IMPORTANT CORRECTION(?) The total number of Marder III Ausf. M is likely "only" about 1009+ both newly produced and converted, NOT 941 + 1009 = 1950+ as noted in the video. It seems I misinterpreted the table, since in some cases the "new+converted" was lower than the "new" per month, but the "new+converted" was those number reported as received. It is a bit confusing, so I am not entirely sure yet. If you like what we do, you can support us on » patreon - www.patreon.com/join/mhv or » subscribe star - www.subscribestar.com/mhv Or check out our books: » The Assault Platoon of the Grenadier-Company November 1944 (StG 44) - sturmzug.com » Army Regulation Medium Panzer Company 1941 - www.hdv470-7.com
I've always had a soft spot for these impromptu or make-do conversions of captured or annexed equipment the Germans had. We have these obsolete tanks laying around that aren't good anymore, but a need for tank killing, so we'll replace the turret with a much larger fixed gun and call it a day. They aren't perfect, but they're an excellent example of pragmatic and improvised usage of available equipment.
Can you tell me which book talking about the Marder III M 1009 conversion? Because some wikipedia moderator said: "This is nonsense, because the H and M chassis are DIFFERENT, you cant convert it..."
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized I do appreciate when you do not wear a mask so I can see you facial expressions. It provides a more personal viewer experience. That being said we are all bound by our countries laws, the preferences of our hosts and the wants/needs of those around us. taking a non-political stance to masks is respectable. I appreciate your content and however you choose to dress yourself is your own personal choice. any attempt to cast you in a certain political light in relation to your nationality and mask wearing is a touch out of line. TLDR: you do you, I come here for the honest and impartial information you provide about military history and anything else doesn’t really matter.
@@TheBelrick "The face covering has nothing to do with health"? I'm sorry to say but you are what you were called. Enjoy the video and shut up. PS: The comment has been deleted.
I think we can have a very long discussion on this next time we link up. I would observe that Marder does seem to meet the requirements set out by the Germans for a Panzerjager (See Panzer Tracts 7-1), suffers many of the same 'limitations' of the Panzerjager 1, which was very popular with the troops, and if used as a self-propelled anti-tank gun (which it was) and not as an assault gun (which the StuG was), I see no evidence it was not as effective as any other such vehicle such as US TDs.
From my understanding these are early reports, the interesting aspect is that I haven't seen any reference to the Panzerjäger I experience. Those were mainly used in non-divisional AT units if I am not mistaken, whereas the reports about the Marder were from divisional units if I remember correctly. After the video I found instructions on how to use Panzerjäger in contrast to StuGs. So my guess is that these early reports were in many ways due to using these vehicles the wrong way. The popularity of the Panzerjäger I might have several reasons as well: it was basically under the authority of the Corps/Army if I am not mistaken. Additionally it was available already in 1939, so there was time to adapt as well. Also in 1939/1940 it was quite a different campaign than 1941 onward as well.
It would be interesting to know by what kind of weapons Marders got knocked out most frequently. I can imagine that during the timeframe Marders where in use they would be more frequently target of liberal artillery fire than the average US TD. And a turreted US TD probably has more usefull all-round armor protecting the gun crew from that than the Marder has, with it’s open rear crew compartment.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized In 1 you had limited resources, so having a single StuG or Marder was huge. In 3 you were usually swimming in Panzers by the middle campaign :D
I remember those days. Now Steel Division II eats up my time. That game does have some accuracy in how the Marder series was used, and how best to use it. If you roll it forward to engage enemy armor it won't do well. If you set it up in cover and within a legit range it can defeat T34's in one shot.
@@SmokinLoon5150 Yeah I was guilty of doing that with the Marders :( . It gets even worse when in my early games I would send them rolling into towns....on their own....without infantry support. Thats what I get for playing too much Hoi4.
I cannot stress how thankful I am for this channel. As a teacher I use it often to teach statistic and (although research and documentation are EXCELLENT), you are the ONLY researcher I "use" that freely admits what is FACT, VS the "educated assumption" of subject experts with documentation, and what is only assumption (although you usually explain that too) Keep it up please
I had a Marder III Ausf H model as a kid. I thought it was awesome. As an adult I understand it's limitations. Man it was so cool looking as a kid. Love the Marder. Thanks for the video.
Always liked the ingenuity of German conversions of foreign vehicles into their own SPGs, the later Marder series looks so much better than the earlier ones (Looking at you early marder II specifically). Really like how far they came from things like the SPA 10.5 LefH on the Light tank Mk IV towards all the Hotchkiss conversions. Pretty neat and somewhat under appericated probably for the lack of cool factor/looking ugly compared to the normal German vehicles
The early Marders were hilarious. They basically duct taped a 7.5cm gun and gunshield superstructure on top of whatever obsolescent chassis they had enough units of.
Hervorragende Arbeit wie immer! Ich lerne in 10-15 Minuten Ihres Videos mehr als in den Wochen an der Universität. Outstanding work as always! I learn more in 10-15 minutes of your video than I did froms weeks in in University.
For those who may be wondering, a Marten is a species of carnivorous weasel-like mammal. I don't know about you, but I think it's quite a fitting name for this tank.
This is true, and they are adorable. On a hiking trip one time I made camp a few miles from the peak of a mountain for a rest day and a Pine Marten hung out on the edges of my campsite all day hoping I would give him food. He basically looked like a ferret with long claws
The Marder has important advantages over any towed piece: it moves under it's own steam, carries it's own ammunition, and even moves it's own crew and all their stuff around. Even with a fighting compartment open to the elements, higher profile, less concealability, and more-or-less only token armour protection, who wouldn't prefer this to a paralyzed, overweight and uncooperative "drunk chick"?
And in comparing it to that lies the secret of calling the Marder successful. However, the whole concept of parking expensive equipment, it's expert crew and an engine with as little protection as the Marder gave, pales, when compared to a "proper" TD. In the end, the "cheaper" solution might run higher total costs on the battlefield...
An hervorragend video; excellent format, excellent narrative, useful and interesting graphics, new information - all prime beef and no filler. I've been reading books and watching documentaries on such things for 50+ years and this is an exceptional is every regard. I look forward to watching all of your other videos.
I'd just like to say that I love this video format - as a scale model builder, I really appreciate the walkaround for the vehicle as well as pointing out what the individual parts are for. For the Marder - I only wish that we were able to get more sources on what the view was on its performance after the users (Germans) finally developed the doctrine on it - and what other nations it fought against thought of it (any US/UK/USSR evaluations out there?)
So it sounds like it was a terrible Assault Gun, but a great Self-Propelled AT Gun. The latter being what it was designed for while the former is what the troops were looking for.
As the war worsened German armor was being tasked to do more odd jobs, misused. I still recall reading of Panzer Divisions put on the frontline in the defense and not in the reserve for a counterattack. IIRC some Pz Divisions got annihilated because of that late in the war, I think at the onset of Operation Bagration, possibly later. The Soviets wound up for a big offensive and it just so happened some Panzer formations were in the front. The Soviets start their offensive with a heavy artillery attack and armor assault, pretty much destroying that Panzer formation right off the bat.
Thank you, for again taking a deep dive into the subject. Your analysis, and understanding, of both German engineering, and the German politics of the day, is a refreshing change from other channels. Most every military channel on TH-cam has something to offer the serious student. Perhaps you can also take a deep dive the last German Uboat series, the Type XXIII. (No pun intended.) Or, if you have already done so, create another video on the subject. Describing what, if any, developments were adopted after the war by the allies. Greetings from Wien.
Thank you for this. Very informative. Especially? 1) I had NO IDEA that the 38t made up such a HUGE part of the total Panzers for Barbarossa. 2) The Marder III H - to me - was easily the best looking Marder. ☮
A very concise video. The Marder series was typical of the Germans during the war: stopgap after stopgap. It took the best of a year to get any of them to the battlefields.
Very nice presentation, thank you so much for the production numbers Clearly the Marder was the "best" tool for the job considering the chassis production challenge for the German army during the war. Were their superior weapons available ? as aptly pointed out that answer is YES. However when considering the vast areas in conflict and a need for AP force projection the Marder did a more than adequate job of "plugging the gap".
Only the best Koala-tea grains of salt* is allowed here * Disclaimer No guarantee can be given of the Koala-tea of this salt and a possible side effect of misidentification
If more scholars would be as honest and transparent as this fellow, we’d have a much better look into the past. It seems easy enough for him to assume there was a change in crew assignments and to admit it was speculation since he could not find a source, but too few of our “finest” historians seem to be able to to this. My compliments.
I didn't know that the Marder III was regarded to be useless. I thought that it was quite useful, and considering that the German Army did not much more than defend from 1943 onwards anyways, I guess it was a good vehicle. Doesn't take that much steel to make and fires potent rounds. Also, I read somewhere that the western allies nicknamed the vehicle "Murder III", on account of it being quite deadly. Do you know if this is true or a myth? Thanks again for your hard work with these videos, very informative, but not at all boring.
In a broad strategical sense, the german army was on the defense from 1943 onwards, but on a local, tactical level there were hundreds of german offensives, tacctical counter-attacks etc each day, to recapture strategic position, drive the enemy away from your own lines, capture important towns/railway stations etc. So offensive warfare was still conducted by the german army on a daily basis, in which the Marder was obviously quite useless. Fun fact: the usage of the Jagdpanther for defensive purposes was actually forbidden and only allowed in emergency situations, so much for defensive warfare haha
Thank you for speaking a little bit of German in the video!! I LOVE the PHYSICAL APPEARANCE of the German Marders; I think they look really TOUGH and AGGRESSIVE!!
