Jagdtiger
Revision as of 09:36, 27 September 2016 +category | Revision as of 22:46, 2 October 2016 XXN:na moved page Tank:Jagdtiger to Tank:G44 JagdTiger | |||
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? | {{TankData|Tank= | + | {{TankData|Tank=JagdTiger | |
? | | | + | |The undisputed "King" of German tank destroyers before the 7.5 update, and by some still considered to be better than the Jagdpanzer E-100, the Jagdtiger offers thick frontal armor and a selection of two heavy guns capable of dealing massive damage to any target. Due to its high weight, it is slow and unwieldy. The gun mantlet, while thick, shots which hit it still manages to damage the gun. If de-tracked, or attacked from the rear or sides, it will die easily and quickly . Do not approach this tank from the front even if you have a gun with sufficient penetration; it will probably be the last thing you see before becoming a smoking wreck. This tank destroyer is best played with one or two [[Medium Tanks|mediums]] acting in support role, defending its sides and rear. It has large weak spots, as with most German tanks, on the lower glacis plate. There are several places with guaranteed penetration, but those are yours to find. Either way, drive or attack this tank destroyer with caution. | |
|Gallery= | |Gallery= | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger front view 1.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger front left view | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger front view 2.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger front right view | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger back view 2.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger back left view | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger back view 1.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger back right view | |||
+ | image:JagdTigergame1.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger, Malinovka map | |||
+ | image:JagdTiger-1.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger, map Highway | |||
|InTheGame_pros= | |InTheGame_pros= | |||
? | * Very | + | * Very strong casemate with no weakspot | |
? | * | + | * Thick spaced armor on the mantlet | |
? | * | + | * Upper glacis, while not reliable against tier 9 and 10, is actually very hard to penetrate for gun with <220mm penetration | |
? | * | + | * Extremely accurate gun | |
? | * | + | * Excellent DPM | |
+ | * Great ability to hull down | |||
+ | * Decent maneuverability and acceleration for its size | |||
+ | * Decent gun depression | |||
+ | ||||
|InTheGame_cons= | |InTheGame_cons= | |||
? | * | + | * Lower glacis is very weak | |
? | * | + | * Extremely weak to artillery due to its height and weak side and rear armor | |
? | * | + | * Poor camo rating | |
? | + | * Slow traverse speed, easily circled | ||
+ | * Upper glacis is easily penetrated by even lower tier TDs | |||
? | |InTheGame_performance= The | + | |InTheGame_performance= The Jagdtiger excels as a sniper, with excellent accuracy, good aiming time, and very high DPM. You want to keep as far away as possible, because your armor isn't particularly strong up close (especially if you show your lower hull), while its strenghens at distance. If you have to advance, make sure you do it with people near you so fast tanks can't get behind you, and try to take advantage of the terrain, in order to show only your upper structure. Sixth sense is a must for this tank since you'll get spotted a lot and once you're spotted you're a primary target for artillery. A well-played Jagdtiger can be a really intimidating opponent and can easily control the tide of the battle. | |
? | ||||
? | + | |InTheGame_research= | ||
+ | * Stock suspension can handle both radio and engine (which carries over from the [[Jagdpanther]]). | |||
+ | * Next, the 12,8cm Pak 44/2 L/61 offers much increase in alpha damage and penetration. | |||
+ | * Then the upgrade suspension to increase top speed and traverse speed | |||
? | ||||
? | ||||
? | ||||
? | |InTheGame_equipment= Large- | + | |InTheGame_equipment= | |
+ | Large-caliber tank Gun Rammer, toolbox, binocular telescope, coated optics, large spall liner, camouflage net | |||
? | |History= | + | |History= | |
+ | [[image:Jagdtiger_ussr.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Captured JagdTiger, photo taken by Soviet forces in 1945.]] | |||
+ | Jagdtiger: the common name of a German tank-destroyer (German: Jagdpanzer) of World War II. The official German designation was Panzerjäger Tiger Ausf. B. The ordnance inventory designation was Sd. Kfz. 186. It saw service from late 1944 to the end of the war on both the Western and Eastern Fronts. The Jagdtiger was the heaviest armored fighting vehicle to see service during World War II. | |||
? | + | Although well protected and armed, it suffered from mechanical problems attributed to its excessive weight. A total of almost 80 vehicles were manufactured. | ||
? | + | == Development == | ||
