Technical description of the German tank T4. Medium tank T-IV Panzerkampfwagen IV (PzKpfw IV, also Pz

The Germans themselves did not have a high opinion about the combat qualities of the Pz.lV. Here is what Major General von Mellenthin writes about this in his memoirs (in 1941, with the rank of major, he served in Rommel's headquarters): "The T-IV tank gained the reputation of a formidable enemy among the British mainly because it was armed with a 75-mm cannon However, this gun had a low muzzle velocity and poor penetration, and although we used the T-IV in tank battles, they were much more useful as a means of infantry fire support. "Pz.lV began to play a more significant role in all theaters of operations only after the acquisition" long arm"- 75-mm guns KwK 40 (series F2). On Eastern Front Pz.lV Ausf.F2 also appeared in the summer of 1942 and took part in the attack on Stalingrad and North Caucasus. After the production of the Pz.lll was discontinued in 1943, the "four" gradually became the main German tank in all theaters of operations. However, in connection with the start of production of the Panther, it was planned to stop production of the Pz.lV, however, due to the tough position of the General Inspector of the Panzerwaffe, General G. Guderian, this did not happen. Further developments showed that he was right.

have risen sharply combat characteristics Pz.IV after installing a long-barreled gun. Not inferior to enemy tanks in all other respects, the "four" proved to be capable of hitting Soviet and american tanks out of range of their guns. We are not talking about English cars - for four years of the war the British were marking time. Until the end of 1943, the combat characteristics of the T-34 remained virtually unchanged, Pz.IV took first place among medium tanks. Since 1942 performance characteristics Pz.IV did not change (except for the thickness of the armor) and during the two years of the war remained unsurpassed by anyone! Only in 1944, having installed a 76-mm long-barreled gun on the Sherman, did the Americans catch up with the Pz.IV, and we, having launched the T-34-85 into the series, surpassed it. The Germans had no time or opportunity for a decent response. Comparing the characteristics of WWII tanks, we can conclude that the Germans, before others, began to consider the tank as the main and most effective anti-tank weapon, and this is the main trend of post-war tank building.

In general, it can be argued that of all the German tanks during the Second World War, the Pz.IV was the most balanced and versatile. In this car various characteristics harmoniously combined and complemented each other. The "Tiger" and "Panther", for example, had a clear bias towards security, which led to their overweight and deterioration of dynamic characteristics. Pz.III, with many other equal characteristics with Pz.IV, did not reach it in armament and, having no reserves for modernization, left the stage. Pz.IV with a similar Pz.III, but a little more thoughtful layout, had such reserves in full measure. This is the only tank of the war years with a 75 mm cannon, whose main armament was significantly strengthened without changing the turret. The T-34-85 and Sherman had to change the turret, and, by and large, they were almost new machines. The British went their own way and, like a fashionista outfits, they changed not towers, but tanks! But the Cromwell, which appeared in 1944, did not reach the Quartet, as, indeed, did the Comet, released in 1945. Bypass the German tank, created in 1937, could only post-war "Centurion".

From what has been said, of course, it does not follow that the Pz.IV was an ideal tank. For example, it had insufficient engine power and a rather rigid and outdated suspension, which adversely affected its maneuverability. To some extent, the latter was compensated for by the smallest L / B ratio of 1.43 among all medium tanks. The equipment of the Pz.lV (as well as other tanks) with anti-cumulative screens cannot be attributed to the successful move of the German designers. HEAT munitions were rarely used en masse, but the screens increased the dimensions of the vehicle, making it difficult to move in narrow aisles, blocked most of the observation devices, and made it difficult for the crew to board and disembark.
However, even more senseless and rather expensive was the coating of tanks with zimmerite (anti-magnetic painting, from magnetic mines). But perhaps the biggest mistake of the Germans was to try to switch to a new type of medium tank - the Panther. As the latter, it did not take place, making the company "Tiger" in the class of heavy vehicles, but played a fatal role in the fate of the Pz.lV. Having concentrated all efforts in 1942 on the creation of new tanks, the Germans ceased to seriously modernize the old ones. Let's try to imagine what would have happened if not for the "Panther"? The project of installing the "Panther" turret on the Pz.lV, both standard and "close" (Schmall-turm), is well known. The project is quite realistic in terms of dimensions - the inside diameter of the turret ring for the Panther is 1650 mm, for the Pz.lV-1600 mm. The tower rose without expanding the turret box. The situation with the weight characteristics was somewhat worse - due to the large overhang of the gun barrel, the center of gravity shifted forward and the load on the front road wheels increased by 1.5 tons. However, it could be compensated by strengthening their suspension. In addition, it must be taken into account that the KwK 42 cannon was created for the Panther, and not for the Pz.IV. For the "four" it was possible to confine oneself to a gun with smaller weight and size data, with a barrel length, say, not 70, but 55 or 60 calibers. Such a gun, if it would require replacing the turret, would still make it possible to get by with more lightweight design than "Panther". The inevitable increase (by the way, even without such a hypothetical re-equipment) of the tank's weight required the replacement of the Engine. For comparison: the dimensions of the HL 120TKRM engine, installed on the Pz.IV, were 1220x680x830 mm, and the "Panther" HL 230R30 - 1280x960x1090 mm. The clear dimensions of the engine compartments were almost the same for these two tanks. At the "Panther" it was 480 mm longer, mainly due to the slope of the rear hull plate. Therefore, equipping the Pz.lV with a higher power engine was not an unsolvable design problem. The results of such a, of course, far from complete, list of possible modernization measures would be very sad, since they would nullify the work on creating the T-34-85 for us and the Sherman with a 76-mm gun for the Americans. In 1943-1945, the industry of the Third Reich produced about 6 thousand "panthers" and almost 7 thousand Pz.IV. If we take into account that the labor intensity of manufacturing the Panther was almost twice that of the Pz.lV, then we can assume that during the same time German factories could produce an additional 10-12 thousand modernized "fours", which would be delivered to the soldiers of the anti-Hitler coalition much more trouble than the Panthers.

The decision to create a medium tank with a short-barreled 75 mm gun was made in January 1934. Preference was given to the project of the Krupp company, and in 1937 - 1938 it produced about 200 machines of modification A, B, C and D.

These tanks had a combat weight of 18 to 20 tons, armor up to 20 mm thick, a road speed of no more than 40 km / h and a cruising range of 200 km on the highway. A 75-mm gun with a barrel length of 23.5 caliber was installed in the tower, coaxial with a machine gun.