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This is also the last time* we see him in the "old" setup of the WW2 Hall in the German Tank Museum, as they are just now reshuffeling it to improve the exhibition a bit. In that sense you were lucky because the PaK40 is still right next to the Marder III. A few weeks ago I did one of my first not book review Videos (in German) trying to compare the sizes and weight of the different German PaKs throughout WW2. One only has to look at the difference between the some 450 kgs of the PaK 35/36 to the 4380 kgs of the Pak 43/41 to understand the reasoning for "self propelling" them and also one of the reasons why PaKs were not a big thing in many armies after WW2. Of course a nice topic for a DPM Video would be the Vehicle which used to by right across from the Marder. The Pak 40 on Raupenschlepper Ost. It would be nice to hear what some primary sources have to say on that one, as it doesnt come away that positiv in the Museums Catalog :) *Yes I know that he probably filmed a gazillion other Videos on that trip and so it is not quite the last time.
Thanks for this look at the Marder. Always had a soft spot for the various Marders as a kid 2 of my best model kits ( ie the best painted) were a 1/35 Tamiya Marder II with a Panzer II hull and a Revell 1/32 Marder III Ausf M. Both painted in various desert camo's
Thank you for nice vido, I like it like all your posted videos. Video about Marder I and similar constructions (sometimes called also Marder 1´s ) - like 7,5 cm PaK 40 on everything imaginable would be great. Other conversions also (like 10,5 cm StuH and SiG 33 on everything imaginable, even Char B).
Very good and informative video as always and I hope that you have a great Holiday Season and a Merry Christmas to you all! Thanks again for sharing your work with us. Have a great evening.
IMHO the Marder and Hetzer are simply ingenious. While a Panther or even a StuG might have been more versatile the production lines of the Pz 38/Marder/Hetzer could not produce StuGs or Panthers - but did provide some very useful tank destoyers. The problems arose when you tried to use tank destoyers as assaultguns or tanks.
Thank you for this video, I always had a fascination of the Marder III Ausf H even though it was not exactly the most produced or effective tank destroyer of its side. So I'm glad this sees the light of the day. To be honest before watching I thought your title of "The Hetzer's Useless Uncle" seemed about right since I thought it would be best used as a more mobile anti-tank gun than a StuG equivalent, but the lonooog barrel sticking out means the operator could do something silly like bump it into a tree while moving it into cover. I kind of wish you read some of the German primary sources in German and then in English. It wouldn't mean much just repeating the same thing in two languages, but I really liked the infantry anti tank tactics video.
Thanks for the good video! not much to say, since my previous knowledge comes from raw statistics you bring up and just numbers regarding the tank's specifics.
Bruh this thing was AMAZING in Company of Heroes 1. Build a pair of those, some of those elite panzergrenadiers to slow down the enemy armour and let those Marders reap their toll.
Excellent video. Very informative, like all your other work. I would like to see you do some videos on the less glamorous German units. For instance, maybe you could do a video on the balloon observation units, if any. It would be interesting, to me at least, to see something about the German army's Topographical units " Kartenstelle truppen" I think they were called. As Napoleon once said ' An army travels on it's stomach' so it would be interesting to see something about the organization and equipment of German field kitchen and bakery units. I know interest in this more mundane stuff may be pretty low and maybe not worth the time or effort. I think this stuff is fascinating though. Anyway, Thanks for all the great vids.
thank you, such aspects are more likely to be covered in my second channel, e.g., here I talk about the German Military Horse: th-cam.com/video/0v3SerMDgns/w-d-xo.html
Hi Bernhard, great video! I think I found a small error though. In your penetration table you are comparing the tanks' "effective" armor against the 30° penetration values of the gun. That's kind of calculating the angle twice. I think you'd have to use the flat (90°) angle if you compare against effective armor. The PaK40 (with the PzGr 39) would still be able to penetrate a T34/85 at 1000m. Looking forward to your next video, keep up the great work!
> I think you'd have to use the flat (90°) angle if you compare against effective armor. You assume I have those values. You seem also miss that the angle is rarely 30°, additionally the tank is usually angled horizontally and vertically as well. Not to mention that weak points are not accounted for. In other words these numbers should give you a broad idea.
Cool video. I think the Marder are interesting vehicles. If used as mobile AT platform (aka us hellcat) it seems to perform fairly well. It also makes since to try and use good captured equipment and the decent 38t chassis. As an ambush weapon it would be effective for a few minutes, until tanks or arty returned fire.
Good video. In Warthunder at BR 2.7-3.0 the Marder is devastating if used properly. Against M5s, M3s and early Sherman tanks it can outrange and easily penetrate. More often than not, it's enemy air support that gets the Marder.
interesting to see those production numbers, I think more people know about the h variant because of war thunder, when in the end there were more of the m variant made. maybe they should add the m variant to the game too, tho German tech tree is already very big
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized I think that the Marder III H is a nicer looking vehicle. To me it's more aesthetically pleasing than the other Marder variants. That being said I would love to see more Marder variants added to War Thunder as I quite enjoy playing the Marder III H.
i thought that too when i saw the production numbers. I think the Marder 3 H fits into the early German BR with the other '35/38 (T)' variants abit better than the M
My Opa was a Panzerjager in the 8th Panzer Division. It was the 43rd Abt. They had the Marder and didn’t like it do to the thin armor and open top. He got the Panzerjager 4 L/70 and really liked it
I’m not sure what version of the Panzerjager 4 the received first. But I believed it was the L48. I do know they finally got the L/70. He was with them from 1940 to 1945. In the book about the 8th PD by Richard Kindel he shows photos of both.
The czech company BMM (ČKD) from Prague still produce vehicles for germany under name Škoda🤗 the best construction was 1945 Panther prototipe with autoloading cannon, teoreticaly 45 round per minute.
From my limited research I was under the impression that eventually the Russian 76.2 gun in German service were eventually rechambered for PaK 40 rounds. Rather than just making a self- propelled anti tank gun on a wider more wholistic view it seemed a down and dirty way to make good panzer losses, especially after Kursk. All up as usual a short but very informative video. As I am a doctrine nut I would like to see more on tactics developed for it. Ie you shown me what it is, now tell me how it was used rather than very broad terms such as it was best used defensively. Was it used in PaK fronts and the like.
Not exactly. They used Pak40 shells,the cash Ng was unique though. The gun in question was F-22, a failed project to make universal guns. They were replaced by cheaper and yet more modern ZiS-3. But ZiS-3 was 100% artillery gun, there was no modernization reserve. Meanwhile F-22 was on purpose build with too thick chamber walls that were supposed to be redrilled for AA use later on if the project would be approved as universal gun. Germans just captured the plans when they entered Kharkov and basically had done what was already listed in blueprints. There was no development per say involved. Would you claim that you have developed your IKEA furniture?:))
I had a few Italeri sets of my own, mostly ships though, like the Graf Spee. I am not sure, but I think either there were no tanks in store or I did not buy them for some reason.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized it’s strange because up until that point I only seemed to have Tamiya kits in 1/35 scale - really should have widened my horizons before the Marder kit!
Great video Bernhard. I would like to add that it seems like the Marder II had a PAK 40 gun version arriving in action like in mid 1942, I don't know the correct "ausf" for it. At least I hope so, because I scratched one of these to my wargame model kit forces combating in the Caucasus haha. As for its use in combat, I think it could have been used in attack as well, at least in some sort of covering advancing forces from the distance or the flanks from counter-attacks, things like that. It seems like while fighting on a plain, Marder's gun could outrange the one from the earlier versions of T-34 and KV-1. Mostly because of optics perhaps? Because even with the PAK gun being better than the T-34's in terms of range, it wouldn't be necessary armor piercing shells to knock down a Marder, it might have been possible to use HE shells to counter it, making both vehicles capable of knocking down each other in the distance.
Thank you, the issue is the Marder had 15mm everything goes through that except for rifle ammo. So I can't see a way that a Marder can really outrange a T-34 or KV-1. Covering an attack was possible, but the issue in the report was Soviet tanks showing up and "harassing" German lines from afar.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized but let me ask you, the Soviet tank optics were bad as some people claim or is this a myth? Because if they couldn't see the Marder, this would be an advantage. And how far could a PAK 40 destroy a T-34 tank? Like around 1500 km, perhaps? One problem would be the Soviet artillery, because the Soviet had it in number, so they could bombard the area around the Marder and I don't know if its armor would be enough to stand against the HE. By the way, seems like Germany was the only country to use this kind of combat vehicle in larger numbers. Those American tank destroyers were quite different for the Marders in many aspects, isn’t it? They had turrets and things like that, and seemed to be faster as well.
Su-76 was common spam, like mentioned in earlier video. That means it was produced in HUGE numbers and it is pretty same - obsolete tank chassis with good gun in static mounting and open top. US can produce good TD because there was no war on their continent so they can aford full solution.
@@pecazidle was the SU-76 used against tanks? Wasn't it kind of a mobile artillery more keen to the Wespe? Bernhard have a video on it, I have to watch it again, because as I remember, it's focus wasn't primarely on tank combat. It has the Zis 3 mounted on it, which isn't exactly an AT gun, but could have been used for the task. I think the SU-76 can't be directly compared to the Marder because the Marder however was indeed a tank destroyer. SU-76 might have been used against tanks on occasion, just like the SU-152 did. Its gun could fire against tanks just like the 152, but it wasn't meant primarely for AT role like a Marder. The Russians were in a different position than Germany as the Marder was a stopgap to counter KVs and T-34s. As a stopgap solution I wonder if we could compare Marder to the US tank destroyers as well, because I think they would be very different combat vehicles as both have very different design characteristics and may have had also very different combat doctrines. As far as I know, US tank destroyers were meant to counter tanks on the offensive as well. They were conceived to be fast, faster than a tank. Marder may be a light-weight vehicle still compared to a tank, but it wasn't as flexible and quick as a US tank destroyer. Marder is closer to a AT mounting, but on top of a vehicle chassis, while a M10 is closer to these cruiser, "cavalry" tanks, like the Crusader tank, the Somua, Panzer III, BT tank and the like.
