Skipping Leg Day | 15 cm sIG 33 auf Panzerkampfwagen I ohne Aufbau Ausf.B Sd.Kfz.101
Вставка
- Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
- Providing adequate fire support to an infantry unit was, and still is to this day vital in achieving success when engaging enemy positions. This is something that the Germans were quite aware of before the Second World War, based on their experience gained in the First World War. For destroying well-defended targets, they introduced the 15 cm (5.9 in)schwere Infanterie Geschütz (heavy infantry gun) 33 into service, or sIG 33 for short. While this gun did its job very well, it was heavy and hard to field. In order to increase its mobility, the Germans decided to mount this gun on a modified Panzer I chassis. Alkett was tasked with developing such a vehicle, which it did in 1940. A small production run of 38 vehicles would be carried out. Despite its primitive construction and the limited number built, this vehicle, very creatively named 15 cm sIG 33 auf Panzerkampfwagen I ohne Aufbau Ausf.B, would remain in service up to 1943.
Join this channel to get access to exclusive perks:
/ @tanksencyclopediayt
If you liked this video, please consider donating on Patreon or Paypal!
Patreon: / tankartfund
Paypal: www.paypal.com...
Article: tanks-encyclop...
Sources:
T. Anderson (2020) The History of the Panzerwaffe, Osprey Publishing
J. Engelmann, Bison und andere 15 cm-Geschutze auf Selbstfahrlafetten, Podzun-Pallas-Verlag GmbH
P. Chamberlain and H. Doyle (1978) Encyclopedia of German Tanks of World War Two - Revised Edition, Arms and Armor press.
Ian V. Hogg (1975) German Artillery of World War Two, Purnell Book Services Ltd.
T. L. Jentz and H. L. Doyle (1998) Panzer Tracts No.10 Artillerie Selbsfahrlafetten
H. Doyle (2005). German Military Vehicles, Krause Publications
F. V. De Sisto (2010) Early Panzer Victories, Condor Publication Company
Tank Power Vol.XXIV 15 cm sIG 33(Sf) auf PzKpfw I/II/III, Wydawnictwo Militaria
D. Nešić (2008) Naoružanje Drugog Svetskog rata-Nemačka, Beograd
W. Oswald (2004) Kraftfahrzeuge und Panzer Motor Buch Verlag
T. Anderson (2019) Panzerartillerie, Osprey publishing
D. Predoević (2008) Oklopna vozila i oklopne postrojbe u drugom svjetskom ratu u Hrvatskoj, Digital Point Tiskara
Reddit: / tankencyclopedia
TE Shop: www.tanks-encyc...
Our website: www.tanks-encyc...
Gaming News Website: www.tanks-encyc...
Facebook: / tanksencyclopedia
Twitter: / tanksenc
Discord: / discord
Email: tanks.encyclopedia@gmail.com
An article by Marko P
Script by Marko P
Narrated by Mechakeller Russel
Edited by Julesans
Sound edited by Mechakeller Russel
I have respect for anyone that can pronounce German tank names
2:12 Notice how the German artilleryman opens his mouth before the FIRE! signal . This was to distribute the force of the shock away from the eardrums and brain
Still mystifies me that they didn’t bother taking off the wheels.
Given later silly Waffentrager ideas, they probably had a mandate that the gun had to be dismountable.
The gun mount was designed so as the gun can be dismounted but it need a crane !
I know,and the rudimentary fixing arrangement is medieval.
The idea was to still be able to dismount the gun and place it in dug-up defensive position etc.
@@George_M_ how is that silly? Since the carriages are weak, it's safer to shoot from dismount whenever possible, and allows to shoot from fortified emplacements in defense.
Designs which were optimised for safe firing from carriage, like Grille, Wespe or Hummel didn't have dismount option added.
It is interesting how little attention the German infantry guns get during the Second World War, despite them being so important to German concepts of how to deal with problems encountered in the Great War, when it was determined a small section of specialized artillery able to directly fire in support of infantry rather than depending on area fire would have greatly helped deal with the many fortified positions and bunkers that became common fixtures of the more open battlefields of the war.
I have a facsimile Artillery map with tracing paper overlay and fields of fire marked and scheduled for rolling barrages.Looks bloody confusing is an understatement.
@@darronhedges5873 For sure. And Germans really didn't want to have to do that for everything when they could have more precise guns that could really put a few aimed shots more or less right on target rather than making the full-size howitzers do all the work all the time. Saved a lot of work for the big long-ranged howitzers by having these smaller guns on hand.
Yes! Very underrated and overshadowed by more "flashy" units, infantry guns were important as a very flexible asset. A quickly deployable set of guns at the ready to sling HE-shells at the instant, without having to wait to coordinate with artillery units in the rear, was a big advantage on the battlefield. You'll be hard pressed to ever see one in the movies, yet these guns were often mentioned by veterans as very effective whenever they encountered a strong target.
Some with the Soviet SU series.
The 706th company ship being sunk in the adriatic means you could potentially recover some of them from the wreck if someone had the money to burn :)
Probably scrap collector company`s did already recover the ship and its load after wwII.
Biggest problem I could think of is the salt water. Wouldn't be much left of them now.
My daily dose of tank knowledge
yay
Nine SIG 33 on Pz1 Knowledge
wahoo
12:45 thats german accuracy at its finest: counting every bolt even under war conditions
24 bunkers, 31 guns, 13 AT guns, and 6 tanks for this type of platform is insanely good.