During the attack on Poland on September 1, 1939, the German army had only 211 T-4 tanks. The tank proved to be a good side and was approved as the main one along with the T-3. From December 1939, its mass production began (in 1940 - 280 pieces.).

By the beginning of the campaign in France (May 10, 1940) in German tank divisions in the West there were only 278 T-4 tanks. The only result of the Polish and French campaigns was an increase to 50 mm in the thickness of the armor of the frontal part of the hull, onboard up to 30 and turret up to 50 mm. The mass reached 22 tons (modification F1, produced in 1941 - 1942). The track width was increased from 380 to 400 mm.

Soviet tanks T-34 and KV (see below) from the first days of the war demonstrated the superiority of their weapons and armor over the T-4. The Nazi command demanded that their tank be re-equipped with a long-barreled gun. In March 1942, he received a 75 mm cannon with a barrel length of 43 caliber (machines of the T-4F2 modification).

In 1942, modifications G were produced, since 1943 - H and since March 1944 - J. The tanks of the last two modifications had 80 mm frontal armor of the hull and were armed with 48-caliber guns. The mass increased to 25 tons, and the cross-country ability of the vehicles noticeably worsened. On modification J, the fuel supply was increased and the cruising range increased to 300 km. Since 1943, tanks began to install 5-mm screens that protected the sides and the turret (side and rear) from artillery shells and bullets from anti-tank rifles.

The welded hull of a tank of simple design did not have a rational inclination of the armor plates. There were many hatches in the hull, which facilitated access to units and mechanisms, but reduced the strength of the hull. Internal partitions divided it into three compartments. In front of the control compartment there were final drives, the driver (on the left) and the gunner-radio operator, who had his own observation devices, were located. The fighting compartment with a multifaceted turret housed three crew members: commander, gunner and loader. The tower had hatches in the sides, which reduced its projectile resistance. The commander's cupola is equipped with five viewing devices with armored shutters. There were also viewing devices on both sides of the gun mantlet and in the side hatches of the turret. The rotation of the tower was carried out by an electric motor or manually, vertical aiming - manually. The ammunition included high-explosive fragmentation and smoke grenades, armor-piercing, sub-caliber and cumulative shells. An armor-piercing projectile (weight 6.8 kg, muzzle velocity - 790 m/s) pierced armor up to 95 mm thick, and a sub-caliber (4.1 kg, 990 m/s) - about 110 mm at a distance of 1000 m (data for a gun in 48 calibers).

In the engine compartment in the aft part of the hull, a 12-cylinder water-cooled Maybach carburetor engine was installed.

The T-4 turned out to be a reliable and easy-to-handle vehicle (it was the Wehrmacht's most massive tank), but poor maneuverability, a weak gasoline engine (tanks burned like matches) and undifferentiated armor were disadvantages over Soviet tanks.


"Panzerkampfwagen IV" ("PzKpfw IV", also "Pz. IV"; in the USSR it was also known as "T‑IV") - a medium armored tank tank troops Wehrmacht during World War II. There is a version that the Pz IV was originally classified by the German side as a heavy tank, but it has not been documented.


The most massive tank of the Wehrmacht: 8,686 vehicles were produced; serially produced from 1937 to 1945 in several modifications. The ever-increasing armament and armor of the tank in most cases allowed the PzKpfw IV to effectively resist tanks of a similar class. The French tanker Pierre Danois wrote about the PzKpfw IV (in modification, at that time, still with a short-barreled 75-mm gun): “This medium tank was superior to our B1 and B1 bis in all respects, including weapons and, to some extent, armor ".


History of creation

Under the terms of the Versailles Peace Treaty, Germany, defeated in the First World War, was forbidden to have armored troops, with the exception of a small number of armored vehicles for the needs of the police. But despite this, since 1925, the Reichswehr Armaments Office has been secretly working on the creation of tanks. Until the early 1930s, these developments did not go beyond the construction of prototypes, both because of the insufficient performance of the latter, and because of the weakness of the German industry of that period. However, by the middle of 1933, German designers managed to create their first production tank- Pz.Kpfw.I and during 1933-1934 start its mass production. The Pz.Kpfw.I, with its machine gun armament and crew of two, was seen as only a transitional model on the way to building more advanced tanks. The development of two of them began back in 1933 - a more powerful "transitional" tank, the future Pz.Kpfw.II and a full-fledged battle tank, the future Pz.Kpfw.III, armed with a 37-mm cannon, designed mainly to fight other armored vehicles.

Due to the initial armament limitations of the Pz.Kpfw.III, it was decided to supplement it with a fire support tank, with a longer-range cannon with a powerful fragmentation projectile capable of hitting anti-tank defenses beyond the reach of other tanks. In January 1934, the Armaments Department organized a project competition for the creation of a machine of this class, whose mass would not exceed 24 tons. Since work on armored vehicles in Germany at that time was still carried out in secret, the new project, like the rest, was given the code name “support vehicle” (German: Begleitwagen, usually abbreviated to B.W .; incorrect names are given in a number of sources German. Bataillonwagen and German Bataillonfuehrerwagen). From the very beginning, the firms Rheinmetall and Krupp took up the development of projects for the competition, later they were joined by Daimler-Benz and M.A.N. Over the next 18 months, all firms presented their developments, and the Rheinmetall project under the designation VK 2001 (Rh) was even made in metal in the form of a prototype in 1934-1935.


Tank Pz.Kpfw. IV Ausf. J (Armoured Vehicles Museum - Latrun, Israel)

All presented projects had a chassis with a staggered arrangement of large-diameter road wheels and the absence of support rollers, with the exception of the same VK 2001 (Rh), which, on the whole, inherited the chassis with small-diameter road wheels interlocked in pairs and side screens from an experimental heavy tank Nb. fz. As a result, the Krupp project - VK 2001 (K) was recognized as the best of them, but the Arms Administration did not satisfy its spring suspension, which they demanded to be replaced with a more advanced torsion bar. However, Krupp insisted on the use of a running gear with interlocked pairs of rollers of medium diameter on a spring suspension, borrowed from the rejected Pz.Kpfw.III prototype of its own design. In order to avoid the inevitable delays in the processing of the project for a torsion bar suspension with the start of production of a tank badly needed by the army, the Ordnance Department was forced to agree to the Krupp proposal. After the subsequent refinement of the project, Krupp received an order for the production of a pre-production batch of a new tank, which by that time had received the designation "armored vehicle with a 75-mm gun" (German: 7.5 cm Geschütz-Panzerwagen) or, according to the end-to-end designation system adopted at that time, "experimental model 618" (German: Versuchskraftfahrzeug 618 or Vs.Kfz.618). From April 1936, the tank acquired its final designation - Panzerkampfwagen IV or Pz.Kpfw.IV. In addition, he was assigned the index Vs.Kfz.222, previously owned by Pz.Kpfw.II.