I haven't look into optics yet, so I simply can't say. I am not even sure if anyone did a proper study on this topic. I read a lot of "one-liners" over the years. Turrets are expensive, Americans could afford it, Germans couldn't. Same with chassis, the Americans put their 105mm artillery on Sherman chassis, the Germans on Panzer II. See also this podcast on MagzTV particularly the comment by Chieftain: th-cam.com/video/iME2X3p6fLM/w-d-xo.html
I think you can find footage of italian front where german spotter call Marder III. M to move from hiding position to firing position. Also in the end whole point of Marder is come down to tactical mobility of towed gun vs on wheel.
I love the marder 38t. In world of tanks, it has a high velocity 75mm with outrageous rate of fire, accuracy, and very good camo factor. I know it’s only a game, but hey, I like it
I was surprised how much fun I had playing the Marder III Ausf. F in War Thunder! In one match, I single-handedly denied the cap until I ran out of ammo!
After thinking for a bit, it makes sense to have the loader on the left side and the gunner on the right. Its way more comfortable to load a gun from the left side.
I think that your video on the SU-76m is not a coincidence ;) It is interesting to see some similarities: I do remember reading an article about the SU-76m where the author claimed, that the high losses were due to the commanders wanting to use them as assault guns and wanting them to move closer and attack, which they were not intended for. I can see a similar trope here- it was seen not as a movable gun emplacement (which it was meant to be), but as a direct assault vehicle. Armor+gun+tracks= congratulations, you're a tank! Yet there are differences: the gun on the Marder was a typical AT gun, unlike the Soviet one where it was universal. Unless of course the Soviet gun was used, in which case it was exactly the same. It would be interesting to compare ammo loadouts and some tactical instructions. Apparently both armies had to deal with the obsolesence of their light tanks and both seem to have done it in pretty much the same way.
I think it is important to note that after the Marder’s introduction, it became standard practice for the anti-tank battalions of German infantry divisions to receive one company of Marders and have two companies of towed anti-tank guns. It was extremely uncommon for them to be used outside of this structure. In contrast, StuGs were sufficiently armored that they could be used in Panzer regiments when there were not sufficient turreted Panzers to fill the regiment. As the war progressed and additional StuGs were produced, or foreign vehicles, like the Italian Semovente 75, were put into German service, that German infantry divisions started fielding one company of StuGs, one company of Marders, and one towed AT company. As Hetzers were introducing, they started replacing the outdated Marders. So, during 1943 to late 1944, the Marders served the role of mobile AT guns for relatively static infantry divisions very well. They were not typically sent to more mobile Panzer and Panzergrenadier divisions that were expected to attack and counterattack enemy forces.
I cant remember the source, but i remember reading that the germans loved them in the italian campaign, because they could pop out behind a cliff or alley and fire deadly accurate shots.
Very interesting video. I am confused about the graphic at 1.12. There are 3 Marder III variants but you only spoke about H and M model. What happened to the first one?
I'd always figured if there was an Ausführung F or G, there had to have been C-E before them at some point, even if they were prototypes or limited production runs.
In the final battle scene in Saving Private Ryan, it appears that Marder III H and Ms are featured in combat. Bernhard states that the maximum elevation of the Pak 40 was 9 degrees. In the movie an Ausf. H elevates its gun way past the maximum to blast private Jackson from the top of a church tower, a display of artistic license, I now realize, for an antitank vehicle.
@@ADITADDICTS That looked to be an Ausf. M, based on the location of the crew compartment. Late in the battle, Sgt. Horvath bazookas what looks to be a Ausf. H. My understanding is that all of the AFVs were replicas built for the movie, so the builders may not have been perfectly faithful to the details. Another detail: they should not have been able to shoot into the tiger driver compartment because the viewport should have been blocked with ballistic glass. Later, I tried to ID the German AFVs and was astounded at how many they eventually employed, mashups of various carriages, guns, and other parts. It must have been a nightmare to maintain such an inventory. This documentary clears up much of the confusion. Maybe Bernard could confirm all this.
I looked at some images, it seems there was also a mock-up for the Sturmpanzer IV usually called "Brummbär" that aims up: www.sproe.com/images/screenshots/tankdestroyer-02-large.jpg And yes, the Tiger should have ballistic glass there, they also had several spares generally to replace broken ones as well. It seems most of them are converted Swedish Tanks, the Tiger was on a T-34 hull if I remember correctly, see the road wheels. mock-up Marder III Ausf. H: www.reddit.com/r/TankPorn/comments/hzdsrb/slightly_modified_swedish_sav_m43_assault_gun/ mock-up Ausf. M: www.sproe.com/images/screenshots/marder3-02-large.jpg
@@Ad_Valorem the luftwaffe did the same thing with planes. Anything that went down, German or allied, if it could be fixed then it was back up in the air. A lot of times with a freshly painted swastika over the other countries markings lol.
0:49, the left Marder II has another name that is: Panzwrselbstfahlfette I fud 7.62 PAK 36(r) auf Pzkpfw. II Ausf. D (Sdkfz. 132). The long version is something along the lines of: Panzwrselbstfahlfette I fud 7.62 Panzer Abwher Kanone 36(r) auf Panzerkampfwagen II Ausführung D (Sonderkraftfahrzeug 132)
I was friends with knights cross holder Hardy Svenson (born Eberhard Schmalz). He won the Deutsches kreuz i Gold commanding a Marder III on the Don bend with Pz jgr abt 43, 8 Panzer division. He shot up 9 Russian tanks in December 1942 with a Marder. Ultimately, he did not like being protected only by a shield of “sheet metal”. After officers school he chose to serve in an pz jaeger unit equipped with the Stug III. The stug III he thought was a very fine weapon..
The round used to kill the T-34 was a tungsten round that was provided for "last ditch" uses. The gun on the Marder III was the ex-Russian 76mm anti aircraft gun.
The vehicle that blew up the Bell Tower in SPR was a repainted Swedish Sav m/43- their version of the Marder/Hetzer family. I'd have to go back and look, but if I'm not mistaken the m/43 in the film is mounted with the 75mm gun, as opposed to the alternate 105mm gun. Also, I believe the Marder 38t shown in the film is also a Sav m/43 with the back of the crew compartment cut off (maybe the same m/43 as the other with a removable section?).
Kinda interesting comment (at 3:22) that Panzer 38(t) was too slow for recon but Germans would end up converting 60-70 (exact number is unknown) old Panzer 38(t) to Aufklärungspanzer 38(t) during 1944.
Context with the Armor value of those tanks. Those values are effective 90 degrees, taking account line of slight thickness due to sloping. T34 with a 45mm plate at 45 degrees =90 mm. However all penetration values are 30 degrees from vertical, not the 90 degree penetration.
"As you can see, there where two Marder II variants, and for the Marder III actually three." This actually makes perfect logical and linguistical sense. 😊
You're missing the point that it was a Marder 3 or nothing. Germany didn't have the ability to retool factories fast enough to switch production from obsolete vehicles to other types. That's why vehicles like the Wespe and Marder were built. They were still better than nothing.
@@tamlandipper29 Retooling to build a completely different vehicle means stopping production, potentially for months. Germany needed every weapon it could get and stopping production wasn't an option.
Ahh yes the Marder, also known as the "tank destroyer" that explodes into a fireball from a stiff breeze in Steel Division 2. I always wanted to make it work but it's a question of do you want a AT gun that has a lower profile, better stealth, and is harder to hit, or do you want a AT gun that has mobility, but why do you need an AT gun with mobility? Generally you want to set it up in a good position for defense or to set an ambush. At least American TD had great speed and a turret, allowing them to quickly flank or move into a advantageous position, they also died to a stiff breeze but at least it seems they had some use. In real life I can see the logistical usefulness of a self propelled AT gun, on the eastern front the lines were constantly moving and the Germans ultimately ended up on a multi year retreat. Having a AT gun that has tracks and won't get stuck in the mud and can pretty much drive anywhere as needed has value.
The lack of need to unlimber/dismount and relimber/remount is the main advantage of a sp-at gun over a regular one. It allows you to use a wider variety of ambush positions irl and to pull back from infantry. Marders irl had mgs in ball mounts or spintol mounts, allowing them o lay suppressive fore on the move too.
Generally speaking TD's in SD2 are completely inferior to AT guns. Nashorn is passable at best due to superior range to keep it safe if only for a while. Pak40/43 in a forest is always better.
i think the issue with SPGs in steel division is there is really no need to move an AT gun. As you said, you set them up and leave them. In real life when u have to actually get that gun to the battle thats when an SPG would come in handy
@@Overlord734 (if we're still on the subject of SD2) it has more HP (more crew) and can take more damage and suppression. It's also usually placed in excellent cover while TD's such as Marder fire of a shot or two out of thin forest and even 1v1's within enemy ranges when firing first are a 50/50. Since the second if not first hit on it is a kill. The stiff breeze OP mentioned
Greetings! I would love to know which source stated that Marder IIIMs were converted from previously built chassis. The upper hull of the Sd.kfz. 138/1 vehicle was purpose-built, and from about the middle of the production, instead of part riveting,part welding(and part cast for the driver's position),they used an all welded construction. Basically, OKW changed the contract with BMM from light tank to SPG chassis and hull.(If I remember correctly,that is in Panzer Tracts 7-2 as well as in Marder III a Grille, by Vladimir Francev and Charles Kliment.)About the purpose built upper hull,it was different from the standard 38(t) hull,as it used a very sloped frontal upper plate. These hulls were also used as basis for the Flakpanzer 38(t),the Sd.kfz 138/1 Ausf M Grille and an ammo carrier. Since the original 38(t) hulls were riveted while the new ones were welded and using different angles for the armour plates,I found the task of conversion from standard 38(t) hull to 138/1 hull at least problematic.(Of course,not unimaginable or undoeable,just problematic.) About the Marder H crew numbers(is it 3 or 4). They kept the hull as intact as possible,so there was room for two people in the hull,but since you can "replace" the hull MG-gunner with some ammo,it is understandable if some units thought 3 is better than 4. Especially since this vehicles were supposed to be used in defense. The Soviet 7,62 cm field gun in question is the F-22. It was designed by Rheinmetall in the 30ies for the Red Army, so it was rather fitting that they were the ones tasked to refurbish it as a PaK-40 supplement. A Hungarian Armour Enthusiast
This was a really good video! Do you have any vids on German camouflage? There is a lot of info if you google but it’s difficult to get a good idea of what’s accurate and not.