? | + | With the success of the StuG III in the tank-destroyer role, the military leadership of Nazi Germany decided to use the chassis' of existing armored fighting vehicles as the basis for self-propelled guns. German tank destroyers of World War II lacked turrets, using fixed casemates instead, and as a result, they were capable of mounting larger caliber guns than on turreted AFVs on the same chassis. The lack of turrets also reduced their production time and cost, as fewer complex components need to be manufactured. | ||
? | + | |||
? | + | |||
? | + | In early 1942, a request was made by the Army General Staff to mount a 128 mm gun on a self-propelled armored chassis. On May 18 1942, Adolf Hitler ordered that the 128 mm gun be utilized in the tank-destroyer role, rather than for infantry support. Firing tests of the 128 mm gun showed it to have a high percentage of hits. Lower caliber heavy shells such as the 88 mm and 105 mm were also tested. | ||
? | + | |||
? | | | + | By early 1943, a decision was made to install a 128 mm gun on a Panther or Tiger I chassis as a heavy assault gun. The Panther chassis was considered unsuitable after a wooden mockup of the design was constructed. On October 20 1943, another wooden mockup was constructed on a Tiger II chassis, and presented to Hitler in East Prussia. Two prototypes were produced; a version with the eight road wheel Porsche suspension system (number 305001) and a version with the Henschel nine overlapping-wheel suspension system (number 305002), as used on the production Tiger II, were completed in February 1944. It was originally designated as Jagdpanzer VI, but was later named the Jagdtiger. It received the special ordnance number Sd.Kfz. 186. | |
+ | ||||
+ | == Design == | |||
+ | [[image:Jagdtiger_Bovington.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Jagdtiger at [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bovington_Tank_Museum Bovington Tank Museum]] ]] | |||
+ | The Jagdtiger was a logical extension of the creation of Jagdpanzer designs from tank designs, such as the Jagdpanther from the Panther tank. The Jagdtiger used a boxy casemate superstructure on top of a lengthened Tiger II chassis. The resulting vehicle featured very-heavy armor and the 128 mm PaK 44 L/55 gun,:capable of defeating any tank fielded in World War II, even at very long ranges (over 3,500 m). It had 250 mm armor on the front of the casemate and 150 mm on the glacis plate. The main gun mount had a limited traverse of only 10 degrees; the entire vehicle had to be turned to aim outside that narrow field of fire. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | The Jagdtiger suffered from a variety of mechanical and technical problems due to its immense weight and under-powered engine. The vehicle had frequent breakdowns. Ultimately, more Jagdtigers were lost to mechanical problems or lack of fuel than to enemy action. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | == Production == | |||
+ | ||||
+ | 150 Jagdtigers were ordered, but only half that number were produced. Eleven of them, serial numbers 305001 and 305003 to 305012, were produced with the Porsche suspension (8 roadwheels): all following used the Henschel suspension (9 roadwheels). | |||
+ | ||||
+ | Production figures vary depending on source and other factors, such as if prototypes are included and if those made after VE day are included. Totals range from about 77 to 88 produced from July 1944 to May 1945. Approximately 48 from July 1944 to the end of December 1944, 36 from January to April 1945, and serial numbers from 305001 to 305088 (such as examples from May 1945, and pre-production prototypes, and whether incomplete chassis are counted). Some sources say no more vehicles were completed after February. Towards the end, some were lacking important equipment and could not be used operationally, or could not be deployed to units. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | == Combat history == | |||
+ | [[image:Jagdtiger_AOM.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Vehicle 305020, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army_Ordnance_Museum US Army Ordnance Museum]].]] | |||
+ | Only two heavy anti-tank battalions (schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung), numbered 512 and 653, were equipped with Jagdtigers, with the first vehicles reaching the units in September 1944. About twenty percent were lost in combat, most were destroyed by their own crews when abandoned, chiefly due to mechanical breakdowns or lack of fuel in the desperate final stages of the war. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | The gun used separate-loading ammunition, which meant that two loaders were used to insert the projectile and the cased propelling charge separately. This resulted in a slow rate of fire. The tremendous amount of smoke would often give-away the position of the vehicle, in addition to momentarily blinding the crew, although the latter was a moot point, owing to the very-slow reload time. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | Tiger ace Otto Carius commanded the second of three companies of Jagdtigers in Panzerjagerabteilung 512. His memoir "Tigers in the Mud" provides a rare combat history of the ten Jagdtigers under his command. He states that Jagdtigers were not utilized to their full potential due to several factors. Allied air supremacy made it difficult to move, the massive gun needed to be re-calibrated from jarring after traveling off-road for even short distances, it was slow, and transmissions and differentials broke down easily because the whole 72 ton vehicle needed to rotate to traverse. The massive gun had to be locked down, otherwise mounting brackets would have worn too much for accurate firing. However, he also recorded that a 128 mm projectile went through all the walls of a house and destroyed an American tank behind it. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | Insufficient crew training and depleted morale was the biggest problem for Jagdtiger crews under Carius' command. At the Ruhr pocket, two Jagdtiger commanders failed to attack an American armored column about 1.5 km away in daylight for fear of attracting an air attack, even though Jagdtigers were well-camouflaged. Both vehicles broke down while withdrawing through fear of air attack, and one was then destroyed by the crew. To prevent such a disaster at Siegen, Carius himself dug in on high ground. An approaching American armored column avoided the prepared ambush because German civilians warned them of it. Later, one of his vehicles fell into a bomb crater at night and was disabled, and another was lost to Panzerfaust attack by friendly Volkssturm troops who had never seen a Jagdtiger before. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | Near Unna, one Jagdtiger attacked uphill against five American tanks six-hundred meters away; two withdrew and the other three opened fire. The Jagdtiger took several hits, but they could not penetrate the 250 mm frontal armor. The inexperienced German commander then lost his nerve and turned around instead of backing away, exposing the thinner side armor, which was eventually penetrated and all six crew were lost. Carius wrote that it was useless when crews were not trained or experienced enough to have the thick frontal armor facing the enemy at all times. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | When unable to escape the Ruhr pocket, Carius ordered the guns of the remaining Jagdtigers destroyed and surrendered to American forces. The ten Jagdtigers of 2nd Company, Panzerjagerabteilung 512, destroyed one American tank for one Jagdtiger lost to combat, one lost to friendly fire, and eight others lost to breakdown or destroyed by their crews to prevent capture. | |||
+ | ||||
+ | |HistoricalGallery= | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger, destroyed by his own crew at the battle of Ruhn.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger, destroyed by his own crew at the battle of Ruhn | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger, somewhere in France.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger, somewhere in France | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger,_rear_view_with_recognisable_King_tigar_exhaust_pipes.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger,_rear_view_with_recognisable_King_tigar_exhaust_pipes | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger_frontal_view.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger_frontal_view | |||
+ | image:Jagdtiger note the massive superstructure and a huge gun.jpg{{!}}Jagdtiger note the massive superstructure and a huge 128 mm gun | |||
+ | ||||
+ | |Ref_references= | |||
+ | ||||
+ | ||||
+ | |Ref_sources= | |||
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|Ref_links= | |Ref_links= | |||
+ | * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jagdtiger Wikipedia] | |||
+ | * https://panzerwaffe.pl | |||
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Revision as of 22:46, 2 October 2016
Jagdtiger
Mouse over "
[Client Values; Actual values in
3,450,000 Cost |
2100420 HP Hit Points |
74.55/7528.08/79 t Weight Limit |
- Commander
- Radio Operator
- Driver
- Gunner
- Loader
- Loader
650700 hp Engine Power |
38/12 km/h Speed Limit |
2426 deg/s Traverse |
8.7224.93 hp/t Power/Wt Ratio |
YesYes Pivot |
// mm Hull Armor |
AP/APCR/HE
AP/APCR/HE Shells |
1070/4800/935
1260/4400/1055 Shell Cost |
490/490/630560/560/700 HP Damage |
246/311/65276/352/65 mm Penetration |
r/m ▲
5.5 r/m Standard Gun ▲
5.26 Rate of Fire Standard Gun |
▲
Standard Gun
▼
Standard Gun
▲
2695 Standard Gun ▲
Standard Gun
▼
Standard Gun
▲
2945.6 Damage Per Minute Standard Gun |
m ▲
0.35 m With 50% Crew: 0.434 m ▲
0.33 Accuracy With 50% Crew: 0.409 m |
s 2.3 s 2.3 Aim time |
2626 deg/s Gun Traverse Speed |
20° Gun Arc |
-7°/+15°-7°/+15° Elevation Arc |
4036 rounds Ammo Capacity |
2020 % Chance of Fire |
m 390 m 390 View Range |
m 310 m 710 Signal Range |
IX
3450000
The Jagdtiger is a German tier 9 tank destroyer.
Developed from 1942 through 1944, the heavy tank destroyer, with the chassis of the Tiger II heavy tank, became the heaviest mass-produced armored vehicle ever. According to various sources, 70–79 tank destroyers were manufactured from 1944 through 1945. The vehicles saw service in the 653rd and 512th Heavy Panzerjäger Battalions.