Tank PzKpfw IV Ausf G. Armored Museum in Kubinka.

Mass production

Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf.A - Ausf.F1

The first few Pz.Kpfw.IV "zero" series were manufactured in 1936-1937 at the Krupp plant in Essen. The serial production of the first series, 1.Serie / B.W., was launched in October 1937 at the Krupp-Gruson plant in Magdeburg. In total, until March 1938, 35 tanks of this modification were produced, designated as Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausführung A (Ausf.A - “model A”). According to the unified designation system of German armored vehicles, the tank received the index Sd.Kfz.161. Ausf.A tanks were in many ways still pre-production vehicles and carried bulletproof armor that did not exceed 15-20 mm and poorly protected surveillance devices, especially in commander's cupola. At the same time, the main design features Pz.Kpfw.IV, and although in the future the tank was repeatedly upgraded, the changes mainly boiled down to the installation of more powerful armor and weapons, or to an unprincipled alteration of individual components.

Immediately after the end of production of the first series, Krupp began production of an improved 2.Serie / B.W. or Ausf.B. The most noticeable outward difference of the tanks of this modification was a straight upper frontal plate, without a prominent driver's cabin and with the elimination of the course machine gun, which was replaced by a viewing device and a hatch for firing personal weapons. The design of viewing devices was also improved, primarily the commander's cupola, which received armored shutters, and the driver's viewing device. According to other sources, the new commander's cupola was already introduced during production, so some of the Ausf.B tanks carried the old-style commander's cupola. Minor changes also affected the landing hatches and various hatches. Frontal armor on the new modification was brought up to 30 mm. The tank also received a more powerful engine and a new 6-speed gearbox, which made it possible to significantly increase its maximum speed, and its cruising range also increased. At the same time, the ammunition load of the Ausf.B was reduced to 80 rounds for the gun and 2,700 machine gun rounds, instead of 120 and 3,000 rounds for the Ausf.A, respectively. Krupp was given an order for the production of 45 Ausf.B tanks, but due to a shortage of components, only 42 vehicles of this modification were actually produced from April to September 1938.


Tank Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.A on parade, 1938.

The first relatively massive modification was 3.Serie/B.W. or Ausf.C. Compared to the Ausf.B, the changes in it were insignificant - externally, both modifications are distinguishable only by the presence of an armored casing for the barrel of a coaxial machine gun. The rest of the changes came down to replacing the HL 120TR engine with an HL 120TRM of the same power, as well as starting to install a fender under the gun barrel on part of the tanks to bend the antenna located on the hull when the turret turns. In total, 300 tanks of this modification were ordered, but already in March 1938 the order was reduced to 140 units, as a result of which, according to various sources, 140 or 134 tanks were produced from September 1938 to August 1939, while 6 chassis were transferred for conversion into bridgelayers.


Museum Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.D with additional armor

Machines of the next modification, Ausf.D, were produced in two series - 4.Serie / B.W. and 5.Serie/B.W. The most noticeable external change was the return to the broken upper frontal plate of the hull and the forward machine gun, which received enhanced protection. The inner mantlet of the gun, which proved vulnerable to lead spatter from bullet hits, was replaced with an outer one. The thickness of the side and rear armor of the hull and turret was increased to 20 mm. In January 1938, Krupp received an order for the production of 200 4.Serie / B.W. and 48 5.Serie/B.W., but during production, from October 1939 to May 1941, only 229 of them were completed as tanks, while the remaining 19 were allocated for the construction of specialized variants. Some of the late production Ausf.D tanks were produced in a "tropical" version (German tropen or Tp.), with additional ventilation holes in the engine compartment. A number of sources speak of armor reinforcement carried out in 1940-1941 in parts or during repairs, which was carried out by bolting additional 20-mm sheets to the upper side and frontal plates of the tank. According to other sources, later production vehicles were regularly equipped with additional 20 mm side and 30 mm frontal armor plates of the Ausf.E type. Several Ausf.Ds were re-armed with KwK 40 L/48 long guns in 1943, but these converted tanks were only used as training tanks.


Tank Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.B or Ausf.C on exercises. November 1943.

The appearance of a new modification, 6.Serie/B.W. or Ausf.E, was caused primarily by the lack of armor protection of early series vehicles, demonstrated during the Polish campaign. On Ausf.E, the thickness of the lower frontal plate was increased to 50mm, in addition, it became standard to install additional 30mm plates above the upper frontal and 20mm above the side plates, although on a small part of the early production tanks, additional 30mm plates were not were established. The armor protection of the tower, however, remained the same - 30 mm for the frontal plate, 20 mm for the side and aft plates and 35 mm for the gun mantlet. A new commander's cupola was introduced, with a vertical armor thickness of 50 to 95 mm. The inclination of the aft wall of the turret was also reduced, now made of a single sheet, without the “influx” for the turret, and on late production vehicles, an unarmored equipment box was attached to the stern of the turret. In addition, the Ausf.E tanks featured a number of less noticeable changes - a new driver's viewing device, simplified drive and steering wheels, an improved design of various hatches and inspection hatches, and the introduction of a turret fan. The order for the sixth series of Pz.Kpfw.IVs amounted to 225 units and was completed in full between September 1940 and April 1941, in parallel with the production of Ausf.D tanks.


Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.F. Finland, 1941.

