![panzer corps core composition panzer corps core composition](https://steamcdn-a.akamaihd.net/steamcommunity/public/images/clans/5756290/b239db5f8e8b86ee80e03dbe3d53505b6b107b3d.jpg)
Despite the German tanks appeared numerically and technically inferior to the Anglo-French armored forces, equipped with a greater quantity of medium and heavy vehicles, German crews were trained and experienced in the new combined tactics of tanks, anti-tank guns and dive bombers, being able to exploit the advantages of the Panzer III, in particular, the modern radio communications system and the deployment of three men in the turret resulting in greater efficiency in the field, winning the Battle of France. By May 1940 there were 349 Panzer III tanks available for the attacks on France and the Low Countries. The panzer force for the early German victories was a mix of the Panzer I ( machine-gun only), Panzer II (20 mm gun) light tanks and two models of Czech tanks (the Panzer 38(t)) and the Panzer 35(t)). There were also technical problems with the Panzer III: it was widely considered to be under-gunned with a 37 mm KwK L/45 gun and production was split among four manufacturers ( MAN, Daimler-Benz, Rheinmetall-Borsig, and Krupp) with little regard for each firm's expertise, and the rate of production was initially very low (40 in September 1939, 58 in June 1940), taking until December 1940 to reach 100 examples a month. Nevertheless, the number of available Panzer IVs (211) was still larger than that of the Panzer III (98). Rommel in the Western Europe campaign (June 1940) Such low production numbers were due to tanks being given a low priority for steel relative to the more conventional needs of an army, such as artillery shells. However, even that low number could not be sustained, with production dropping to ten in April 1940. Development work was then halted and limited production was begun by Krupp in Magdeburg (Grusonwerk AG), Essen and Bochum in October 1939 with 20 vehicles built. The design work for the Panzer IV had begun in 1935 and trials of prototypes were undertaken in 1937, but by the time of the invasion of Poland only a few hundred 'troop trial' models were available. Guderian had planned for two main tanks: the Panzer III and the Panzer IV, with production starting in 19 respectively. Only 4% of the defense budget was spent on armored fighting vehicle (AFV) production. Basically, as a coherent unit, the combined arms tactic of the "blitzkrieg" shocked the Allies.ĭespite this, the German Panzer forces at the start of World War II appeared not especially impressive.
![panzer corps core composition panzer corps core composition](https://i.imgur.com/EcXm6Ht.png)
Using so-called " Blitzkrieg" ("lightning war") tactics, Heinz Guderian, Ewald von Kleist and other field commanders such as Erwin Rommel broke the hiatus of the Phoney War in a manner almost outside the comprehension of the Allied-and, indeed, the German-High Command. The German tank forces were a success especially due to tactical innovation. Heinz Guderian in the Battle of France with the 'Enigma' machine The first German tank, the A7V of 1918, was referred to as a Sturmpanzerwagen (roughly, "armoured assault vehicle"). The modern commonly used synonym is Kampfpanzer, or "battle panzer". The dated German term is Panzerkampfwagen, "tank" or "armoured combat vehicle". In particular, it is used in the proper names of military formations ( Panzerdivision, 4th Panzer Army, etc.), and in the proper names of tanks, such as Panzer IV, etc. The word is used in English and some other languages as a loanword in the context of the German military. It derives through the French word pancier, " breastplate", from Latin pantex, "belly". Panzer ( / ˈ p æ n z ər/ German pronunciation: ( listen)) is a German word that means " armour".