The undisputed "King" of German tank destroyers before the 7.5 update, and by some still considered to be better than the Jagdpanzer E-100, the Jagdtiger offers thick frontal armor and a selection of two heavy guns capable of dealing massive damage to any target. Due to its high weight, it is slow and unwieldy. The gun mantlet, while thick, shots which hit it still manages to damage the gun. If de-tracked, or attacked from the rear or sides, it will die easily and quickly . Do not approach this tank from the front even if you have a gun with sufficient penetration; it will probably be the last thing you see before becoming a smoking wreck. This tank destroyer is best played with one or two mediums acting in support role, defending its sides and rear. It has large weak spots, as with most German tanks, on the lower glacis plate. There are several places with guaranteed penetration, but those are yours to find. Either way, drive or attack this tank destroyer with caution.
The Jagdtiger leads to the Jagdpanzer E 100.
Modules / Available Equipment and Consumables
Modules
Tier | Engine | Engine Power (hp) |
Chance of Fire on Impact (%) |
Weight (kg) |
Price ()
| |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VII | Maybach HL 210 TRM P30 | 650 | 20 | 850 | 35500 | |
VIII | Maybach HL 230 TRM P30 | 700 | 20 | 1200 | 54000 |
Tier | Suspension | Load Limit (т) |
Traverse Speed (gr/sec) |
Rmin | Weight (kg) |
Price ()
| |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VIII | Jagdtiger | 75 | 24 | 0 | 22350 | 28100 | |
IX | Jagdtiger verstärkteketten | 79 | 26 | 0 | 22350 | 62000 |
Tier | Radio | Signal Range (m) |
Weight (kg) |
Price ()
| |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
III | FuG 5 | 310 | 50 | 630 | |
VI | FuG 7 | 415 | 70 | 8160 | |
IX | FuG 12 | 710 | 150 | 43200 |
Compatible Equipment
Compatible Consumables
Player Opinion
Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Very strong casemate with no weakspot
- Thick spaced armor on the mantlet
- Upper glacis, while not reliable against tier 9 and 10, is actually very hard to penetrate for gun with <220mm penetration
- Extremely accurate gun
- Excellent DPM
Cons:
- Lower glacis is very weak
- Extremely weak to artillery due to its height and weak side and rear armor
- Poor camo rating
- Slow traverse speed, easily circled
- Upper glacis is easily penetrated by even lower tier TDs
Performance
The Jagdtiger excels as a sniper, with excellent accuracy, good aiming time, and very high DPM. You want to keep as far away as possible, because your armor isn't particularly strong up close (especially if you show your lower hull), while its strenghens at distance. If you have to advance, make sure you do it with people near you so fast tanks can't get behind you, and try to take advantage of the terrain, in order to show only your upper structure. Sixth sense is a must for this tank since you'll get spotted a lot and once you're spotted you're a primary target for artillery. A well-played Jagdtiger can be a really intimidating opponent and can easily control the tide of the battle.
Early Research
- Stock suspension can handle both radio and engine (which carries over from the Jagdpanther).
- Next, the 12,8cm Pak 44/2 L/61 offers much increase in alpha damage and penetration.
- Then the upgrade suspension to increase top speed and traverse speed
Suggested Equipment
Gallery
Historical Info
Jagdtiger: the common name of a German tank-destroyer (German: Jagdpanzer) of World War II. The official German designation was Panzerjäger Tiger Ausf. B. The ordnance inventory designation was Sd. Kfz. 186. It saw service from late 1944 to the end of the war on both the Western and Eastern Fronts. The Jagdtiger was the heaviest armored fighting vehicle to see service during World War II.
Although well protected and armed, it suffered from mechanical problems attributed to its excessive weight. A total of almost 80 vehicles were manufactured.
Development
With the success of the StuG III in the tank-destroyer role, the military leadership of Nazi Germany decided to use the chassis' of existing armored fighting vehicles as the basis for self-propelled guns. German tank destroyers of World War II lacked turrets, using fixed casemates instead, and as a result, they were capable of mounting larger caliber guns than on turreted AFVs on the same chassis. The lack of turrets also reduced their production time and cost, as fewer complex components need to be manufactured.
In early 1942, a request was made by the Army General Staff to mount a 128 mm gun on a self-propelled armored chassis. On May 18 1942, Adolf Hitler ordered that the 128 mm gun be utilized in the tank-destroyer role, rather than for infantry support. Firing tests of the 128 mm gun showed it to have a high percentage of hits. Lower caliber heavy shells such as the 88 mm and 105 mm were also tested.
By early 1943, a decision was made to install a 128 mm gun on a Panther or Tiger I chassis as a heavy assault gun. The Panther chassis was considered unsuitable after a wooden mockup of the design was constructed. On October 20 1943, another wooden mockup was constructed on a Tiger II chassis, and presented to Hitler in East Prussia. Two prototypes were produced; a version with the eight road wheel Porsche suspension system (number 305001) and a version with the Henschel nine overlapping-wheel suspension system (number 305002), as used on the production Tiger II, were completed in February 1944. It was originally designated as Jagdpanzer VI, but was later named the Jagdtiger. It received the special ordnance number Sd.Kfz. 186.
