The VK 3002 (MAN), which was known
unofficially as the Panther during the course of its development, was well
shaped but was too heavy and too high to be a medium tank replacement for the
Pz Kw IV. As usual the constant modifications called for during development
increased the original weight from 35 tons until it finally reached 43 tons.
After 20 vehicles had been built with the specified frontal armour 60 mm thick,
an increase of the nose armour to 80 mm was ordered. The engine originally
planned, the Maybach HL 210, was no longer considered powerful enough and was
replaced by the more powerful HL 230 P 30. This was basically the same engine
but its capacity had been raised from 21 to 23 litres by enlarging the cylinder
bore. This engine was put into all production vehicles and was used until the
end of the war. The HL 230 P 30 was a short V-12 petrol-driven engine producing
700 hp at 3000 rpm. In service however it was limited to 2500 rpm. Maybach used
an eight-bearing crankshaft which just fitted the limited area of the Panther
engine compartment. Together with several other licensees (including
Daimler-Benz and Auto-Union) Maybach produced nearly 1000 of these 700 hp
engines each month.
As the Pz Kw V differed radically from the
Pz Kw III and IV, newly developed mechanical units had to be fitted because of
the increased weight and the alterations to the hull shape. The hand-operated
AK 7-200 type gearbox had seven speeds, all with synchromesh. It. was intended
for an engine producing 800 hp at 3000 rpm and a torque of up to 175 mkg. The
weight of the gear with clutch and crown wheel was 750 kg. An LAG 3/70 H dry
clutch was fitted. New steering gear and steering brakes were developed by MAN.
Steering was effected by Argus disc brakes, operated hydraulically. Each track
could be halted separately when the steering brake was used to steer the tank,
after the epicyclic brake had been released and the steering clutch
disconnected. In addition to this, when the epicyclic brake was released the
direct gear of the epicyclic could be driven, via a steering clutch and a pair
of pinions, against the' direction of the main drive. In this way the relevant
track was retarded and the vehicle travelled in each gear through a curve of
fixed radius. Hence the description "single radius steering gear".
The bogies were carried on double torsion
bars which lay transversely, each radius arm having two hair-pin-shaped torsion
bars. This arrangement gave the Panther the best designed suspension of all
German tanks. One disadvantage was the amount of space taken up by this type of
springing. The bogie wheels were of the interleaved disc type with rubber
tyres. Front sprockets and rear idlers, which also acted as tensioning wheels,
together with two hydraulic shock absorbers and a return roller each side,
completed the suspension. The unlubricated, 86-link track, designed for the
original 35-ton prototype, was 660 mm wide and the width was not increased in
the heavier production model. To increase the adhesion on icy surfaces the
track was fitted with non-skid ribs, which were placed between the links.
Chassis, hull and superstructure were integral and comers of the armour-plated
hull were interlocked.
In addition to the 7.5 cm 42 L/70 gun there
were two MG 34s. Seventy-nine rounds of tank gun ammunition were carried and
the fuel supply of 720 litres was in five tanks. Power take-off to traverse the
8-ton turret was taken from a main shaft which lay between the two half shafts.
This main shaft was mounted in a housing and worked the turret drive and the
two oil pressure pumps for the steering mechanism.
Initially the specifications called for a
fording depth of 1900 nun and a submersible depth of up to 4 metres. Full
waterproofing was never fully developed however, and in consequence it was not
100 per cent effective on production vehicles.
In the Marks III, IV and VI the crews' kit
was carried in stowage boxes on the rear turret walls, but in the Panther these
were fitted left and right of the lower hull plate.
Production of the Panther began in November
1942 at the MAN factory, and its official designation was "Pz Kw V Panther
Ausf D (Sd Kfz 171)". In the first production model the wireless
operator's bow MG aperture was of the shutter type. Some of these early
machines had the commander's cupola fitted on the left hand side of the turret.
The combat weight was 43 tons.
The Panther's importance in the
re-equipping of armoured units is evident from the fact that the production
programme, which went into operation immediately, called for an output of 250
vehicles per month. A revised production programme dated September 1942
increased the monthly output to 600 Panthers up to and including the spring of
1944.
It was clear from this ambitious scheme
that additional manufacturers would have to be brought into the production
programme. The first production vehicles very quickly showed the teething
troubles resulting from over-hasty development. Representatives of the industry
and of the troops continually warned against putting these new vehicles into
service prematurely. There were not only the usual teething troubles of a new
design, but deep-rooted problems which could only be eradicated after thorough
tests and fundamental alterations, and the armoured units had little confidence
in the vehicle. The increased weight, which was greater than the original
specification laid down, led to excessive wear of gears and shafts and the more
powerful engine stretched the transmission to its limits. In this and the suspension
were the main weaknesses of this otherwise very successful vehicle. In a speech
at Hider's HQ in March 1943 Guderian emphasised that under no circumstances
could the Panther be expected to enter service earlier than July 1943. The
results of troop trials at Erlangen and Grafenwohr only confirmed this.
Despite these deficiencies tank battalions
equipped with Panthers were ordered to take part in the Kursk Offensive or
Operation Citadel. All the gloomy mechanical predictions were fully realised.
Most of the vehicles unloaded in Orel and driven to Byelograd broke down en
route. Engine fires caused by insufficient cooling and damage to gears and
tracks ruined the outstanding potential of the armament as the vehicles were
continually being taken out of service because of mechanical troubles and in
some cases did not reach the battlefield at all.
These mechanical troubles made the first
production batch of Panthers, almost without exception, unfit for front line
service. In 1944 an official High Command memorandum acknowledging these
weaknesses said: "... the mechanical weakness of the cross shaft on the Pz
Kw IV and V led to such high unserviceability that the demand for replacement
parts could not be met, despite the great efforts of the factories, without
interfering with production..."
In February 1943 the Maschinenfabrik
Niedersachsen-Hannover were brought into the Panther production programme.
Henschel produced 200 Panthers between March and November 1943. From mid-1943
onwards Daimler-Benz went over to mass production of the Panther. The following
firms took part in the production of armour and turrets: Dortmund-Hörder Hüttenverein of Dortmund,
Eisenwerke Oberdonau of Linz, Ruhrstahl of Hattingen, Böhler of Kapfenberg, Bismarckhütte of Upper Silesia and Harkort-Eicken of Hagen. Numerous other
component suppliers took part in the Panther building programme and production
was given the "SS" priority rating.
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