Rare WW2 Jagdpanzer IV - L/70 / L/48 - footage.

2 years ago
51

0:21 Training film showing several types of halftracks and the L/48 variant.
2:40 Several destroyed and abandoned Jagdpanzers in a Soviet newsreel.
2:50 A Jagdpanzer knocked out after the Battle of Budapest. note the rare zimmerit on the vehicle.
2:55 A destroyed Jagdpanzer in the Battle of Normandy.
3:14 Several Jagdpanzers during Operation Market Garden.
3:35 A Centaur tank driving past a Jagdpanzer with number 343 in the Netherlands.
3:53 Several German Jagdpanzers surrendering in Amersfoort, the Netherlands to Canadian forces.
3:55 Several Jagdpanzers during the Battle of the Bulge, filmed in a well known staged propaganda film in Poteau.
4:50 Surrendered German vehicles in Norway.
4:58 Only footage of the Jagdpanzer IV/70 (A).

The Jagdpanzer IV, was a German tank destroyer based on the Panzer IV chassis and built in
three main variants.

It was developed as a replacement for the Sturmgeschutz III.

Officially only the L/48-armed vehicle was named Jagdpanzer IV and the L/70-armed
vehicle was named Panzer IV/70.

The Jagdpanzer IV served in the anti-tank sections of Panzer and SS Panzer Divisions.

These vehicles saw service in Normandy, the Battle of the Bulge and on the Eastern Front.

They were very successful tank destroyers but performed poorly when used out
of role as substitutes for tanks or assault guns.

It was also a needless vehicle, because the Sturmgeschutz III and IV were still more them
adequate for their role.and in some reports preformed even better then the Jagdpanzer IV.

Despite all the downsides of the vehicle there were still 2000 produced at the end of the war.

The Jagdpanzer IV/70 (A) was developed to speed up production of the Jagdpanzer IV, the design was copied from earlier German attempts to place the 7.5 cm L/70 into a Panzer IV turret.
The vehicle had a modified hull and it was placed on a standard Panzer IV tank chassis.
The upper nose plate was 60mm thick instead of the original 50mm thick vertical plate.
In addition the interior layout was changed.

The result was a much taller and heavier vehicle than the Panzer IV/70 (V) and they failed to speed up the production whatsoever and at the end of the war they only produced 278 vehicles.

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■ Information obtained from several sites.
■ Wikipedia
■ tanks-encyclopedia
■ the.shadock.free.fr/Surviving_Panzers
■ preservedtanks
■ pantser.net
■ the.shadock.free.fr/Tanks_in_France

■ Some music is from the YouTube Audio Library.

■ Music used:
EpidemicSound.com

Copyright fair use notice

All media used in
this video is used for
the purpose of education
under the terms of
fair use.

All footage and images
used belong to their
copyright holders.

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