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Bolt Action Jagdtiger Heavy Tank Destroyer Released


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Suetonius Paullinus writes:

The captured Tiger (now in the Bovington Tank Museum) in North Africa was unnecessarily abandoned by through a hit just below the gun barrel panicked crew. Only the turret has been immobilised as the round got stuck between turret and main hull, they could have driven away.

Cheers

SP


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Paul at Warlord Games Sponsoring Member of TMP of Warlord Games writes:

Players of German Bolt Action armies receive some serious armored reinforcement this week, with the arrival of the dreaded Jagdtiger!

Jagdtiger

The Germans hugely innovated armored warfare – from the mechanized Blitzkrieg that swept through mainland Europe in the early stages of war, right through until the final days of the war amid the shattered streets of Berlin.

Jagdtiger

Throughout the war, they strove for better armored fighting vehicles, often larger and larger at the behest of Hitler. Like many nations, the Germans made good use of their existing tank designs to convert them into self-propelled guns and tank destroyers. One colossal example of this process was the Jagdtiger – the Germans wanted to make the much-feared Tiger II even more deadly by mounting the 128mm Pak 44 cannon into a purpose-built armored citadel atop the lengthened King Tiger chassis.

Jagdtiger

In late 1944, 150 units were ordered to tackle the ever-encroaching Soviet armor – the Pak 44 would tear through anything that the Allies could throw at it with ease.

Jagdtiger

Weighing in at over 70 tonnes, the Jagdtiger could reach a top speed of 21mph – and a lot of European roads and bridges simply couldn't take the weight – bridges would collapse, and roads would simply break up.

Jagdtiger

This, coupled with the ever more sparse deliveries of supplies, such as spare parts and fuel, meant that although the Jagdtiger was a fantastic tank on paper, it was never quite able to fulfill its battlefield potential.

That said, when it overcame these problems, the Jagdtiger did very well indeed. Renowned panzer ace Otto Carius famously commanded a company of these armored behemoths in battle as part of the 512th Schwere Panzerjägerabteilung. Carius is credited with destroying more than 150 tanks and a similar number of anti-tank guns. He would earn the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves. Carius survived the war, surrendering to U.S. forces. He passed away in January this year.

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Text edited by Editor Hebber
Graphics edited by Editor Hebber
Scheduled by Personal logo Editor in Chief Bill The Editor of TMP Fezian