Shielding with additional armor (on average by 10-12 mm), used on previous modifications, was irrational and was considered only as a temporary solution, which was the reason for the appearance of the next modification, 7.Serie / B.W. or Ausf.F. Instead of using hinged armor, the thickness of the frontal top plate of the hull, the frontal plate of the turret and the mantlet of the gun was increased to 50 mm, and the thickness of the sides of the hull and the sides and rear of the turret was increased to 30 mm. The broken upper frontal plate of the hull was again replaced by a straight one, but this time with the preservation of the course machine gun, and the side hatches of the turret received double doors. Due to the fact that the mass of the tank increased by 22.5% compared to the Ausf.A after the changes made, wider tracks were introduced to reduce ground pressure. Other, less noticeable changes included the introduction of ventilation air intakes in the middle frontal plate to cool the brakes, a different location of the silencers and slightly modified viewing devices due to the thickening of the armor, and the installation of a course machine gun. On the Ausf.F modification, other firms, in addition to Krupp, joined the production of Pz.Kpfw.IV for the first time. The latter received the first order for 500 machines of the seventh series, later orders for 100 and 25 units were received by Vomag and Nibelungenwerke. Of this number, from April 1941 to March 1942, before switching production to the Ausf.F2 modification, 462 Ausf.F tanks were produced, 25 of which were converted to Ausf.F2 at the factory.


Tank Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.E. Yugoslavia, 1941.

Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf.F2 - Ausf.J

Although the main purpose of the 75-mm Pz.Kpfw.IV cannon was to destroy unarmored or lightly armored targets, the presence of an armor-piercing projectile in its ammunition load allowed the tank to successfully fight armored vehicles protected by bulletproof or light anti-ballistic armor. But against tanks with powerful anti-cannon armor, such as the British Matilda or the Soviet KV and T-34, it proved to be completely ineffective. Back in 1940 - early 1941, a successful combat use Matilda stepped up work on re-equipping the Pz.Kpfw.IV with a gun with better anti-tank capabilities. On February 19, 1941, on the personal order of A. Hitler, work began on arming the tank with a 50-mm Kw.K.38 L / 42 cannon, which was also installed on the Pz.Kpfw.III, and in further work to strengthen the armament of the Pz.Kpfw.IV, they also advanced under his control. In April, one Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.D was re-armed with the newest, more powerful 50 mm Kw.K.39 L/60 gun for demonstration to Hitler on his birthday, April 20th. It was even planned to produce a series of 80 tanks with such weapons from August 1941, but by that time the interest of the Ordnance Department (Heereswaffenamt) had shifted to a 75-mm long-barreled gun and these plans were abandoned.

Since the Kw.K.39 had already been approved as a weapon for the Pz.Kpfw.III, it was decided to choose an even more powerful gun for the Pz.Kpfw.IV, which could not be installed on the Pz.Kpfw.III with its smaller turret ring diameter . Since March 1941, Krupp, as an alternative to the 50-mm cannon, has been considering a new 75-mm cannon with a barrel length of 40 calibers, intended for rearmament assault guns StuG III. At a distance of 400 meters, it pierced 70 mm armor at an encounter angle of 60 °, but since the Ordnance Department required that the gun barrel did not protrude beyond the dimensions of the tank hull, its length was reduced to 33 calibers, which led to a decrease in armor penetration to 59 mm under the same conditions. It was also planned to develop a sub-caliber armor-piercing projectile with a detachable pallet, penetrating 86-mm armor under the same conditions. Work on re-equipping the Pz.Kpfw.IV with the new gun was going well, and in December 1941 the first prototype was built with a 7.5 cm Kw.K. L/34.5.


Tank Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.F2. France, July 1942.

In the meantime, the invasion of the USSR began, during which German troops encountered T-34 and KV tanks, which were slightly vulnerable to the main tank and anti-tank guns of the Wehrmacht and at the same time carried a 76-mm cannon that pierced the frontal armor of German tanks, which were then practically in service with the Panzerwaffe. at any real combat distances. The Special Tank Commission, sent to the front in November 1941 to study this issue, recommended rearming German tanks with a weapon that would allow them to hit Soviet vehicles from long distances, while remaining outside the radius of effective fire of the latter. On November 18, 1941, the development of a tank gun was initiated, similar in its capabilities to the new 75-mm Pak 40 anti-tank gun. Such a gun, originally designated Kw.K.44, was developed jointly by Krupp and Rheinmetall. The barrel passed to him from the anti-tank gun without changes, but since the shots of the latter were too long for use in a tank, a shorter and thicker cartridge case was developed for the tank gun, which led to a reworking of the breech of the gun and a reduction in the overall length of the barrel to 43 calibers. Kw.K.44 also received a single-chamber muzzle brake of a spherical shape, different from the anti-tank gun. In this form, the gun was adopted as the 7.5 cm Kw.K.40 L/43.

The Pz.Kpfw.IVs with the new gun were initially designated as "refitted" (German 7.Serie/B.W.-Umbau or Ausf.F-Umbau), but soon received the designation Ausf.F2, while the Ausf.F vehicles with the old guns were called Ausf.F1 to avoid confusion. The designation of the tank according to a single system changed to Sd.Kfz.161/1. With the exception of a different gun and related minor changes, such as the installation of a new sight, new shot stowage and slightly modified gun recoil armor, the early production Ausf.F2s were identical to the Ausf.F1 tanks. After a month-long break due to the transition to a new modification, the production of Ausf.F2 began in March 1942 and continued until July of the same year. A total of 175 tanks of this variant were produced and another 25 converted from the Ausf.F1.


Tank Pz.Kpfw. IV Ausf. G (tail number 727) of the 1st Panzergrenadier Division "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler". The vehicle was hit by gunners of the 4th battery of the 595th anti-tank fighter artillery regiment in the area of ​​st. Sumy in Kharkov, on the night of March 11-12, 1943. On the frontal armor plate, almost in the center, two inlets from 76-mm shells are visible.

The appearance of the next modification Pz.Kpfw.IV was not initially caused by any changes in the design of the tank. In June - July 1942, by orders of the Ordnance Department, the designation Pz.Kpfw.IV with long-barreled guns was changed to 8.Serie / B.W. or Ausf.G, and in October the Ausf.F2 designation was finally abolished for previously produced tanks of this modification. The first tanks produced as the Ausf.G were therefore identical to their predecessors, but more and more changes were made to the design of the tank during later production. Ausf.G of early releases still carried the index Sd.Kfz.161/1 according to the end-to-end notation, which was replaced by Sd.Kfz.161/2 on later releases. The first changes made in the summer of 1942 included a new two-chamber pear-shaped muzzle brake, the elimination of viewing devices in the front side plates of the turret and the loading hatch in its frontal plate, the transfer of smoke grenade launchers from the rear of the hull to the sides of the turret, and a system to facilitate launching in winter conditions .

