Mention of this gun has already been made in Tactical and Technical
Trends (No. 18, p. 4). It must not be confused with
the 7.5-cm Pak 97/38 which is a German modification
of the well-known French 75 (see Tactical and Technical
Trends, No. 22, p. 6).
The 7.5-cm Pak 40 is very similar in appearance to the standard
German 50-mm antitank gun, the 5-cm Pak 38. However,
the following structural differences may be readily noted:
Item | |
5-cm Pak 38 | |
7.5-cm Pak 40 |
Shield | |
Curved. Flattened at outer edges | |
Angular. Flat frontal section with two flat side pieces set at an angle of approx. 45° to the plane of the frontal section |
Muzzle brake | |
Narrow and elongated | |
Broad and longer |
Sighting aperture | |
Rectangular | |
Square |
The gun proper, i.e., exclusive of the carriage, is essentially the same
weapon as the 7.5-cm Kw.K 40*, which is the principal
armament of the new German medium tank, the PzKw 4. Two self-propelled versions
of the 7.5-cm Kw.K 40 have also been reported, one mounted
on the chassis of a PzKw 2, the other on the chassis of the PzKw 38 (t)**. The
chief differences between the 75-mm antitank gun and tank gun are
probably the substitution of mechanical firing and percussion primer for electric
firing and primer; the chamber of the antitank gun is also probably considerably
longer. The breechblock is the semi-automatic, horizontally sliding type.
The piece is mounted on a split-trail carriage, with torsion springing; this
springing is automatically cut out when the trails are opened. The wheels are
of a light alloy and are fitted with solid rubber tires. An interesting feature
is a detachable third wheel which can be fitted on near the trail spades, thereby
permitting the gun to be man-handled more easily. The shield is of the spaced-armor
type like the Pak 38; note also that a protective apron is provided.
Further details on this weapon are as follows:
Over-all length in travelling position | | 19 ft 2 in |
Weight in action | | 3,350 lbs |
Length of barrel | | 10 ft 6 in |
Length of recoil | | 35.43 in |
Elevation | | 22 degrees |
Depression | | 5 degrees |
Traverse | | 65 degrees |
Four types of ammunition are used, namely HE, hollow charge,
AP shot, and an armor-piercing tracer shell with a small explosive
charge and an armor-piercing cap covered with a ballistic nose. Details
on this latter type of ammunition (see sketch at left) are these:
Weight of complete round | | 27 lbs |
Length of complete round | | 36.14 in |
Weight of projectile | | 15 lbs |
Weight of HE filling | | 3/4 oz |
Weight of propellant | | 6 lb 3/4 oz |
Muzzle velocity (estimated) | | 2,830 f/s |
With this AP-HE ammunition it has been estimated that this
gun can penetrate homogeneous armor as follows:
Range | |
Normal | |
30 degrees |
500 | |
5.20 in | |
4.43 in | |
1,000 | |
4.72 in | |
4.02 in | |
1,500 | |
4.27 in | |
3.62 in | |
2,000 | |
3.82 in | |
3.23 in | |
2,500 | |
3.43 in | |
2.87 in | |
The AP shot is the usual German steel casing enclosing a tungsten carbide
core; it is fitted with tracer. The muzzle velocity with this ammunition is
reported to be 3,250 feet per second.
Comment: Detailed confirmed information on the effectiveness of this
weapon is not available as yet. For its size it does have a low silhouette, a
desirable feature for an antitank gun. While the muzzle velocity is high, the tube is of
monobloc construction and the propellant charge is very large, so that the safety
factor is open to question. The Germans have been doubling the length of the
chambers in their tank and antitank weapons (e.g., the Russian 76.2-mm gun), and
seem to have reached the conclusion that it is worthwhile since they are now
producing this 75-mm antitank gun with the long chamber and shell
case as a standard weapon.
* Kampfwagon Kanone--used by Germans to designate tank guns.
** A Czech light tank.