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- Panzer IV - Wikipedia
The Panzerkampfwagen IV (Pz Kpfw IV), commonly known as the Panzer IV, is a German medium tank developed in the late 1930s and used extensively during the Second World War Its ordnance inventory designation was Sd Kfz 161
- Panzerkampfwagen IV - tank-afv. com
However, it quickly became known as the Pz Kpfw IV (Sd Kfz 161) in the new prewar nomenclature Its engine was the gasoline Maybach HL 108TR, developing 250 hp, with a SGR 75 transmission coupled with a five forward, one reverse gearbox Maximum speed on trials (on flat ground) was 31 km h (19 mph)
- Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf. A - Tank Encyclopedia
The Panzer IV Ausf A armor was designed primarily to provide protection from 7 92 mm armor piercing bullets usually fired from anti-tank rifles The anti-tank rifles were a typical infantry weapon to fight tanks in the thirties and in the earliest stages of the war
- German Panzer IV – Workhorse of the Wehrmacht in Photos
The German Panzerkampfwagen IV medium tank, abbreviated PzKpfw IV, Pz IV, or T-IV, was created by Friedrich Krupp AG Production started in 1937 and continued until the very end of the Second World War The Pz IV became one of the most mass-produced Wehrmacht tanks, with 8,686 units built
- Panzerkampfwagen IV - Panzerphotos
This Pz Kpfw IV (tactical number I01, commanded by Major Koppenburg) was destroyed in near the village of Sierżniki in central Poland on 17 September 1939 Major Koppenburg survived the destruction of the tank
- Pzkpfw IV (Kleinerpanzer befehlswagen) - GlobalSecurity. org
The Sturmpanzer IV (also known as Sturmpanzer 43 or Sd Kfz 166) was a German armored infantry support gun based on the Panzer IV chassis used in the Second World War
- Panzer IV - wehrmacht-history. com
The Panzer IV or Panzerkampfwagen IV or abbreviated to Pz Kpfw IV was designed as an infantry support tank with a short 7 5 cm assault gun which was to support Panzer III however, after realising that the Panzer III was inferior to the Russian T-34 tanks
- Panzer - German Tank, WWII, Pz-IV | Britannica
IV (along with the Pz V, described below) formed the backbone of Germany’s panzer divisions from 1943 to the war’s end The tank had the same engine and general appearance as the Pz III, but the Pz IV had a larger turret and gun, thicker frontal armour, and better cross-country mobility
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