Since the 50 mm frontal armor of the Pz.Kpfw.IV was still insufficient, not providing adequate protection against 57 mm and 76 mm guns, it was again reinforced, by welding or, on later production vehicles, by bolting additional 30 mm mm plates above the upper and lower end plates of the hull. The thickness of the frontal plate of the turret and gun mantlet, however, was still 50 mm and did not increase in the process of further modernization of the tank. The introduction of additional armor began on the Ausf.F2, when 8 tanks with increased armor thickness were produced in May 1942, but progress was slow. By November, only about half of the vehicles were produced with enhanced armor, and only from January 1943 did it become the standard for all new tanks. Another significant change introduced to the Ausf.G in the spring of 1943 was the replacement of the Kw.K.40 L/43 cannon with the Kw.K.40 L/48 gun with a 48-caliber barrel, which had slightly better armor penetration. Production of the Ausf.G continued until June 1943, with a total of 1,687 tanks of this modification produced. Of this number, about 700 tanks received enhanced armor and 412 received the Kw.K.40 L/48 cannon.


Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.H with side screens and zimmerite coating. USSR, July 1944.

The next modification, Ausf.H, became the most massive. The first tanks under this designation, which left the assembly line in April 1943, differed from the latest Ausf.Gs only in the thickening of the front turret roof sheet up to 16 mm and the rear up to 25 mm, as well as reinforced final drives with cast drive wheels, but the first 30 Ausf.H tanks received only a thickened roof due to delays in the supply of new components. Since the summer of the same year, instead of an additional 30 mm hull armor, solid-rolled 80 mm plates were introduced to simplify production. In addition, hinged anti-cumulative screens made of 5 mm sheets were introduced, which were installed on most Ausf.H. In this regard, as unnecessary, viewing devices in the sides of the hull and turret were eliminated. Since September, the tanks have been coated with vertical armor with zimmerite to protect against magnetic mines.

Late production Ausf.H tanks received a turret mount for the MG-42 machine gun at the commander's cupola hatch, as well as a vertical stern plate instead of the inclined one that was on all previous tank modifications. In the course of production, various changes were also introduced to reduce the cost and simplify production, such as the introduction of non-rubberized support rollers and the elimination of the driver's periscope viewing device. Since December 1943, the front plates of the hull began to be connected to the side connection "into a spike", to increase resistance to projectile hits. Production of the Ausf.H continued until July 1944. Data on the number of produced tanks of this modification, given in various sources, differ somewhat, from 3935 chassis, of which 3774 were completed as tanks, to 3960 chassis and 3839 tanks.


Destroyed on the Eastern Front, the German medium tank Pz.Kpfw. IV lying upside down on the side of the road. Part of the caterpillar in contact with the ground is missing, in the same place there are no rollers with a fragment of the lower part of the hull, the bottom sheet is torn off, the second caterpillar is torn off. The upper part of the machine, as far as one can judge, does not have such fatal damage. A typical picture during a land mine explosion.

The appearance of the Ausf.J modification on the assembly lines since June 1944 was associated with the desire to reduce the cost and simplify the production of the tank as much as possible in the face of the deteriorating strategic position of Germany. The only but significant change that distinguished the first Ausf.J from the latest Ausf.H was the elimination of the electric turret traverse and the associated auxiliary carburetor engine with a generator. Soon after the launch of the new modification, the pistol ports in the stern and sides of the turret were eliminated, which were useless because of the screens, and the design of other hatches was also simplified. Since July, an additional fuel tank with a capacity of 200 liters was installed in place of the liquidated auxiliary engine, but the fight against its leakage dragged on until September 1944. In addition, the 12-mm roof of the hull began to be reinforced by welding additional 16-mm sheets. All subsequent changes were aimed at further simplifying the design, the most notable among them being the abandonment of the zimmerite coating in September and the reduction of the number of carrier rollers to three per side in December 1944. The production of Ausf.J tanks continued almost until the very end of the war, until March 1945, but the slowdown in production due to the weakening of German industry and difficulties in the supply of raw materials led to the fact that only 1758 tanks of this modification were produced.

Production volumes of the T-4 tank


Design

The Pz.Kpfw.IV had a layout with a combined transmission compartment and control compartment in the front, the engine compartment in the aft, and the fighting compartment in the middle part of the vehicle. The crew of the tank consisted of five people: a driver and gunner-radio operator, located in the control compartment, and a gunner, loader and tank commander, who were in a triple tower.

Armored corps and turret

The turret of the PzKpfw IV tank made it possible to upgrade the tank gun. Inside the tower were the commander, gunner and loader. The commander's seat was directly under the commander's turret, the gunner was located to the left of the cannon breech, the loader was to the right. Additional protection was provided by anti-cumulative screens, which were also installed on the sides. The commander's cupola at the rear of the turret gave the tank good visibility. The tower had an electric turn drive.


Soviet soldiers are considering a broken German tank Pz.Kpfw. IV Ausf. H (single hatch and no triple-barreled grenade launchers on the turret). The tank is painted in tricolor camouflage. Oryol-Kursk direction.

Means of observation and communication

The tank commander in non-combat conditions, as a rule, conducted observation, standing in the hatch of the commander's cupola. In battle, to view the area, he had five wide viewing slots around the perimeter of the commander's cupola, which gave him an all-round view. The viewing slots of the commander, like those of all other crew members, were equipped with a protective triplex glass block on the inside. On the Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.A, the viewing slots did not have any additional cover, but on the Ausf.B, the slots were equipped with sliding armor shutters; in this form, the commander's viewing devices remained unchanged on all subsequent modifications. In addition, on tanks of early modifications in the commander's cupola there was a mechanical device for determining the heading angle of the target, with the help of which the commander could carry out accurate target designation to the gunner who had a similar device. However, due to excessive complexity, this system was eliminated starting with the Ausf.F2 modification. Viewing devices for the gunner and loader on the Ausf.A - Ausf.F consisted of, for each of them: a viewing hatch with an armored cover without viewing slots, in the frontal plate of the tower on the sides of the gun mantlet; inspection hatch with a slot in the front side plates and a viewing slot in the side hatch cover of the tower. Starting with the Ausf.G, as well as on parts of the late production Ausf.F2, viewing devices in the front side plates and the loader's viewing hatch in the frontal plate were eliminated. On the part of the tanks of modifications Ausf.H and Ausf.J, in connection with the installation of anti-cumulative screens, viewing devices in the sides of the tower were completely eliminated.

