A brief and not too satisfactory account of a brand-new, rather mobile,
German 128-mm SP gun has been supplied by an allied source. The gun-caliber
is a newcomer in the list of German artillery, and appears to be one of the
ultra-modern long weapons which have been recently turned out by the Rheinmetall
Company. No specifications are yet available concerning it.
Present data indicate the gun-and-mount assembly is an improvement on
the rather cumbersome, 70-ton "Ferdinand", which mounts only an 88-mm
(3.46 in) weapon rather than the new 128-mm (5.03 in) piece, and carries massive
hull armor running from 4.33 to 7.87 inches (see Tactical and Technical Trends
No. 35, p. 16) -- a plating heavier than that
carried at sea by most heavy naval
cruisers. The hull armor on the 128-mm gun varies from 30 to 45 millimeters
(1.18 to 1.38 in) over the fighting compartment and 15 to 30 millimeters (.59
to 1.18 in) on the lengthened PzKw 3 hull and chassis. The weight is thereby cut
to about 35 tons and the speed has been stepped up from the 6 to 9 mph of the
"Ferdinand" to about 15.5. Whether the added mobility is justified
at the cost of stripping down the armor to a thickness that may be pierced by
many small-caliber antitank guns is an open question, and is certainly a
reversal of trend. Perhaps "Ferdinand" was too massive to be thoroughly
practical in mobile warfare. It is believed that the "128" may be used
for the most part against fixed fortifications, in which case protection
would be supplied by other means, which is further indicated by the fact that no
machine gun is reported as part of the equipment. Only 18 rounds of separate-loading
ammunition are carried. While the type of shell is not yet reported, mixed AP
and anticoncrete projectiles may be expected. The crew is five.
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Notes:
The German designation is 12.8cm Selbstfahrlafette L/61
(Panzerselbstfahrlafette V). The Germans produced two vehicles in 1942
which were dispatched to the Eastern Front. One was captured by the Russians
in 1943 and analyzed.
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