Can you imagine being the driver of the Marder with the rear mounted gun. It has to be a tremendous blast with the muzzle break directly in front of your position.
The Marder III Ausf. M, Sd.Kfz. 138, carried the 7.5 cm Pak 40; PzGr. 40 round at 1500 m could penetrate up to 97mm were these rounds not much available? What where the tactics mostly employed by the Marder III crews; did they camouflage, and then shoot and scoot?
Sounds like they were initially issued to units that were not familiar with how to use them. Common sense would dictate that they are ambush vehicles only yet those complaining about them obviously wanted tanks as they were from tank units. The same holds true with American tank destroyers where there was a constant battle to prevent them from being employed as tanks. This was part of the reason why hull mounted MGs were omitted. Otherwise, the temptation would be to employ them against infantry. And, naturally, when your vehicle is only protected from rifle and MG fire, and you're using it as a tank, you will take losses that Stugs could avoid or survive. Clearly the fault lies with whoever decided to send the vehicles to the units they did without proper training. I found reference to Marder II's being sent to a unit that later received Ferdinands. Previously they only had towed weapons. They received the Marders while the Italians were retreating in panic all around them. Without any training and no gun sights they figured out how to use them and soon started killing t34s. In some cases they attacked T34s after getting information about how they were situated and how to best approach them. A short time later, they were ordered to use the vehicles as tanks and took severe losses until the guys at the top clued in. They are not tanks. Don't use them as such or compare them to tanks. What was left of the unit was then sent home to train on Ferdinands.
> Sounds like they were initially issued to units that were not familiar with how to use them. well, it was kinda a new vehicle, yes, there was the Panzerjäger I but they only made about 200 of them.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Pretty sure if they had been issued to regular AT gun batteries instead of tank units as in the far from perfect deployment I mentioned, they would have fared better. That's my point, they chose the wrong units to give them to, or perhaps they had no choice at the time. Just because they are new vehicles, that does not mean nobody had any indication of their strengths and weaknesses and how best to employ them, which should have dictated that they not go to tankers unless they are retrained to function like PAK units. If they were "useless" they would have stopped producing them long before they did rather than continuously building new variants on multiple hull types and refining them.
Their gun crews knew how to use those since they were accustomed to finding ways to conceal their AT gun positions on the ground. The Marders came with a trained driver and bow gunner/radio operator that also were the mechanics that kept the vehicle operational.
@@billwilson3609 One might hope they would get trained drivers, but that apparently did not happen in December 1942. From 2/panzerjäger abteilung 654, Gefreiter Herbert Hartig, his impression of the Marder II: "Lovely vehicle, fast, maneuverable, and with a good gun. Their only drawback was their relatively thin armor. In spite of this we were as proud as could be. Heretofore we had been a wheeled anti-tank unit - now we had tanks, or at least something like it." His unit received a shipment of Marder II's in December 1942 while supporting Italian troops panicking during a Russian attack by T34s. He had just returned from the hospital and when he arrived at the train station he, with whoever else they could scrape together, took the first 3 operational Marder IIs the unit received into battle directly from the train (the crews were apparently not trained on the vehicles, just halftracks and PAK guns). They immediately destroyed T34's and used the Marders to recover PAK guns that were in danger of being overrun. See pages 18-20 of 'The Combat History of Schwere panzerjäger abteilung 654" by Karlheinze Münch, J. J. Fedorowicz Publishing.
One thing many people over look in their discussions of German anti-tank firepower is the quality of the optics. There is no question that the Germans had the best optics in WW2 in terms of quality and clarity. I for one do not understand why the Germans stayed with the original 2.3X (?) for the Panzer IV F2/H, and StG III/IV's, when they could have pumped up to the 5X like the Panther, etc. Do you have the resources to compare German vs Soviet optics ? Perhaps vs US and UK too? Thanks again. :)
sadly I have not seen anything that was really substantial in that matter, I hear/read it all the time, but over the years I came across so much stuff that is just wrong that I had heard/read all the time that I am bit burnt and hesitant.
Russian optics were bad with much dust in theirs and the inprecision made their guns very unaccurate at long ranges. Having super optics on German tanks was perhaps not super useful. I mean really need a dumb opponent driving open terrain to let him fire at you from long ranges where you cannot fire back. I would try to use hills and buildings to sneak up on my enemy at close range so a fair fight could be had. And if my tank company was ambushed then I would just fire smoke grenades and retreat. And then would the enemy be unable to use his nice optics to destroy allied tanks from long ranges anymore. I would try to sneak up on the flanks on the German tanks and hit their side armor and deny them the chance of a long range fire fight where they can use their superior frontal armor, optics and powerful guns. The Germans in the late war also lacked everything supporting their tanks - they did not have enough recon to know where the enemy were, they did not have enough flak to protect their tanks from air attacks, they lacked artillery support and infantry support to deal with close range threats from enemy infantry, and engineers to deal with mines and make bridges... So even if the Germans for some reason would have been able to assemble lots of panther tanks they would still not be able to use them effectivly because the lack of good support organization - so as an allied tanker I could use this knowledge to my advantage to sneak up on them and outflank them. And if I was lazy, I could just call in air strikes and destroy the German tanks with bombers before they even had the chance to use their nice optics on any allied tank.
IMPORTANT CORRECTION(?)
The total number of Marder III Ausf. M is likely "only" about 1009+ both newly produced and converted, NOT 941 + 1009 = 1950+ as noted in the video. It seems I misinterpreted the table, since in some cases the "new+converted" was lower than the "new" per month, but the "new+converted" was those number reported as received. It is a bit confusing, so I am not entirely sure yet.
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You’re the best genius in the world Bernhard!!!
I've always had a soft spot for these impromptu or make-do conversions of captured or annexed equipment the Germans had. We have these obsolete tanks laying around that aren't good anymore, but a need for tank killing, so we'll replace the turret with a much larger fixed gun and call it a day. They aren't perfect, but they're an excellent example of pragmatic and improvised usage of available equipment.
Can you tell me which book talking about the Marder III M 1009 conversion? Because some wikipedia moderator said: "This is nonsense, because the H and M chassis are DIFFERENT, you cant convert it..."
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized I do appreciate when you do not wear a mask so I can see you facial expressions. It provides a more personal viewer experience. That being said we are all bound by our countries laws, the preferences of our hosts and the wants/needs of those around us. taking a non-political stance to masks is respectable. I appreciate your content and however you choose to dress yourself is your own personal choice. any attempt to cast you in a certain political light in relation to your nationality and mask wearing is a touch out of line. TLDR: you do you, I come here for the honest and impartial information you provide about military history and anything else doesn’t really matter.
@@TheBelrick "The face covering has nothing to do with health"? I'm sorry to say but you are what you were called. Enjoy the video and shut up.
PS: The comment has been deleted.
I think we can have a very long discussion on this next time we link up. I would observe that Marder does seem to meet the requirements set out by the Germans for a Panzerjager (See Panzer Tracts 7-1), suffers many of the same 'limitations' of the Panzerjager 1, which was very popular with the troops, and if used as a self-propelled anti-tank gun (which it was) and not as an assault gun (which the StuG was), I see no evidence it was not as effective as any other such vehicle such as US TDs.
From my understanding these are early reports, the interesting aspect is that I haven't seen any reference to the Panzerjäger I experience. Those were mainly used in non-divisional AT units if I am not mistaken, whereas the reports about the Marder were from divisional units if I remember correctly. After the video I found instructions on how to use Panzerjäger in contrast to StuGs. So my guess is that these early reports were in many ways due to using these vehicles the wrong way. The popularity of the Panzerjäger I might have several reasons as well: it was basically under the authority of the Corps/Army if I am not mistaken. Additionally it was available already in 1939, so there was time to adapt as well. Also in 1939/1940 it was quite a different campaign than 1941 onward as well.
It would be interesting to know by what kind of weapons Marders got knocked out most frequently.
I can imagine that during the timeframe Marders where in use they would be more frequently target of liberal artillery fire than the average US TD. And a turreted US TD probably has more usefull all-round armor protecting the gun crew from that than the Marder has, with it’s open rear crew compartment.
@@hans6500 I wouldnt be surprised if it was a combination of light artillery and their positions being overrun by infantry rather than enemy armour.
@darkplace28 Real life keeps getting in the way, I fear...
@hognoxious german archer time
I have a soft spot for the Marder III H since it was the most common armored vehicle you usually had access to in Close Combat 1.
I think I rarely played Close Combat 1, I know I played a lot of 2 and a lot more 3.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized In 1 you had limited resources, so having a single StuG or Marder was huge. In 3 you were usually swimming in Panzers by the middle campaign :D
yeah, in 3 I remember when I had a few heavy tanks lined up and boom boom, the enemy lost half its forces in the first few seconds.