The main means of observation for the driver of the Pz.Kpfw.IV was a wide viewing slot in the frontal plate of the hull. From the inside, the slit was protected by a triplex glass block, from the outside, on the Ausf.A, it could be closed with a simple folding armored flap, on the Ausf.B and subsequent modifications, with a replaced Sehklappe 30 or 50 sliding flap, also used on the Pz.Kpfw.III. A periscopic binocular viewing device K.F.F.1 was located above the viewing slot on Ausf.A, but it was eliminated on Ausf.B - Ausf.D. On Ausf.E - Ausf.G, the viewing device appeared already in the form of an improved K.F.F.2, but starting with Ausf.H, it was again abandoned. The device was brought out through two holes in the frontal plate of the hull and, if it was not needed, was moved to the right. The gunner-radio operator on most modifications did not have any means of viewing the frontal sector, in addition to the sight of the course machine gun, but on the Ausf.B, Ausf.C and part of the Ausf.D, in place of the machine gun, there was a hatch with a viewing slot in it. Similar hatches were placed in the side plates on most Pz.Kpfw.IVs, being eliminated only on Ausf.J in connection with the installation of anti-cumulative screens. In addition, the driver had a turret position indicator, one of two lights warned of the turret turning to one side or another, in order to avoid damage to the gun when driving in cramped conditions.

For external communications, Pz.Kpfw.IV platoon commanders and above were equipped with a Fu 5 VHF radio station and a Fu 2 receiver. Line tanks were equipped only with a Fu 2 receiver. The FuG5 had a transmitter power of 10 W and provided a communication range of 9.4 km in telegraph and 6.4 km in telephone mode. For internal communication, all Pz.Kpfw.IVs were equipped with a tank intercom for four of the crew members, with the exception of the loader.

The decision to develop a medium tank (also called an artillery support tank) with a short-barreled gun was made in January 1934. The following year, Krupp-Gruson, MAN and Rheinmetall-Borsig presented their prototypes for testing. The army team liked the Krupp project. Machines of modification A were produced in 1937, modifications B (the so-called installation batches) - in 1938. Over the next year, 134 tanks of the C.

The combat weight of the tanks is 18.4 - 19 tons, the thickness of the armor is up to 30 millimeters, the maximum speed on the highway is 40 km / h, the cruising range is 200 kilometers. The turret was equipped with a 75 mm long L / 24 gun (24 caliber) and a coaxial machine gun. Another one was located on the right in the frontal sheet of the hull in a ball mount. In terms of design and layout, the tank basically repeated the medium Pz Kpfw III.

Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.B or Ausf.C during exercises. November 1943

German medium tanks PzKpfw IV Ausf H during an exercise to work out the interaction of crews. Germany, June 1944

As of September 1, 1939, the Wehrmacht had 211 Pz Kpfw IV tanks. The tank proved to be excellent during the Polish campaign, and along with the Pz Kpfw III medium tank, it was approved as the main one. Its mass production began in October of the same year. Already in the 40th year, 278 pieces were produced. modifications D and E.

In the German tank divisions at the time of the French invasion, there were about 280 Pz Kpfw IV tanks in the Western Theater. Operation in combat conditions has shown that the armor protection is insufficient. As a result, the thickness of the sheets of the frontal part was increased to 60 mm, the sides - up to 40 mm, the turret - up to 50 mm. As a result, the combat weight of modifications E and F, which were produced in 40-41, increased to 22 tons. To keep the specific pressure within acceptable limits, the width of the tracks was slightly increased - up to 400 millimeters from 380.

The German “fours” lost firefights with Soviet-made KB and T-34 tanks due to inadequate weapon characteristics. Starting in the spring of 1942, 75-mm long-barreled guns (L / 43) began to be installed on the Pz Kpfw IV. starting speed sub-caliber projectile was 920 meters per second. This is how the Sd Kfz 161/1 (modification F2) appeared, which surpassed even the T-34-76 in armament. Modification G was produced in 1942-1943, H - from 43rd and J - from June 44th (all modifications were coded as Sd Kfz 161/2). The last two modifications were the most perfect. The thickness of the frontal armor plates was increased to 80 millimeters. The power of the gun increased: the barrel length was 48 calibers. Weight increased to 25 thousand kg. Ausf J at one gas station could move on the highway for a distance of up to 320 kilometers. Since 1943, 5-mm screens have become mandatory on all tanks, which protected the sides and the turret behind and to the side from bullets from anti-tank rifles and cumulative projectiles.

Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.E. Yugoslavia, 1941

Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.F. Finland, 1941

The welded hull of the tank was simple in design, although it did not differ in the rational slope of the armor plates. A large number of hatches facilitated access to various mechanisms and assemblies, but at the same time reduced the strength of the hull. Partitions divided the interior into three compartments. The control compartment occupied the front compartment, which housed the gearboxes: onboard and general. The driver and radio operator were located in the same compartment, both had their own observation devices. The multifaceted turret and the middle compartment were assigned to the fighting compartment. The main armament, ammunition rack and other crew members: loader, gunner and commander were located in it. Ventilation was improved by hatches on the sides of the turret, but they reduced the projectile resistance of the tank.

The commander's cupola had five viewing devices with armored shutters. There were also viewing slots in the side hatches of the tower and on both sides of the gun mantlet. The gunner had a telescopic sight. The tower rotated manually or with the help of an electric motor, the vertical aiming of the gun was carried out only manually. The ammunition included smoke and high-explosive fragmentation grenades, cumulative, sub-caliber and armor-piercing shells.

In the engine compartment (aft of the hull) housed a 12-cylinder water-cooled carburetor engine. The undercarriage included eight rubber-coated road wheels of small diameter, which were interlocked in two. Leaf springs were elastic suspension elements.

Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.F2. France, July 1942

Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.H with side screens and zimmerite coating. USSR, July 1944

The medium tank Pz Kpfw IV proved to be an easy-to-handle and reliable vehicle. However, its patency, especially for overweight tanks latest releases was pretty bad. In terms of armor protection and armament, it surpassed all similar ones produced in Western countries, except for some modifications of the English "Comets" and American M4.

