. Encyclopedia of German Tanks of World War II: The Complete Illustrated Guide to German Battle Tanks, Armored Cars, Self-Propelled Vehicles and Half-Track Vehicles 1933-1945. - Moscow: AST, Astrel, 2002. - 271 p. - ISBN 5-17-018980-X

Self-propelled artillery in its design is in many ways reminiscent of a tank. With less maneuverability and armor, it has high firepower. Such installations are most effective in supporting offensive tank and infantry formations.

Self-propelled artillery mounts (ACS) began to be used already in the First World War. Gradually, they occupied their niche in the issue of combat use and were actively used in the Second World War. Taking into account their combat qualities, self-propelled guns are practically not used outside large-scale conflicts.

Self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" (Ferdinand) - heavy anti-tank (PT) artillery installation of the Third Reich during the Second World War. It was created with a focus on the destruction of enemy tanks, it was used mainly on the Eastern Front.

Development history

The history of the creation of the self-propelled guns Ferdinand is associated with the design of the Tiger I tank. The development was carried out by competing firms Porsche and Henschel, presenting in 1942 prototypes VK 4501 (P) and (H), respectively. Hitler proposed to assemble both machines in parallel, but at a meeting with the Armaments Directorate, it was decided to leave the Henschel version.

Ferdinand Porsche's tank model had problems with the transmission and a short range. At the same time, the production of engines required a large amount of non-ferrous metals, which were in short supply in Germany. However, Porsche did not wait for the results of the meetings and began assembling the first tanks.

Porsche cars were never put into service. In the autumn of 1942, Hitler ordered their chassis to be used under heavy assault self-propelled guns with 88mm Pak 43 gun and 200mm armour. These conditions required significant changes in the layout of the machine.

Also, Maybach engines that already had serial production were installed on the new German self-propelled gun. This required a redesign of the cooling system and fuel tanks. All work was done in a greater hurry, which subsequently caused a number of shortcomings.

By the end of December 1942, new self-propelled guns were presented for testing. As a reward, Hitler gave them the name of the designer "Ferdinand". In the spring of 1943, artillery mounts began to arrive at the front.

At the end of 1943, the installations left after the first battles were returned to Germany for modernization. A course machine gun appeared in the frontal part, guns were replaced, a commander's cupola with seven periscope devices appeared. These aspects make it easy to distinguish versions of self-propelled guns from the photo.

The vulnerability of the installations to mines was also taken into account - the front of the bottom received additional armor, the tracks became wider. The new model was called "Elephant" (Elephant, with German "elephant", sometimes they write Elefant), but this name was fixed only in English-language literature, since it was with the modernized version that the Allies faced after the opening of the second front.

User manual

The application manual initially put the Ferdinand self-propelled guns at a disadvantage. The limited power reserve and low maneuverability limited their use in a mass offensive, although they could be used in positional battles. Also, the heavy weight of the installation did not allow her to cross most bridges.

Self-propelled artillery "Ferdinand" (the simplified name "Ferd" is incorrect) was designed to destroy Soviet tanks. Considerable armor provided reliable protection against their projectiles. It was supposed to use self-propelled guns at the expense of armor as the first echelon of the offensive against Soviet positions.

Combat vehicle design

The design of the self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" was largely redone after they decided to make artillery out of the tank. Due to the considerable length of the gun, the turret was moved to the stern, where the cabin of the main crew was located.

The power plant with engines, generators, cooling and fuel tanks was moved to the middle part, it was separated from the control compartment by heat-resistant partitions. Given the location of the branches, there was no direct communication between the control and the felling.

Despite the absence of a machine gun, there were loopholes in the wheelhouse for firing personal weapons. They are represented by small hatches with plugs, three in the stern and one on each side. The stern also had a door through which the crew could leave the installation. On the roof of the cabin, there were additionally two hatches for the crew, small hatches for installing a periscope and a fan.

Means of observation and communication

Observation of the terrain was carried out with the help of periscope devices provided in the control room and in the wheelhouse. Viewing slots for the driver and radio operator were also in the front beveled side sheets.

The self-propelled guns were equipped with a FuG 5 radio station, mounted in the control department. Her telephone worked within a radius of 6.5 km, telegraph - 9.5 km. More powerful FuG 8s with an additional antenna were installed on commanders' vehicles.

armored corps

Self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" were sheathed with rolled hardened armor. The frontal protection had a thickness of 200 mm, the upper part of the hull, sides and stern - 80 mm, the lower part of the side - 60 mm. The bottom had 20 mm armor, but the front part (1.35 m) was additionally reinforced with a 30 mm sheet. All fastenings were provided with bolts with bulletproof heads.

Crew

The crew of the artillery installation consisted of 6 people. The driver and radio operator were located in the control department. The main crew, including the commander, is in the wheelhouse. With the advent of the course machine gun, the radio operator also played the role of a gunner.

Armament

The armament of the self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" was originally designed to counter tanks and other armored vehicles. The gun hit almost any machine. Only the IS-2 and M26 "Pershing" at a certain distance from the desired heading angle could withstand a projectile hit.

88 mm gun StuK 43

The key armament of the self-propelled artillery mount is the 88 mm Pak 43/2 rifled gun with a barrel length of 71 calibers. Its obsolete designation is StuK 43. Version 43/2 is a tank version of the Pak 43.

The mass of the gun is 2.2 tons, in the stowed position it was mounted on a special installation. It had two recoil devices and a vertical wedge gate that worked on semi-automatic. Guidance mechanisms were placed on the left at the gunner's position. For this, a periscope device SFlZF1a / Rblf 36 with a fivefold increase was used.