I remember those days. Now Steel Division II eats up my time. That game does have some accuracy in how the Marder series was used, and how best to use it. If you roll it forward to engage enemy armor it won't do well. If you set it up in cover and within a legit range it can defeat T34's in one shot.
@@SmokinLoon5150 Yeah I was guilty of doing that with the Marders :( . It gets even worse when in my early games I would send them rolling into towns....on their own....without infantry support. Thats what I get for playing too much Hoi4.
I cannot stress how thankful I am for this channel. As a teacher I use it often to teach statistic and (although research and documentation are EXCELLENT), you are the ONLY researcher I "use" that freely admits what is FACT, VS the "educated assumption" of subject experts with documentation, and what is only assumption (although you usually explain that too)
Keep it up please
Thank you! Glad you like it!
I had a Marder III Ausf H model as a kid. I thought it was awesome. As an adult I understand it's limitations. Man it was so cool looking as a kid. Love the Marder. Thanks for the video.
Thank you! If used properly it was quite deadly.
Always liked the ingenuity of German conversions of foreign vehicles into their own SPGs, the later Marder series looks so much better than the earlier ones (Looking at you early marder II specifically). Really like how far they came from things like the SPA 10.5 LefH on the Light tank Mk IV towards all the Hotchkiss conversions. Pretty neat and somewhat under appericated probably for the lack of cool factor/looking ugly compared to the normal German vehicles
Yeah, the go from really ugly to well that is quite a neat vehicle.
I like the look of the Marder II more than the Marder III. But the early Marders were ugly as all hell.
FCM 36 Marder I is the best looking though, so cute >__
@@bezahltersystemtroll5055 I love that cutiepie too.
The early Marders were hilarious. They basically duct taped a 7.5cm gun and gunshield superstructure on top of whatever obsolescent chassis they had enough units of.
Hervorragende Arbeit wie immer! Ich lerne in 10-15 Minuten Ihres Videos mehr als in den Wochen an der Universität.
Outstanding work as always! I learn more in 10-15 minutes of your video than I did froms weeks in in University.
Danke, ich versuche eine hohe Informationsdichte zu erreichen :)
An welcher Uni wird denn bitte etwas über Panzer gelehrt? Ich hab einen Master in Maschinenbau und keinen Panzer in irgendeiner Vorlesung gesehen.
the jagdpanzer 38t should have been dubbed the “angry butterfly”.
behold the deafening silence of its flapping before it strikes.
:)
For those who may be wondering, a Marten is a species of carnivorous weasel-like mammal.
I don't know about you, but I think it's quite a fitting name for this tank.
This is true, and they are adorable. On a hiking trip one time I made camp a few miles from the peak of a mountain for a rest day and a Pine Marten hung out on the edges of my campsite all day hoping I would give him food. He basically looked like a ferret with long claws
Not a tank, but sure. The name fits.
Interesting. So the Marder III is more accurately compared to the towed Pak 40 rather than other anti-tank guns. Makes sense.
The Marder has important advantages over any towed piece: it moves under it's own steam, carries it's own ammunition, and even moves it's own crew and all their stuff around. Even with a fighting compartment open to the elements, higher profile, less concealability, and more-or-less only token armour protection, who wouldn't prefer this to a paralyzed, overweight and uncooperative "drunk chick"?
And in comparing it to that lies the secret of calling the Marder successful.
However, the whole concept of parking expensive equipment, it's expert crew and an engine with as little protection as the Marder gave, pales, when compared to a "proper" TD.
In the end, the "cheaper" solution might run higher total costs on the battlefield...
@@daszieher so how any tanks did these SPAT KILL?
@@paullakowski2509 "real" tanks were not killed by PaK40 ^^
So there's that.
@@daszieher not sure what you mean?
An hervorragend video; excellent format, excellent narrative, useful and interesting graphics, new information - all prime beef and no filler. I've been reading books and watching documentaries on such things for 50+ years and this is an exceptional is every regard. I look forward to watching all of your other videos.
I'd just like to say that I love this video format - as a scale model builder, I really appreciate the walkaround for the vehicle as well as pointing out what the individual parts are for. For the Marder - I only wish that we were able to get more sources on what the view was on its performance after the users (Germans) finally developed the doctrine on it - and what other nations it fought against thought of it (any US/UK/USSR evaluations out there?)
thank you! Might come, I actually stumbled across something a few days ago.
So it sounds like it was a terrible Assault Gun, but a great Self-Propelled AT Gun.
The latter being what it was designed for while the former is what the troops were looking for.
As the war worsened German armor was being tasked to do more odd jobs, misused. I still recall reading of Panzer Divisions put on the frontline in the defense and not in the reserve for a counterattack. IIRC some Pz Divisions got annihilated because of that late in the war, I think at the onset of Operation Bagration, possibly later. The Soviets wound up for a big offensive and it just so happened some Panzer formations were in the front. The Soviets start their offensive with a heavy artillery attack and armor assault, pretty much destroying that Panzer formation right off the bat.
Bingo
Your clever little icons are fun. I actually smiled when I figured out what the Ambush Vehicle icon was a picture of.
Thank you, for again taking a deep dive into the subject. Your analysis, and understanding, of both German engineering, and the German politics of the day, is a refreshing change from other channels. Most every military channel on TH-cam has something to offer the serious student. Perhaps you can also take a deep dive the last German Uboat series, the Type XXIII. (No pun intended.)
Or, if you have already done so, create another video on the subject. Describing what, if any, developments were adopted after the war by the allies. Greetings from Wien.
Thank you for this.
Very informative.
Especially?
1) I had NO IDEA that the 38t made up such a HUGE part of the total Panzers for Barbarossa.
2) The Marder III H - to me - was easily the best looking Marder.
☮
I always look forward to your videos and the thorough research you do. Thank you once again for another great effort. .
My pleasure!
I always enjoy these analytical videos. Your graphic representations of statistics are excellent.
Glad you like them!
A very concise video. The Marder series was typical of the Germans during the war: stopgap after stopgap. It took the best of a year to get any of them to the battlefields.
thank you!
Very nice presentation, thank you so much for the production numbers
Clearly the Marder was the "best" tool for the job considering the chassis production challenge for the German army during the war.
Were their superior weapons available ? as aptly pointed out that answer is YES.
However when considering the vast areas in conflict and a need for AP force projection the Marder did a more than adequate job of "plugging the gap".
thank you!
Salt from the Jingles Salt Mine :) NICE
;)
Only the best Koala-tea grains of salt* is allowed here
* Disclaimer No guarantee can be given of the Koala-tea of this salt and a possible side effect of misidentification
I humbly contribute my share
Lower-right corner at 6:09
if anyone wants to see it.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized I hope my triple shift in the mines supplied enough salt for this!
I still love the things, they have such a unique profile and origin. Great video.
The best part of your channel is that you can provide accurate pronunciation for all the german vehicles.
Always appreciating specific historic details and informed opinions!
Wieder mal eine sehr interessante, fundierte Analyse - mit einer kleinen Prise Salz wie immer 👍
Danke :)
If more scholars would be as honest and transparent as this fellow, we’d have a much better look into the past. It seems easy enough for him to assume there was a change in crew assignments and to admit it was speculation since he could not find a source, but too few of our “finest” historians seem to be able to to this.
My compliments.
Your best video yet! Great research and presented in a very clear and informative manner. Thanks for sharing. I enjoyed every minute of this.
The stugs and the marders are my favorite tanks to use in warthunder, seeing a m48 light up is great!
Bernhard, i hope all is well. Happy New Year and God Bless. Keep the vids coming, we love em!
Thank you! Happy new year to you to!
Very excellent scholarship and history. Thank you for translating the meters to feet. Easier for me to understand. A+ grade.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it!
I didn't know that the Marder III was regarded to be useless. I thought that it was quite useful, and considering that the German Army did not much more than defend from 1943 onwards anyways, I guess it was a good vehicle. Doesn't take that much steel to make and fires potent rounds. Also, I read somewhere that the western allies nicknamed the vehicle "Murder III", on account of it being quite deadly. Do you know if this is true or a myth?
Thanks again for your hard work with these videos, very informative, but not at all boring.
Yes and no though the idea of the marker was a good idea that put less stress on the army.
In a broad strategical sense, the german army was on the defense from 1943 onwards, but on a local, tactical level there were hundreds of german offensives, tacctical counter-attacks etc each day, to recapture strategic position, drive the enemy away from your own lines, capture important towns/railway stations etc.
So offensive warfare was still conducted by the german army on a daily basis, in which the Marder was obviously quite useless. Fun fact: the usage of the Jagdpanther for defensive purposes was actually forbidden and only allowed in emergency situations, so much for defensive warfare haha
its not a hetzter or pnzjgr 4 hornisse but wasnt it somethink about knowledge or fuel?🙋
I loved this video. It clarifies so many things about the Marder that I didn’t know.
thank you, glad you learned something!
You know you have a lot of tanks when the guy that visits doesn’t even talk about the tiger in the corner
Outstanding video and presentation.
Thank you for speaking a little bit of German in the video!! I LOVE the PHYSICAL APPEARANCE of the German Marders; I think they look really TOUGH and AGGRESSIVE!!
This is also the last time* we see him in the "old" setup of the WW2 Hall in the German Tank Museum, as they are just now reshuffeling it to improve the exhibition a bit. In that sense you were lucky because the PaK40 is still right next to the Marder III.
A few weeks ago I did one of my first not book review Videos (in German) trying to compare the sizes and weight of the different German PaKs throughout WW2. One only has to look at the difference between the some 450 kgs of the PaK 35/36 to the 4380 kgs of the Pak 43/41 to understand the reasoning for "self propelling" them and also one of the reasons why PaKs were not a big thing in many armies after WW2.