Technical characteristics of the medium tank Pz Kpfw IV (Ausf D/Ausf F2/Ausf J):
Year of issue - 1939 / 1942 / 1944;
Combat weight - 20000 kg / 23000 kg / 25000 kg;
Crew - 5 people;
Body length - 5920 mm / 5930 mm / 5930 mm;
Length with gun forward - 5920 mm / 6630 mm / 7020 mm;
Width - 2840 mm / 2840 mm / 2880 mm;
Height - 2680 mm;
BOOKING:
Thickness of armor plates (angle of inclination to the vertical):
The frontal part of the body - 30 mm (12 degrees) / 50 mm (12 degrees) / 80 mm (15 degrees);
Hull sides - 20 mm / 30 mm / 30 mm;
The frontal part of the tower - 30 mm (10 degrees) / 50 mm (11 degrees) / 50 mm (10 degrees);
The bottom and roof of the hull - 10 and 12 mm / 10 and 12 mm / 10 and 16 mm;
WEAPONS:
Gun brand - KwK37/KwK40/KwK40;
Caliber - 75 mm
Barrel length - 24 klb. / 43 klb. / 48 klb.;
Ammunition - 80 shots / 87 shots / 87 shots;
The number of machine guns - 2;
Machine gun caliber - 7.92 mm;
Ammunition - 2700 rounds / 3000 rounds / 3150 rounds
MOBILITY:
Engine type and brand - "Maybach" HL120TRM;
Engine power - 300 liters. s./300 l. s./272 l. With.;
Maximum speed on the highway - 40 km / h / 40 km / h / 38 km / h;
Fuel supply - 470 l / 470 l / 680 l;
Power reserve on the highway - 200 km / 200 km / 320 km;
The average ground pressure is 0.75 kg/cm2/0.84 kg/cm2; 0.89 kg/cm2.


In ambush


German infantry near the PzKpfw IV tank. Vyazma region. October 1941

It was improved and modified many times, thanks to which it was very effective against other medium tanks throughout the war.

History of creation

The decision to develop the Pz.Kpfw.IV was made in 1934. The car was primarily made to support infantry and suppress enemy firing points. The Pz.Kpfw.III, a recently developed medium tank, was taken as the basis for the design. When development began, Germany still did not advertise work on prohibited weapons, so the project for the new tank was called the Mittleren Tractor, and later, less conspiratorially, Bataillonfuhrerswagen (BW), that is, “battalion commander's vehicle”. Of all the projects, the VK 2001(K) project presented by AG Krupp was selected.

The project was not accepted immediately - at first the military was not satisfied with the spring suspension, but the development of a new, torsion bar suspension could be very delayed, and Germany was in dire need of a new tank, so it was decided to simply finalize the existing project.

In 1934, the first layout was born, still called Bataillonfuhrerswagen. However, when the Germans introduced a unified tank designation system, he received his last name - the PzKpfw IV tank, which fully sounds like Panzerkampfwagen IV.

The first mock-up was made from plywood, and soon a prototype made from mild welded steel appeared. He was immediately sent for testing in Kummersdorf, which the tank successfully passed. In 1936, mass production of the machine began.


Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.A

performance characteristics

general information

  • Classification - medium tank;
  • Combat weight - 25 tons;
  • Layout scheme - classic, front transmission;
  • Crew - 5 people;
  • Years of production - from 1936 to 1945;
  • Years of operation - from 1939 to 1970;
  • Total released - 8686 pieces.

Dimensions

  • Case length - 5890 mm;
  • Hull width - 2880 mm;
  • Height - 2680 mm.

Booking

  • Type of armor - forged steel, rolled with surface hardening;
  • Forehead - 80 mm / degree;
  • Board - 30 mm / degree;
  • Hull feed - 20 m / degree;
  • Tower forehead - 50 mm / degree;
  • Tower board - 30 mm / degree;
  • Cutting feed - 30 mm / degree;
  • Tower roof - 18 mm / degree.

Armament

  • The caliber and make of the gun are 75 mm KwK 37, KwK 40 L/43, KwK 40 L/48, depending on the modification;
  • Barrel length - 24, 43 or 48 calibers;
  • Ammunition - 87;
  • Machine guns - 2 × 7.92 mm MG-34.

Mobility

  • Engine power - 300 horsepower;
  • Highway speed - 40 km / h;
  • Power reserve on the highway - 300 km;
  • Specific power - 13 hp per ton;
  • Climbability - 30 degrees;
  • Crossable moat - 2.2 meters

Modifications

  • Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf. A. - with bulletproof armor and poor protection of surveillance devices. In fact, this is a pre-production modification - only 10 of them were produced, and an order for an improved model was immediately received;
  • PzKpfw IV Ausf. B - a hull of a different shape, the absence of a course machine gun and improved viewing devices. Frontal armor has been strengthened, a powerful engine has been installed, a new gearbox has been installed. Of course, the mass of the tank increased, but the speed increased to 40 km/h. 42 were produced;
  • PzKpfw IV Ausf. C is a truly massive modification. Similar to option B, but with a new engine and some changes. Since 1938, 140 pieces have been made;
  • Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf. D - model with an external turret mantlet, thicker side armor and some improvements. The last peaceful model, 45 pieces were produced;
  • Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf. E - a model that took into account the experience of the first war years. Got a new one commander's tower and reinforced armor. The chassis, the design of viewing devices and hatches have improved, as a result, the weight of the machine has increased to 21 tons;
  • Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf.F2 - with a 75 mm gun. Still had insufficient protection compared to Soviet tanks;
  • Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.G - a more protected tank, some were equipped with a 75-mm cannon with a length of 48 calibers;
  • Ausf.H - machine of 1943, the most massive. Similar to Model G, but with thicker turret roof and new transmission;
  • Ausf.J - an attempt to simplify and reduce the cost of tank production in 1944. There was no electric drive for turning the turret; soon after the release, the pistol ports were removed and the design of the hatches was simplified. Tanks of this modification were produced until the end of the war.

