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8.8 cm KwK 43

German tank gun


German tank gun

FieldValue
name8.8 cm KwK 43
imageTiger II mg 7800.jpg
captionA Tiger II mounting an 8.8 cm KwK 43 gun, preserved at the Musée des Blindés
originNazi Germany
type*Kampfwagenkanone*
<!-- Type selection -->is_rangedYES
is_artilleryyes
is_UKyes
used_byNazi Germany
warsWorld War II
<!-- Production history -->designerKrupp
unit_cost
variants
weight2265 kg
part_length6248 mm bore (71 calibres)
crew
cartridgeFixed QF 88 × 822mm R
cartridge_weight7.3 kg Armor-piercing composite rigid (APCR) Pzgr 40/43
caliber88 mm
rate6–10 round per minute
velocity1130 m/s
max_range9350 m
sights
elevation-8° to +15°

The 8.8 cm KwK 43 (Kampfwagenkanone —"fighting vehicle cannon") was an 88 mm 71-calibre-length tank gun designed by Krupp and used by the German Wehrmacht during the Second World War. It was mounted as the primary armament on the Panzerkampfwagen VI Ausf. B Tiger II. The 8.8 cm Pak 43, an anti-tank gun, was very similar in design but mounted on tank destroyers or deployed stand-alone in the field.

Design and development

At 6.24 m, the length of the KwK 43's barrel was over 1.3 metres longer than of that of the 8.8 cm KwK 36 used for the Tiger I. The cartridge of the KwK 43's shell was also considerably longer (at 82.2 cm) and wider than that of the KwK 36's, meaning that the KwK 43 allowed more room for a heavier propellant charge in its cartridge case than the KwK 36. All guns of the Pak/KwK 43 series could use the same ammunition interchangeably.

The KwK 43 and Pak 43 were initially manufactured with monobloc barrels, meaning the barrel was made from one piece. However, due to the weapons' extremely high muzzle velocity and operating pressures when fired, the weapon suffered from accelerated barrel wear. As a result, the change was made to manufacture the Pak/KwK 43 with a two-piece barrel instead of a monobloc barrel. This had minimal to no effect on the performance of the gun, but made replacing a worn-out barrel much faster and easier than before.

In addition, the massively increased operating pressures of the new gun also required a new armour-piercing shell to be designed. The result of this was the PzGr.39/43 APCBC-HE projectile, which was similar to the older 10.2 kg PzGr.39-1 APCBC-HE projectile used by the 8.8 cm KwK 36 and Pak 43 guns except for the addition of much wider driving bands. The wider driving bands of the PzGr.39/43 increased the weight of the shell to 10.4 kg as a result. However, as the full transition to the newer PzGr.39/43 rounds was slow to take place, the older PzGr.39-1 rounds were instead allowed to be used for the KwK 43 & Pak 43 provided the gun had fired no more than 500 rounds. Above that set amount, the expected barrel wear combined with the narrower driving bands of the PzGr.39-1 would lead to a loss of pressure and therefore muzzle velocity in the gun. The new PzGr.39/43 could be fired without loss of pressure until the barrel was worn out, thus requiring no restriction.

PzGr.39-1 FES & Al all up weight: 10.2 kg (9.87 kg without fuse & bursting charge)

PzGr.39/43 FES & Al all up weight: 10.4 kg (10.06 kg without fuse & bursting charge)

The same 278 gram BdZ 5127 fuse and 59 gram Amatol bursting charge were used for both types of projectile (PzGr.39-1 & PzGr.39/43), requiring armoured targets of 30 mm or thicker to ignite after penetration for maximum behind-armour effects.

Performance

PzGr. 39/43 (APCBC-HE)

  • Type: Armour-piercing, capped, ballistic cap - high explosive
  • Projectile weight: 10.40 kg
  • Muzzle velocity: 1000 m/s
Range
(metres)Penetration
vertical
(mm)Penetration
at 30°
(mm)Hit probability versus
2.5 m x 2 m target
percentTestingPractice
100233202100100
500219185100100
100020416510085
15001901489561
20001761328543
2500n/an/a7430
3000n/an/a6123
3500n/an/a5117
4000n/an/a4213

PzGr. 40/43 (APCR)

  • Type: Armour-piercing, composite rigid
  • Projectile weight: 7.30 kg
  • Muzzle velocity: 1130 m/s
Range
(metres)Penetration
vertical
(mm)Penetration
at 30°
(mm)Hit probability
(2.5 m x 2 m target)
percentTestingPractice
100274237100100
500251217100100
100022319310089
15002111709766
20001841528947
2500n/an/a7834
3000n/an/a6625

Gr. 39/43 HL (HEAT)

  • Type: High explosive anti-tank
  • Projectile weight: 7.65 kg
  • Muzzle velocity: 600 m/s
  • Penetration: 90 mm (30 degrees)

''Sprgr''. 43 (HE)

  • Type: High explosive
  • Projectile weight: 21 lb
  • Explosive Charge: 2.25 lb Amatol (4,270 Kilojoules)

Penetration comparison

Ammunition typerowspan=2Muzzle velocitycolspan=11Penetration (mm)100 m250 m500 m750 m1000 m1250 m1500 m2000 m2500 m3000 m
PzGr. 39/43 (APCBC)1000 m/s232227219211204196190176164
PzGr. 40/43 (APCR)1130 m/s304296282269257245234213194
Gr. 39/3 HL (HEAT)600 m/s110110110110110110110110110

Anti-tank gun

Main article: 8.8 cm Pak 43

The anti-tank gun version of the 8.8 cm KwK 43 was known as the 8.8 cm Pak 43. This name was also applied to versions of this weapon mounted in various armored vehicles designed to hunt tanks, such as the Jagdpanther, Hornisse/Nashorn and Ferdinand/Elefant Panzerjäger tank destroyers. The Nashorn was the first vehicle to carry the KwK/Pak 43 series of guns. The series included: Pak 43 (cruciform mount), Pak 43/41 (two-wheel split-trail carriage), Pak 43/1 (Nashorn), and Pak 43/2 (Ferdinand/Elefant), all with monobloc (one-piece) barrels; Pak 43/3 and 43/4 (Jagdpanther) with two-piece barrels, and KwK 43 (Tiger II) with a two-piece barrel.

Notes

References

Sources

  • Thomas L. Jentz, Germany's Tiger Tanks: Tiger I and Tiger II - Combat Tactics. London: Schiffer Publishing, 1996.

References

  1. US Army Technical Manual TM9-1985-3, United States Government Printing Office Washington, 1953
  2. Higgins, David. (2011). "King Tiger Vs IS-2: Operation Solstice 1945.". Bloomsbury Publishing.
  3. Jentz, 1996, p. 9
  4. (16 March 1953). "TM 9-1985-3 German Explosive Ordnance (Projectiles and Projectile Fuzes) 1953".
  5. (2001). "WWII Ballistics: Armor and Gunnery". Overmatch Press.
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