Of course a nice topic for a DPM Video would be the Vehicle which used to by right across from the Marder. The Pak 40 on Raupenschlepper Ost. It would be nice to hear what some primary sources have to say on that one, as it doesnt come away that positiv in the Museums Catalog :)
*Yes I know that he probably filmed a gazillion other Videos on that trip and so it is not quite the last time.
Thanks for this look at the Marder. Always had a soft spot for the various Marders as a kid 2 of my best model kits ( ie the best painted) were a 1/35 Tamiya Marder II with a Panzer II hull and a Revell 1/32 Marder III Ausf M. Both painted in various desert camo's
Wanted to see this one for a long time, thank you!
Hope you enjoyed it!
Thank you for nice vido, I like it like all your posted videos. Video about Marder I and similar constructions (sometimes called also Marder 1´s ) - like 7,5 cm PaK 40 on everything imaginable would be great. Other conversions also (like 10,5 cm StuH and SiG 33 on everything imaginable, even Char B).
Very good and informative video as always and I hope that you have a great Holiday Season and a Merry Christmas to you all! Thanks again for sharing your work with us. Have a great evening.
IMHO the Marder and Hetzer are simply ingenious. While a Panther or even a StuG might have been more versatile the production lines of the Pz 38/Marder/Hetzer could not produce StuGs or Panthers - but did provide some very useful tank destoyers. The problems arose when you tried to use tank destoyers as assaultguns or tanks.
Diversity is a strength
Been waiting ages for this. Thanx Bernhard
Appreciate the detail in your production's. Thank you.
Thank you for this video, I always had a fascination of the Marder III Ausf H even though it was not exactly the most produced or effective tank destroyer of its side. So I'm glad this sees the light of the day.
To be honest before watching I thought your title of "The Hetzer's Useless Uncle" seemed about right since I thought it would be best used as a more mobile anti-tank gun than a StuG equivalent, but the lonooog barrel sticking out means the operator could do something silly like bump it into a tree while moving it into cover.
I kind of wish you read some of the German primary sources in German and then in English. It wouldn't mean much just repeating the same thing in two languages, but I really liked the infantry anti tank tactics video.
Sehr lehrreich - understanding the tank in it’s technik and history… and improving my English
Thanks for the good video! not much to say, since my previous knowledge comes from raw statistics you bring up and just numbers regarding the tank's specifics.
Thank you!
Love the Marder, for such a strange looking TD its kinda nice. I have a model of the Aust M sitting on my desk at work.
Particularly good video. Always liked the Marder visually. the Ausf. M looked somehow extra Badass to me.
Heyo, I really love your content and your passion about your work on the channel. Wirklich geile Arbeit!
Bruh this thing was AMAZING in Company of Heroes 1.
Build a pair of those, some of those elite panzergrenadiers to slow down the enemy armour and let those Marders reap their toll.
wait, it was in COH 1?
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized yes the panzerelite faction in the addon
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized yeah in the first DLC
ahh yeah, I rarely played that one, it used those armored cars for point control or something.
The Marder is one of the only "tanks" on the Panzer Elite faction
Also that thing was at its peak on Highway 69 level
Awesome video on the Marder III H I'd like to see a following video on all Marder's in the series if you can, thanks for making this!
Excellent video. Very informative, like all your other work. I would like to see you do some videos on the less glamorous German units. For instance, maybe you could do a video on the balloon observation units, if any. It would be interesting, to me at least, to see something about the German army's Topographical units " Kartenstelle truppen" I think they were called. As Napoleon once said ' An army travels on it's stomach' so it would be interesting to see something about the organization and equipment of German field kitchen and bakery units. I know interest in this more mundane stuff may be pretty low and maybe not worth the time or effort. I think this stuff is fascinating though. Anyway, Thanks for all the great vids.
thank you, such aspects are more likely to be covered in my second channel, e.g., here I talk about the German Military Horse: th-cam.com/video/0v3SerMDgns/w-d-xo.html
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Thanks. The video on German army horses was excellent. Keep up the great work.
A simple solution for a certain problem
Simple yet effective and kept being improved
I used this vehicle often in World of Tanks & had quite good luck with it when firing from heavy forest cover.
Hi Bernhard, great video!
I think I found a small error though. In your penetration table you are comparing the tanks' "effective" armor against the 30° penetration values of the gun. That's kind of calculating the angle twice. I think you'd have to use the flat (90°) angle if you compare against effective armor. The PaK40 (with the PzGr 39) would still be able to penetrate a T34/85 at 1000m.
Looking forward to your next video, keep up the great work!
> I think you'd have to use the flat (90°) angle if you compare against effective armor.
You assume I have those values.
You seem also miss that the angle is rarely 30°, additionally the tank is usually angled horizontally and vertically as well. Not to mention that weak points are not accounted for. In other words these numbers should give you a broad idea.
Cool video. I think the Marder are interesting vehicles. If used as mobile AT platform (aka us hellcat) it seems to perform fairly well. It also makes since to try and use good captured equipment and the decent 38t chassis. As an ambush weapon it would be effective for a few minutes, until tanks or arty returned fire.
Good video. In Warthunder at BR 2.7-3.0 the Marder is devastating if used properly. Against M5s, M3s and early Sherman tanks it can outrange and easily penetrate. More often than not, it's enemy air support that gets the Marder.
interesting to see those production numbers, I think more people know about the h variant because of war thunder, when in the end there were more of the m variant made. maybe they should add the m variant to the game too, tho German tech tree is already very big
Maybe also because the H variant is more recognizable, the M variant looks more like a Wespe or Hummel.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized I think that the Marder III H is a nicer looking vehicle. To me it's more aesthetically pleasing than the other Marder variants. That being said I would love to see more Marder variants added to War Thunder as I quite enjoy playing the Marder III H.
i thought that too when i saw the production numbers. I think the Marder 3 H fits into the early German BR with the other '35/38 (T)' variants abit better than the M
My Opa was a Panzerjager in the 8th Panzer Division. It was the 43rd Abt. They had the Marder and didn’t like it do to the thin armor and open top. He got the Panzerjager 4 L/70 and really liked it
well, that is quite an upgrade :)
I’m not sure what version of the Panzerjager 4 the received first. But I believed it was the L48. I do know they finally got the L/70. He was with them from 1940 to 1945. In the book about the 8th PD by Richard Kindel he shows photos of both.
The czech company BMM (ČKD) from Prague still produce vehicles for germany under name Škoda🤗 the best construction was 1945 Panther prototipe with autoloading cannon, teoreticaly 45 round per minute.
I got my first 7 kill RAS in a Marder! So I’ll always like this tank! Cool video, as always!
Great video! All your work is brilliant
From my limited research I was under the impression that eventually the Russian 76.2 gun in German service were eventually rechambered for PaK 40 rounds. Rather than just making a self- propelled anti tank gun on a wider more wholistic view it seemed a down and dirty way to make good panzer losses, especially after Kursk. All up as usual a short but very informative video. As I am a doctrine nut I would like to see more on tactics developed for it. Ie you shown me what it is, now tell me how it was used rather than very broad terms such as it was best used defensively. Was it used in PaK fronts and the like.
Not exactly. They used Pak40 shells,the cash Ng was unique though. The gun in question was F-22, a failed project to make universal guns. They were replaced by cheaper and yet more modern ZiS-3. But ZiS-3 was 100% artillery gun, there was no modernization reserve. Meanwhile F-22 was on purpose build with too thick chamber walls that were supposed to be redrilled for AA use later on if the project would be approved as universal gun. Germans just captured the plans when they entered Kharkov and basically had done what was already listed in blueprints. There was no development per say involved. Would you claim that you have developed your IKEA furniture?:))
Very interesting !!
Thanks for putting this together.
I remember having one of these in kit form when I was in my teens - I think it was the Italeri version. Very detailed and a great kit.
I had a few Italeri sets of my own, mostly ships though, like the Graf Spee. I am not sure, but I think either there were no tanks in store or I did not buy them for some reason.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized it’s strange because up until that point I only seemed to have Tamiya kits in 1/35 scale - really should have widened my horizons before the Marder kit!
Great video Bernhard. I would like to add that it seems like the Marder II had a PAK 40 gun version arriving in action like in mid 1942, I don't know the correct "ausf" for it. At least I hope so, because I scratched one of these to my wargame model kit forces combating in the Caucasus haha.
As for its use in combat, I think it could have been used in attack as well, at least in some sort of covering advancing forces from the distance or the flanks from counter-attacks, things like that. It seems like while fighting on a plain, Marder's gun could outrange the one from the earlier versions of T-34 and KV-1. Mostly because of optics perhaps? Because even with the PAK gun being better than the T-34's in terms of range, it wouldn't be necessary armor piercing shells to knock down a Marder, it might have been possible to use HE shells to counter it, making both vehicles capable of knocking down each other in the distance.
Thank you, the issue is the Marder had 15mm everything goes through that except for rifle ammo. So I can't see a way that a Marder can really outrange a T-34 or KV-1. Covering an attack was possible, but the issue in the report was Soviet tanks showing up and "harassing" German lines from afar.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized but let me ask you, the Soviet tank optics were bad as some people claim or is this a myth? Because if they couldn't see the Marder, this would be an advantage. And how far could a PAK 40 destroy a T-34 tank? Like around 1500 km, perhaps?
One problem would be the Soviet artillery, because the Soviet had it in number, so they could bombard the area around the Marder and I don't know if its armor would be enough to stand against the HE.
By the way, seems like Germany was the only country to use this kind of combat vehicle in larger numbers. Those American tank destroyers were quite different for the Marders in many aspects, isn’t it? They had turrets and things like that, and seemed to be faster as well.
Su-76 was common spam, like mentioned in earlier video. That means it was produced in HUGE numbers and it is pretty same - obsolete tank chassis with good gun in static mounting and open top. US can produce good TD because there was no war on their continent so they can aford full solution.