Pz.Kpfw IV Ausf.H

Vehicles based on the Pz. IV

Several special vehicles were also built on the basis of the Panzerkampfwagen IV:

  • StuG IV - medium self-propelled guns of the assault gun class;
  • Nashorn (Hornisse) - medium anti-tank self-propelled guns;
  • Möbelwagen 3,7 cm FlaK auf Fgst Pz.Kpfw. IV(sf); Flakpanzer IV "Möbelwagen" - anti-aircraft self-propelled guns;
  • Jagdpanzer IV - medium self-propelled gun, tank destroyer;
  • Munitionsschlepper - ammunition transporter;
  • Sturmpanzer IV (Brummbär) - medium class self-propelled howitzer/assault gun;
  • Hummel - self-propelled howitzer;
  • Flakpanzer IV (3.7cm FlaK) Ostwind and Flakpanzer IV (2cm Vierling) Wirbelwind are self-propelled anti-aircraft guns.

A PzKpfw IV Hydrostatic machine with a hydrostatic drive was also developed, but it remained experimental and did not enter the series.


Use in combat

The Wehrmacht received the first three tanks Pz. IV in January 1938. A total of 113 cars were produced in 1938. The first operations of these tanks were the Anschluss of Austria and the capture of the Judiciary Region of Czechoslovakia in 1938. And in 1939 they drove through the streets of Prague.

Before the invasion of Poland, the Wehrmacht had 211 Pz. IV A, B and C. All of them were superior to Polish cars, but here anti-tank guns were dangerous for them, so many tanks were lost.

By May 10, 1940, the Panzerwaffe had 290 Pz.Kpfw.IV tanks. They successfully fought the French tanks, winning with fewer losses. However, while the troops still had more light Pz.l and Pz.ll than Pz. IV. In further operations, they practically did not suffer losses.

After 1940

By the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, the Germans had 439 Pz.lV. There is evidence that then the Germans attributed them to heavy tanks, but they were significantly inferior to the Soviet heavy KV in combat qualities. However, Pz.lV was inferior even to our T-34. Because of this, about 348 Pz.Kpfw.IV units were lost in battles in 1941. A similar situation occurred in North Africa.

Even the Germans themselves did not speak very well of the Pz.Kpfw.IV, which was the reason for so many modifications. In Africa, the machines were clearly defeated, and several successful operations involving Pz.lV Ausf.G and Tigers did not help in the end - in North Africa, the Germans had to capitulate.

On the Eastern Front, the Ausf.F2 took part in the attack on the North Caucasus and Stalingrad. When Pz.lll ceased production in 1943, it was the four that became the main German tank. And although after the start of the release of the Panther, the four wanted to stop releasing, this decision was abandoned, and for good reason. As a result, in 1943, Pz.IVs accounted for 60% of all German tanks - most of all there were G and H modifications. They were often confused with Tigers due to armor screens.

It was Pz.lVs that actively participated in Operation Citadel - there were many more "tigers" and "panthers". At the same time, it seems that Soviet troops just received many Pz. IV for the Tigers, since according to reports they knocked out a lot more Tigers than were present from the German side.

In all these battles, a lot of fours were lost - in 1943 this number reached 2402, and only 161 units were repaired.


Padded Pz. IV

End of the war

Summer 1944 German troops they constantly lost both in the East and in the West, and the Pz.lV tanks could not withstand the onslaught of enemies. 1139 vehicles were destroyed, but there were still enough of them in the troops.

The last major operations in which Pz.lV participated on the side of Germany were the counteroffensive in the Ardennes and the counterattack on Lake Balaton. They ended in failure, many tanks were knocked out. In general, the fours participated in hostilities until the very end of the war - they could also be found on street fighting in Berlin and in Czechoslovakia.

Of course, the captured Pz. IV was actively used by the Red Army and the allies in various battles.

After World War II

After the surrender of Germany, a fairly large batch of fours was transferred to Czechoslovakia. They were repaired and were in service until the 50s. Pz.lV was also actively exploited in Syria, Bulgaria, Finland, France, Turkey and Spain.

In the Middle East, Pz.Kpfw.IV fought in 1964, in the "water war" over the Jordan River. Then Pz.lV Ausf.H fired on Israeli troops, but were soon destroyed in large numbers. And in 1967, in the "six-day" war, the Israelis captured the remaining cars.


Pz. IV in Syria

Tank in culture

Tank Pz. The IV was one of the most popular German tanks, so it has a strong presence in modern culture.

In bench modeling, plastic prefabricated models in 1:35 scale are produced in China, Japan, Russia and South Korea. On the territory of the Russian Federation, the most common models of the Zvezda company are a late shielded tank and an early short-barreled one, with a 75-mm cannon.


Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.A, model

Very often the tank is found in games. Pz. IV A, D and H can be found in the game Word of Tanks, in Battlefield 1942 it is the main German tank. It can also be seen in both parts of Company of Heroes, in Advanced Military Commander, in the games Behind Enemy Lines, Red Orchestra 2, and others. Modifications of the Ausf. C, ausf. E, Ausf. F1, Ausf. F2, Ausf. G, Ausf. H, Ausf. J are presented. On mobile platforms Pz.IV Ausf. F2 can be seen in Armored Aces.

tank memory

The PzKpfw IV was produced in large quantities, so many of its modifications, especially later ones, are presented in various museums around the world:

  • Belgium, Brussels - Museum of the Royal Army and Military History, PzKpfw IV Ausf J;
  • Bulgaria, Sofia - Museum of Military History, PzKpfw IV Ausf J;
  • United Kingdom - Duxford War Museum and Bovington Tank Museum, Ausf. D;
  • Germany - Museum of Technology in Sinsheim and Tank Museum in Munster, Ausf G;
  • Israel - Israel Defense Forces Museum in Tel Aviv, Ausf. J, and the Israeli Armored Forces Museum in Latrun, Ausf. G;
  • Spain, El Goloso - Museum of armored vehicles, Ausf H;
  • Russia, Kubinka - Armored Museum, Ausf G;
  • Romania, Bucharest - National War Museum, Ausf J;
  • Serbia, Belgrade - Military Museum, Ausf H;
  • Slovakia - Museum of the Slovak Uprising in Banska Bystrica and Museum of the Carpathian-Dukela Operation in Svidnik, Ausf J;
  • USA - Military Vehicle Technology Foundation Museum in Portola Valley, Ausf. H, US Army Ordnance Museum at Fort Lee: Ausf. D, ausf. G, Ausf. H;
  • Finland, Parola - Tank Museum, Ausf J;
  • France, Saumur - Tank Museum, Ausf J;
  • Switzerland, Tuna - Tank Museum, Ausf H.

Pz.Kpfw.IV in Kubinka

Photo and video


Flakpanzer IV Möbelwagen