The ballistics of the gun made it possible to penetrate 132 mm of armor at a distance of 2 km at a meeting angle of 60 degrees. From 100 meters under the same conditions, 202 mm of armor penetrated. Ammunition consisted of 50 shells - armor-piercing tracer Pzgr.39-1, sub-caliber Pzgr.40/43 and high-explosive fragmentation Sprgr 43. The modified "Elefant" ammunition increased to 55 shells.

1 × 7.92 mm machine gun

The original version of the self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" did not have a machine gun. In a modified version of January-March 1944, the 7.92 mm MG-34 ball mount appeared. It was located on the right in the frontal part. Ammunition - 600 rounds.

Technical specifications

The technical characteristics of the Ferdinand artillery mount made it in demand for anti-tank combat. In the process of modernization, a number of parameters were changed, however, the main performance characteristics were preserved until the last battle of the ACS data in Berlin.

Dimensions and weight

According to Wikipedia, the dimensions of the German self-propelled gun "Ferdinand" have the following indicators:

  • hull length - 8.14 m;
  • width - 3.38 m;
  • height - 2.97 m;
  • ground clearance - 0.485 m.

The combat weight of the tank is 65 tons. This indicator largely limited the movement of installations across bridges and on soft soil.

Engine and transmission

The power plant of self-propelled artillery "Ferdinand" is made with the transmission of torque from the engine to the drive wheels by means of electricity. This made it possible to get rid of the gearbox and the main clutch.

The self-propelled guns had two V-shaped twelve-cylinder Maybach HL 120 TRM carburetor engines, which worked on water cooling. The power of each was 265 hp. With. at 2600 rpm.

Two Siemens-Schuckert D149aAC traction motors with a power of 230 kW each were located in the aft part of the hull and set the wheels in motion through a reduction gear. Such a transmission increased the weight of the car, but ensured ease of control.

Chassis

The chassis of the self-propelled gun borrowed many elements from the Leopard tanks. Suspension is blocked, combined type, in which torsion bars are combined with a rubber cushion. The torsion bars themselves are located longitudinally outside the body on bogies.

On each side there were three carts with two road wheels in each. The design was quite complicated, but showed its reliability and maintainability. The rollers themselves also had a good durability resource. The rear drive wheels had removable gear rims of 19 teeth. The front ones are equipped with active engagement and pneumohydraulic brakes.

On the highway, the self-propelled guns developed a speed of 35 km / h, on rough terrain - 5-15 km / h, depending on the surface and softness of the soil. The cruising range on the highway and rough terrain was 150 and 90 km, respectively. Overcoming obstacles - a slope of 22 degrees, a wall of 0.78 m, a ditch 2.64 m wide, a ford a meter deep.

Fuel consumption

A separate fuel supply was provided for each of the two engines. Accordingly, the installation had two fuel tanks of 540 liters each. The control compartment had shut-off valves that opened the fuel supply in cases where the minimum amount of fuel remained in the tanks.

Accurate information on fuel consumption is not available. However, given the low power reserve and weight, the car consumed a large amount of fuel - about 720-1155 liters per 100 km. The indicator depends on the type of surface - the consumption decreased on the highway, increased on rough terrain.

Governing bodies

The department of management was located in front of the car and was engaged in a driver and radio operator. It also housed levers and pedals for controlling the machine, devices for pneumohydraulic braking and track tensioning, a junction box with switches and rheostats, an instrument panel, fuel filters, starter batteries, and a radio station.

Advantages and disadvantages

Self-propelled artillery installation "Ferdinand" received a mixed assessment of contemporaries and historians. The car in many ways turned out to be an improvisation, created on the go and in a hurry. However, even despite this, there were many innovative solutions in it.

Of the advantages of the project, electric transmission and suspension with longitudinal torsion bars are distinguished. Technologies have shown good efficiency, but turned out to be too complex and expensive for mass application especially in times of war. Also pay attention to the significant fuel consumption.

In combat conditions, the self-propelled gun clearly demonstrated its advantages. The powerful gun pierced almost any tank at most distances. The frontal armor was not penetrated by anything, the vehicle received some damage only from the sides and from mines.

Such a reservation made it possible to put self-propelled guns in the first echelon of attack to overcome the defense of the Soviet troops. However, this method quickly proved to be ineffective - the infantry and tank artillery cover was shot back, after which the installations were blown up in close combat, using fabric to block the view and Molotov cocktails. Such methods did not always end in success, however, in any case, they showed the vulnerability of artillery in close combat.

As a result, the self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" proved to be quite good, but never received mass production and use. There is an opinion - if it were not for the production of Porsche tanks, such installations would never have appeared due to their technical complexity.

Application in World War II

The first use of self-propelled guns "Ferdinand" is associated with the Battle of Kursk. Artillery installations were included in the anti-tank battalions 653 and 654. They were assigned the role of a ram to overcome the defense. The first combat use was on July 8-9, 1943 in the area of ​​the Ponyri station.

During the fighting and the subsequent retreat to Orel, more than three dozen self-propelled guns were lost. Those who remained in mid-August were transferred to Zhytomyr and Dnepropetrovsk, where they stopped for repairs. Later, they took part in the battles near Nikopol and Dnepropetrovsk.

In winter, the Ferdinands were returned for modernization. The resulting modifications of the Elephant self-propelled guns were transferred to Italy and participated in the battles near Nettuno, Anzio and Rome. The remains were again transferred, first to Austria, then to Poland.

In July 1944, the self-propelled guns were based in the Ternopil region, where, due to the large-scale Soviet offensive, they were drawn into heavy fighting. Many vehicles were blown up by their own crews due to the impossibility of evacuation from the battlefield.

The remaining twelve installations were transferred on August 3 near Krakow. They were later evacuated to Germany and kept in reserve. The last battles of the Ferdinand were held in Wünsdorf, Zossen and Berlin.

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