@@pecazidle was the SU-76 used against tanks? Wasn't it kind of a mobile artillery more keen to the Wespe? Bernhard have a video on it, I have to watch it again, because as I remember, it's focus wasn't primarely on tank combat. It has the Zis 3 mounted on it, which isn't exactly an AT gun, but could have been used for the task. I think the SU-76 can't be directly compared to the Marder because the Marder however was indeed a tank destroyer. SU-76 might have been used against tanks on occasion, just like the SU-152 did. Its gun could fire against tanks just like the 152, but it wasn't meant primarely for AT role like a Marder. The Russians were in a different position than Germany as the Marder was a stopgap to counter KVs and T-34s.
As a stopgap solution I wonder if we could compare Marder to the US tank destroyers as well, because I think they would be very different combat vehicles as both have very different design characteristics and may have had also very different combat doctrines. As far as I know, US tank destroyers were meant to counter tanks on the offensive as well. They were conceived to be fast, faster than a tank. Marder may be a light-weight vehicle still compared to a tank, but it wasn't as flexible and quick as a US tank destroyer. Marder is closer to a AT mounting, but on top of a vehicle chassis, while a M10 is closer to these cruiser, "cavalry" tanks, like the Crusader tank, the Somua, Panzer III, BT tank and the like.
I haven't look into optics yet, so I simply can't say. I am not even sure if anyone did a proper study on this topic. I read a lot of "one-liners" over the years.
Turrets are expensive, Americans could afford it, Germans couldn't. Same with chassis, the Americans put their 105mm artillery on Sherman chassis, the Germans on Panzer II. See also this podcast on MagzTV particularly the comment by Chieftain: th-cam.com/video/iME2X3p6fLM/w-d-xo.html
I think you can find footage of italian front where german spotter call Marder III. M to move from hiding position to firing position.
Also in the end whole point of Marder is come down to tactical mobility of towed gun vs on wheel.
I love the marder 38t. In world of tanks, it has a high velocity 75mm with outrageous rate of fire, accuracy, and very good camo factor. I know it’s only a game, but hey, I like it
I was surprised how much fun I had playing the Marder III Ausf. F in War Thunder! In one match, I single-handedly denied the cap until I ran out of ammo!
If in the right position a marder can wreak havoc. Unless playing arcade and it’s mid to late game. I’ve played the Marder it’s fun until its not.
After thinking for a bit, it makes sense to have the loader on the left side and the gunner on the right. Its way more comfortable to load a gun from the left side.
I think that your video on the SU-76m is not a coincidence ;) It is interesting to see some similarities: I do remember reading an article about the SU-76m where the author claimed, that the high losses were due to the commanders wanting to use them as assault guns and wanting them to move closer and attack, which they were not intended for. I can see a similar trope here- it was seen not as a movable gun emplacement (which it was meant to be), but as a direct assault vehicle. Armor+gun+tracks= congratulations, you're a tank! Yet there are differences: the gun on the Marder was a typical AT gun, unlike the Soviet one where it was universal. Unless of course the Soviet gun was used, in which case it was exactly the same. It would be interesting to compare ammo loadouts and some tactical instructions. Apparently both armies had to deal with the obsolesence of their light tanks and both seem to have done it in pretty much the same way.
it is a coincidence.
always a good video! congratz
Glad you like them!
I always enjoy your videos!
Glad you like them!
I think it is important to note that after the Marder’s introduction, it became standard practice for the anti-tank battalions of German infantry divisions to receive one company of Marders and have two companies of towed anti-tank guns. It was extremely uncommon for them to be used outside of this structure. In contrast, StuGs were sufficiently armored that they could be used in Panzer regiments when there were not sufficient turreted Panzers to fill the regiment.
As the war progressed and additional StuGs were produced, or foreign vehicles, like the Italian Semovente 75, were put into German service, that German infantry divisions started fielding one company of StuGs, one company of Marders, and one towed AT company. As Hetzers were introducing, they started replacing the outdated Marders.
So, during 1943 to late 1944, the Marders served the role of mobile AT guns for relatively static infantry divisions very well. They were not typically sent to more mobile Panzer and Panzergrenadier divisions that were expected to attack and counterattack enemy forces.
I cant remember the source, but i remember reading that the germans loved them in the italian campaign, because they could pop out behind a cliff or alley and fire deadly accurate shots.
Thank-you! Very well done.
Very interesting video. I am confused about the graphic at 1.12. There are 3 Marder III variants but you only spoke about H and M model. What happened to the first one?
we don't talk about him ;)
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized poor guy was left out :(
Probably a prototype version
About 344 Marder III Sd.Kfz. 139 w. FK 7,62 cm (r) (Panzerjäger 38(t) für 7,62 cm PaK 36) were build, some were used in Africa.
I'd always figured if there was an Ausführung F or G, there had to have been C-E before them at some point, even if they were prototypes or limited production runs.
In the final battle scene in Saving Private Ryan, it appears that Marder III H and Ms are featured in combat. Bernhard states that the maximum elevation of the Pak 40 was 9 degrees. In the movie an Ausf. H elevates its gun way past the maximum to blast private Jackson from the top of a church tower, a display of artistic license, I now realize, for an antitank vehicle.
It was one of the vehicles in the end battle right? The one they hit with the molotov?
@@ADITADDICTS
That looked to be an Ausf. M, based on the location of the crew compartment. Late in the battle, Sgt. Horvath bazookas what looks to be a Ausf. H. My understanding is that all of the AFVs were replicas built for the movie, so the builders may not have been perfectly faithful to the details. Another detail: they should not have been able to shoot into the tiger driver compartment because the viewport should have been blocked with ballistic glass. Later, I tried to ID the German AFVs and was astounded at how many they eventually employed, mashups of various carriages, guns, and other parts. It must have been a nightmare to maintain such an inventory. This documentary clears up much of the confusion.
Maybe Bernard could confirm all this.
I looked at some images, it seems there was also a mock-up for the Sturmpanzer IV usually called "Brummbär" that aims up: www.sproe.com/images/screenshots/tankdestroyer-02-large.jpg
And yes, the Tiger should have ballistic glass there, they also had several spares generally to replace broken ones as well.
It seems most of them are converted Swedish Tanks, the Tiger was on a T-34 hull if I remember correctly, see the road wheels.
mock-up Marder III Ausf. H: www.reddit.com/r/TankPorn/comments/hzdsrb/slightly_modified_swedish_sav_m43_assault_gun/
mock-up Ausf. M: www.sproe.com/images/screenshots/marder3-02-large.jpg
@@Ad_Valorem the luftwaffe did the same thing with planes. Anything that went down, German or allied, if it could be fixed then it was back up in the air. A lot of times with a freshly painted swastika over the other countries markings lol.
i find captured/inherited equipment vehicles to be very interesting. Just attempts to reuse old materials for the sake of efficiency.
I think it was more due to scarcity.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized scarcity is the source of many a squeezed lemon. :v
0:49, the left Marder II has another name that is: Panzwrselbstfahlfette I fud 7.62 PAK 36(r) auf Pzkpfw. II Ausf. D (Sdkfz. 132). The long version is something along the lines of: Panzwrselbstfahlfette I fud 7.62 Panzer Abwher Kanone 36(r) auf Panzerkampfwagen II Ausführung D (Sonderkraftfahrzeug 132)
I was friends with knights cross holder Hardy Svenson (born Eberhard Schmalz). He won the Deutsches kreuz i Gold commanding a Marder III on the Don bend with Pz jgr abt 43, 8 Panzer division. He shot up 9 Russian tanks in December 1942 with a Marder. Ultimately, he did not like being protected only by a shield of “sheet metal”. After officers school he chose to serve in an pz jaeger unit equipped with the Stug III. The stug III he thought was a very fine weapon..
The round used to kill the T-34 was a tungsten round that was provided for "last ditch" uses. The gun on the Marder III was the ex-Russian 76mm anti aircraft gun.
If it were useless then it wouldn’t have blown up the bell tower in Saving Private Ryan
The vehicle that blew up the Bell Tower in SPR was a repainted Swedish Sav m/43- their version of the Marder/Hetzer family. I'd have to go back and look, but if I'm not mistaken the m/43 in the film is mounted with the 75mm gun, as opposed to the alternate 105mm gun. Also, I believe the Marder 38t shown in the film is also a Sav m/43 with the back of the crew compartment cut off (maybe the same m/43 as the other with a removable section?).
Kinda interesting comment (at 3:22) that Panzer 38(t) was too slow for recon but Germans would end up converting 60-70 (exact number is unknown) old Panzer 38(t) to Aufklärungspanzer 38(t) during 1944.
yeah, I know :D
It can simply be summed up to "German logic"
The clue might be in the date: when you only have offal, you're not going to prepare a steak dinner.
It is absolutely insane to think that the 38 LT chassis was in service throughout WWII and was not replaced by a better chassis.
Context with the Armor value of those tanks. Those values are effective 90 degrees, taking account line of slight thickness due to sloping. T34 with a 45mm plate at 45 degrees =90 mm. However all penetration values are 30 degrees from vertical, not the 90 degree penetration.
"As you can see, there where two Marder II variants, and for the Marder III actually three."
This actually makes perfect logical and linguistical sense. 😊
Idea to recycle old obsolete chassis and move AT gun was useful.
I love the Anglification of the German Wann, Wie, Wo, Was rule with We have today here......
You're missing the point that it was a Marder 3 or nothing. Germany didn't have the ability to retool factories fast enough to switch production from obsolete vehicles to other types. That's why vehicles like the Wespe and Marder were built. They were still better than nothing.
Yes better than nothing but at best, just delaying the inevitable
I kind of get your point, but standardisation would have saved so many problems. How can 1000 murder possibly be less effort than retooling once?