I love these armoured vehicles made from taking one vehicle and adding on to it to make something different, keep up the good work!
doing leggs watching this
Real
I bet they're pretty huge, or at least well toned
Based gym bro
Just finished building the /35 dragon kit.I’ve built a few PzI”s and it’s such a slapdash design it borders the comical.KV1! No problem,send out the Big gun.
i had used a like that in world of tanks very fun to used but very bad when the enemies comes near easy target
That feel when you get hit by several shells in critical areas in less than a second
The more I learn about this vehicle the more of an enigma it becomes. It truly could only exist in a certain point in time. Used as an offensive weapon against an enemy of mostly poorly trained and led infantry. Once supply lines were extended and the Russians were on the offensive, it became a liability. The sig 33 was abandoned in great numbers during the withdrawal from the Rhezev salient after the failed assault on Moscow.
I couldn't imagine using this vehicle at point blank ranges against a competent enemy. That would be suicide.
I can’t imagine using it at all it’s s huge target no real protection and it’s liable to break
hello everyone
Hulloooo yourself😊
affirmative
Sup man
I copy!
Hey bro
Such a cool little tank with a big gun.
Would you consider making a video that shows what kind of damage happens when a tank takes a hit? It would be interesting to see some examples of what exactly goes on, depending on the caliber, tank and type of round.
Sounds like they built it with stuff from Home Depot lol
what a maintenance nightmare
I really like the Panzer II version, it looks way less dorky than the Panzer I.
Big biceps, small calves.
Great and informative film, I only knew this vehicle from film footage.
The one reason they actually did have to remove the gun was not so much to use it as a conventional gun but to access the engine as access to it was blocked by the gun. Which certainly didn't help maintenance
We will station you in a vehicle , behind paper thin armorer , very tall and easy to see , in a area where you will break down most of the time , firing a weapon that draws maximum attention from the enemy ! Great sign me up sir .
😂😂😂
Badly needed laugh at the title. Thanks folks
I love how those early german SPGs look like Ork Vehicles from 40k 😂
And that's why you should never miss a leg day
the fact they didn't even bother to take off the WHEELS of the gun ...
Gaijin when?
Can you guys please do a video obaut the american t29 heavy? I cant seem to find any videos on it aside from warthunder reviews
we need this chubby thing in warthunder
We need all the mobile artillery guns added into war thunder for the lols.
Funny enough, they removed this from World of Tanks, but if you had it prior, it's still in your garage
one of the nicer looking tanks
I feel like this vehicle would have been best used in Stalingrad provided that it was supported by infantry
Ferda!!!
@2:05 look at that pogger lighting up his spliff between rounds
Love the detail on this shit fam ! I like that kind of stuff
I personally dont get why they didnt get a fast geared tracktor to just push the standard 15cm gun. It would have been cheaper and have better power to weight ratio than the pz1
Alket puts a gun on a panzer chassis gives it a ludicrously long designation and calls it a day lol.
So 6 of them are still at the bottom of the Adriatic. Lots of tanks went down wylam in transit. May be a good idea for a article.
It was unnecessary primitive. Why not taking the gun from its wheels put it a bit deeper in the Panzer I chassis add an 8mm protective shield.
Because it was a stop-gap solution. Proper 15cm support vehicle was made and it was the Grille - this one was designed for it's role from ground up and doesn't exactly look "primitive".
@@czwarty7878 The manufacturer of this interim solution was ALKETT. Alkett was an established producer of tank vehicles. On my point of view unnecessary primitive.
The Grille was built on a 38T body. These vehicles were used for tank destroyers and other purposes. The Mark I tank was really surplus and as of 1941 of no use anymore.
Did the 15 cm SIG 33 howitzer use semi-fixed ammunition like most 150 mm guns? The film doesn't show anyone putting powder bags in after the projectile. If so, that might explain why recoil didn't destroy the vehicle on the first shot.
Wikipedia article on the weapon indicates semi-fixed, without a lot of detail. Consider the source, but seems likely. Reference to the #6 charge indicates crews could vary propellant, and the ready ammunition seems to start out as a combined round, rather than separate shells/powder cases.
@@old_guard2431 - That makes sense. But you can imagine that crew would be careful before shooting a hot load from something so precarious.
1:04 just roles off the tongue
Good design, wrong chassis
8:49 you know i cant help but think that they probably would have been better off just leaving the machine gun turrets on the panzer1's and just useing them to tow the sig15's lol at least they would have machine gun support lol
why not use the panzer2 chassis ?
They did afterwards
@@TanksEncyclopediaYT can you link the pictures?
@@omnianti0 We don't have an article on it yet, but you can Google the wrong name: Sturmpanzer II
They literally just put a towed gun on top of a tank and called it a day
8:50 Yugoslavia was invaded in April 1941, not 1940. Good video otherwise.
make a video on the Projekt NM
Gaijin, plz add
When will War Thunder add in mobile artillery guns? Because this one looks to be meme potential.
It already ad multiple examples.
@@Galvars more ww2 guns in particular.
@@merafirewing6591 the gun is already in the game , sturmpanZer 2 and Brummbär., But the only country who lacks WW2 derp guns is great Britain 😢
SHQ make a 1:76th scale model, in metal, for use in 20mm. wargames.
Seems like it would be a little bit better if it was put on a Pz III or even IV chassis
They didn't have the industrial capacity at the time. Only later in the war after for example, the Pz III was declared obsolete, could such hulls could be used.
ua-cam.com/video/A4cV1scYJPg/v-deo.html
they where more or less the same, isn't it? The one created for Stalingrad was just more protected.
Stop using that irritating transition sound.
Is it me or the music that starts playing at 4:06 is from Genshin Impact? It sound like the one that plays in the Domain "Cecilia Garden", the soundtrack name is "Beats of Water Drops"
The Russian have bad logistic since the USSR era.
This vehicle has the same form as Göring 🥸
1:10 Jesus Christ that pronunciation is abominable