Design
The Jagdtiger was a logical extension of the creation of Jagdpanzer designs from tank designs, such as the Jagdpanther from the Panther tank. The Jagdtiger used a boxy casemate superstructure on top of a lengthened Tiger II chassis. The resulting vehicle featured very-heavy armor and the 128 mm PaK 44 L/55 gun,:capable of defeating any tank fielded in World War II, even at very long ranges (over 3,500 m). It had 250 mm armor on the front of the casemate and 150 mm on the glacis plate. The main gun mount had a limited traverse of only 10 degrees; the entire vehicle had to be turned to aim outside that narrow field of fire.
The Jagdtiger suffered from a variety of mechanical and technical problems due to its immense weight and under-powered engine. The vehicle had frequent breakdowns. Ultimately, more Jagdtigers were lost to mechanical problems or lack of fuel than to enemy action.
Production
150 Jagdtigers were ordered, but only half that number were produced. Eleven of them, serial numbers 305001 and 305003 to 305012, were produced with the Porsche suspension (8 roadwheels): all following used the Henschel suspension (9 roadwheels).
Production figures vary depending on source and other factors, such as if prototypes are included and if those made after VE day are included. Totals range from about 77 to 88 produced from July 1944 to May 1945. Approximately 48 from July 1944 to the end of December 1944, 36 from January to April 1945, and serial numbers from 305001 to 305088 (such as examples from May 1945, and pre-production prototypes, and whether incomplete chassis are counted). Some sources say no more vehicles were completed after February. Towards the end, some were lacking important equipment and could not be used operationally, or could not be deployed to units.
Combat history
Only two heavy anti-tank battalions (schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung), numbered 512 and 653, were equipped with Jagdtigers, with the first vehicles reaching the units in September 1944. About twenty percent were lost in combat, most were destroyed by their own crews when abandoned, chiefly due to mechanical breakdowns or lack of fuel in the desperate final stages of the war.
The gun used separate-loading ammunition, which meant that two loaders were used to insert the projectile and the cased propelling charge separately. This resulted in a slow rate of fire. The tremendous amount of smoke would often give-away the position of the vehicle, in addition to momentarily blinding the crew, although the latter was a moot point, owing to the very-slow reload time.
Tiger ace Otto Carius commanded the second of three companies of Jagdtigers in Panzerjagerabteilung 512. His memoir "Tigers in the Mud" provides a rare combat history of the ten Jagdtigers under his command. He states that Jagdtigers were not utilized to their full potential due to several factors. Allied air supremacy made it difficult to move, the massive gun needed to be re-calibrated from jarring after traveling off-road for even short distances, it was slow, and transmissions and differentials broke down easily because the whole 72 ton vehicle needed to rotate to traverse. The massive gun had to be locked down, otherwise mounting brackets would have worn too much for accurate firing. However, he also recorded that a 128 mm projectile went through all the walls of a house and destroyed an American tank behind it.
Insufficient crew training and depleted morale was the biggest problem for Jagdtiger crews under Carius' command. At the Ruhr pocket, two Jagdtiger commanders failed to attack an American armored column about 1.5 km away in daylight for fear of attracting an air attack, even though Jagdtigers were well-camouflaged. Both vehicles broke down while withdrawing through fear of air attack, and one was then destroyed by the crew. To prevent such a disaster at Siegen, Carius himself dug in on high ground. An approaching American armored column avoided the prepared ambush because German civilians warned them of it. Later, one of his vehicles fell into a bomb crater at night and was disabled, and another was lost to Panzerfaust attack by friendly Volkssturm troops who had never seen a Jagdtiger before.
Near Unna, one Jagdtiger attacked uphill against five American tanks six-hundred meters away; two withdrew and the other three opened fire. The Jagdtiger took several hits, but they could not penetrate the 250 mm frontal armor. The inexperienced German commander then lost his nerve and turned around instead of backing away, exposing the thinner side armor, which was eventually penetrated and all six crew were lost. Carius wrote that it was useless when crews were not trained or experienced enough to have the thick frontal armor facing the enemy at all times.
When unable to escape the Ruhr pocket, Carius ordered the guns of the remaining Jagdtigers destroyed and surrendered to American forces. The ten Jagdtigers of 2nd Company, Panzerjagerabteilung 512, destroyed one American tank for one Jagdtiger lost to combat, one lost to friendly fire, and eight others lost to breakdown or destroyed by their crews to prevent capture.