@@tamlandipper29 Retooling to build a completely different vehicle means stopping production, potentially for months. Germany needed every weapon it could get and stopping production wasn't an option.
Ahh yes the Marder, also known as the "tank destroyer" that explodes into a fireball from a stiff breeze in Steel Division 2. I always wanted to make it work but it's a question of do you want a AT gun that has a lower profile, better stealth, and is harder to hit, or do you want a AT gun that has mobility, but why do you need an AT gun with mobility? Generally you want to set it up in a good position for defense or to set an ambush. At least American TD had great speed and a turret, allowing them to quickly flank or move into a advantageous position, they also died to a stiff breeze but at least it seems they had some use. In real life I can see the logistical usefulness of a self propelled AT gun, on the eastern front the lines were constantly moving and the Germans ultimately ended up on a multi year retreat. Having a AT gun that has tracks and won't get stuck in the mud and can pretty much drive anywhere as needed has value.
The lack of need to unlimber/dismount and relimber/remount is the main advantage of a sp-at gun over a regular one. It allows you to use a wider variety of ambush positions irl and to pull back from infantry.
Marders irl had mgs in ball mounts or spintol mounts, allowing them o lay suppressive fore on the move too.
Generally speaking TD's in SD2 are completely inferior to AT guns. Nashorn is passable at best due to superior range to keep it safe if only for a while. Pak40/43 in a forest is always better.
i think the issue with SPGs in steel division is there is really no need to move an AT gun. As you said, you set them up and leave them. In real life when u have to actually get that gun to the battle thats when an SPG would come in handy
AT gun is stealthy only until the first shot is fired.
@@Overlord734 (if we're still on the subject of SD2) it has more HP (more crew) and can take more damage and suppression. It's also usually placed in excellent cover while TD's such as Marder fire of a shot or two out of thin forest and even 1v1's within enemy ranges when firing first are a 50/50. Since the second if not first hit on it is a kill. The stiff breeze OP mentioned
Binging!!! Great stuff.
Greetings!
I would love to know which source stated that Marder IIIMs were converted from previously built chassis. The upper hull of the Sd.kfz. 138/1 vehicle was purpose-built, and from about the middle of the production, instead of part riveting,part welding(and part cast for the driver's position),they used an all welded construction. Basically, OKW changed the contract with BMM from light tank to SPG chassis and hull.(If I remember correctly,that is in Panzer Tracts 7-2 as well as in Marder III a Grille, by Vladimir Francev and Charles Kliment.)About the purpose built upper hull,it was different from the standard 38(t) hull,as it used a very sloped frontal upper plate. These hulls were also used as basis for the Flakpanzer 38(t),the Sd.kfz 138/1 Ausf M Grille and an ammo carrier. Since the original 38(t) hulls were riveted while the new ones were welded and using different angles for the armour plates,I found the task of conversion from standard 38(t) hull to 138/1 hull at least problematic.(Of course,not unimaginable or undoeable,just problematic.)
About the Marder H crew numbers(is it 3 or 4). They kept the hull as intact as possible,so there was room for two people in the hull,but since you can "replace" the hull MG-gunner with some ammo,it is understandable if some units thought 3 is better than 4. Especially since this vehicles were supposed to be used in defense.
The Soviet 7,62 cm field gun in question is the F-22. It was designed by Rheinmetall in the 30ies for the Red Army, so it was rather fitting that they were the ones tasked to refurbish it as a PaK-40 supplement.
A Hungarian Armour Enthusiast
Nuts & Bolts
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Volume 17?
Part II on the Marder, I would get both that are listed in the description, Part II is an update on Part I.
there is at least one table with the conversions listed per month etc.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized I am going to search for it. Thank you for answering me.
I have heard that the Panzer 34(T) had one of the greatest abilities, the stat called availability 😁
This was a really good video! Do you have any vids on German camouflage? There is a lot of info if you google but it’s difficult to get a good idea of what’s accurate and not.
Can we have a lecture on German vehicle camo. This still mystifies somewhat, and I am intrigued by apparent examples in your fine museum
maybe at some point, but I haven't seen anything about it yet and my interest in it is also very limited.
Can you imagine being the driver of the Marder with the rear mounted gun. It has to be a tremendous blast with the muzzle break directly in front of your position.
The Marder III Ausf. M, Sd.Kfz. 138, carried the 7.5 cm Pak 40; PzGr. 40 round at 1500 m could penetrate up to 97mm were these rounds not much available? What where the tactics mostly employed by the Marder III crews; did they camouflage, and then shoot and scoot?
PzGr. 40 production was halted (in 1943 IIRC) because it required tungsten, which was in short supply and required for manufacturing.
Sounds like they were initially issued to units that were not familiar with how to use them. Common sense would dictate that they are ambush vehicles only yet those complaining about them obviously wanted tanks as they were from tank units. The same holds true with American tank destroyers where there was a constant battle to prevent them from being employed as tanks. This was part of the reason why hull mounted MGs were omitted. Otherwise, the temptation would be to employ them against infantry. And, naturally, when your vehicle is only protected from rifle and MG fire, and you're using it as a tank, you will take losses that Stugs could avoid or survive. Clearly the fault lies with whoever decided to send the vehicles to the units they did without proper training. I found reference to Marder II's being sent to a unit that later received Ferdinands. Previously they only had towed weapons. They received the Marders while the Italians were retreating in panic all around them. Without any training and no gun sights they figured out how to use them and soon started killing t34s. In some cases they attacked T34s after getting information about how they were situated and how to best approach them. A short time later, they were ordered to use the vehicles as tanks and took severe losses until the guys at the top clued in. They are not tanks. Don't use them as such or compare them to tanks. What was left of the unit was then sent home to train on Ferdinands.
> Sounds like they were initially issued to units that were not familiar with how to use them.
well, it was kinda a new vehicle, yes, there was the Panzerjäger I but they only made about 200 of them.
The same applies to light tanks too. It's like using a knife as a prybar, or a magazine as a bottleopener (both not uncommon, but far from ideal)
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Pretty sure if they had been issued to regular AT gun batteries instead of tank units as in the far from perfect deployment I mentioned, they would have fared better. That's my point, they chose the wrong units to give them to, or perhaps they had no choice at the time. Just because they are new vehicles, that does not mean nobody had any indication of their strengths and weaknesses and how best to employ them, which should have dictated that they not go to tankers unless they are retrained to function like PAK units. If they were "useless" they would have stopped producing them long before they did rather than continuously building new variants on multiple hull types and refining them.
Their gun crews knew how to use those since they were accustomed to finding ways to conceal their AT gun positions on the ground. The Marders came with a trained driver and bow gunner/radio operator that also were the mechanics that kept the vehicle operational.
@@billwilson3609 One might hope they would get trained drivers, but that apparently did not happen in December 1942. From 2/panzerjäger abteilung 654, Gefreiter Herbert Hartig, his impression of the Marder II: "Lovely vehicle, fast, maneuverable, and with a good gun. Their only drawback was their relatively thin armor. In spite of this we were as proud as could be. Heretofore we had been a wheeled anti-tank unit - now we had tanks, or at least something like it." His unit received a shipment of Marder II's in December 1942 while supporting Italian troops panicking during a Russian attack by T34s. He had just returned from the hospital and when he arrived at the train station he, with whoever else they could scrape together, took the first 3 operational Marder IIs the unit received into battle directly from the train (the crews were apparently not trained on the vehicles, just halftracks and PAK guns). They immediately destroyed T34's and used the Marders to recover PAK guns that were in danger of being overrun. See pages 18-20 of 'The Combat History of Schwere panzerjäger abteilung 654" by Karlheinze Münch, J. J. Fedorowicz Publishing.
One thing many people over look in their discussions of German anti-tank firepower is the quality of the optics. There is no question that the Germans had the best optics in WW2 in terms of quality and clarity. I for one do not understand why the Germans stayed with the original 2.3X (?) for the Panzer IV F2/H, and StG III/IV's, when they could have pumped up to the 5X like the Panther, etc. Do you have the resources to compare German vs Soviet optics ? Perhaps vs US and UK too? Thanks again. :)
That would be a cool video
sadly I have not seen anything that was really substantial in that matter, I hear/read it all the time, but over the years I came across so much stuff that is just wrong that I had heard/read all the time that I am bit burnt and hesitant.
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized We definitely appreciate your efforts to discern legend from reality. Sometimes they align, but very often don’t.
Russian optics were bad with much dust in theirs and the inprecision made their guns very unaccurate at long ranges.
Having super optics on German tanks was perhaps not super useful. I mean really need a dumb opponent driving open terrain to let him fire at you from long ranges where you cannot fire back. I would try to use hills and buildings to sneak up on my enemy at close range so a fair fight could be had.
And if my tank company was ambushed then I would just fire smoke grenades and retreat. And then would the enemy be unable to use his nice optics to destroy allied tanks from long ranges anymore.
I would try to sneak up on the flanks on the German tanks and hit their side armor and deny them the chance of a long range fire fight where they can use their superior frontal armor, optics and powerful guns. The Germans in the late war also lacked everything supporting their tanks - they did not have enough recon to know where the enemy were, they did not have enough flak to protect their tanks from air attacks, they lacked artillery support and infantry support to deal with close range threats from enemy infantry, and engineers to deal with mines and make bridges...
So even if the Germans for some reason would have been able to assemble lots of panther tanks they would still not be able to use them effectivly because the lack of good support organization - so as an allied tanker I could use this knowledge to my advantage to sneak up on them and outflank them.
And if I was lazy, I could just call in air strikes and destroy the German tanks with bombers before they even had the chance to use their nice optics on any allied tank.
Hey I was just there, last week at the Panzermuseum
:) did you like it?