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Difference between revisions of "Panzerbüchse 38 / 39"

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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[[Image:PzB-39.jpg|thumb|right|500px|PzB 39 Anti-tank rifle - 7.92x94 mm (Patrone 318) ]]
 
[[Image:PzB-39.jpg|thumb|right|500px|PzB 39 Anti-tank rifle - 7.92x94 mm (Patrone 318) ]]
 
[[Image:PzB-39-2.jpg|thumb|right|500px|PzB 39 Anti-tank rifle with spare ammunition box attached to the gun - 7.92x94 mm (Patrone 318) ]]
 
[[Image:PzB-39-2.jpg|thumb|right|500px|PzB 39 Anti-tank rifle with spare ammunition box attached to the gun - 7.92x94 mm (Patrone 318) ]]
The  '''''Panzerbüchse'' 39 (PzB 39)''' (German: "tank hunting rifle model 39") is a German anti-tank rifle used during World War II that is an improvement of the earlier PzB 38. It is a single-shot, manually loaded weapon that uses a falling-block action. To increase the rate of fire, a box containing spare cartridges could be mounted on the rifle's side. This is not a feeding device, but instead simply put spare ammunition within easy reach of the operator. Its cartridge is the propriety 7.92x94mm round, based on the common 7.92x57mm Mauser round, but with a much longer 94mm casing. It was first produced in 1939 and saw action during the Invasion of Poland and the opening phases of the war against the Soviet Union. The rifle was phased out by 1944; by that time, developments in tank armor systems rendered most anti-tank rifles ineffective against all but the lightest armored vehicles.  
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The  '''''Panzerbüchse'' 39 (PzB 39)''' (German: "tank hunting rifle model 39") is a German anti-tank rifle used during World War II that is an improvement of the earlier [[PzB 38]]. It is a single-shot, manually loaded weapon that uses a falling-block action. To increase the rate of fire, a box containing spare cartridges could be mounted on the rifle's side. This is not a feeding device, but instead simply put spare ammunition within easy reach of the operator. Its cartridge is the propriety 7.92x94mm round, based on the common 7.92x57mm Mauser round, but with a much longer 94mm casing. It was first produced in 1939 and saw action during the Invasion of Poland and the opening phases of the war against the Soviet Union. The rifle was phased out by 1944; by that time, developments in tank armor systems rendered most anti-tank rifles ineffective against all but the lightest armored vehicles.  
 
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Revision as of 02:51, 27 September 2021

PzB 39 Anti-tank rifle - 7.92x94 mm (Patrone 318)
PzB 39 Anti-tank rifle with spare ammunition box attached to the gun - 7.92x94 mm (Patrone 318)

The Panzerbüchse 39 (PzB 39) (German: "tank hunting rifle model 39") is a German anti-tank rifle used during World War II that is an improvement of the earlier PzB 38. It is a single-shot, manually loaded weapon that uses a falling-block action. To increase the rate of fire, a box containing spare cartridges could be mounted on the rifle's side. This is not a feeding device, but instead simply put spare ammunition within easy reach of the operator. Its cartridge is the propriety 7.92x94mm round, based on the common 7.92x57mm Mauser round, but with a much longer 94mm casing. It was first produced in 1939 and saw action during the Invasion of Poland and the opening phases of the war against the Soviet Union. The rifle was phased out by 1944; by that time, developments in tank armor systems rendered most anti-tank rifles ineffective against all but the lightest armored vehicles.


Specifications

  • Produced: 1939-1942
  • Calibre: 7.92x94 mm (Patrone 318)
  • Action: Falling-block
  • Length: 1,620 mm (63.8 in)
  • Barrel length: 1,085 mm (42.7 in)
  • Weight: 11.6 kg (25.57 lb)
  • Muzzle velocity : 1265 m/s
  • Effective range: 300 m (330 yd) (for penetration of 20 mm armor)
  • Feed system: Single shot, no magazine

The PzB-39 (Panzerbüchse 39) German anti-tank rifle appears in the following:

Films

Title Actor Character Notation Date
We Will Come Back (Sekretar raykoma) Soviet partisans 1942
Invincible (Nepobedimye) German soldiers 1943
Zigmund Kolosovskiy Seen among Polish partisans weapons 1946
Soldiers (Soldaty) 1956
How I Unleashed World War II German soldiers 1970
Poem of Kovpak: Snow-Storm (Duma o Kovpake: Buran) Soviet partisans 1975

Video Games

Game Title Appears as Mods Notation Release Date
World War II Online: Battleground Europe 2001-2011
Forgotten Hope 2 "PzB39" 2007
Battlefield Heroes Cartoonified Level 10 sniper rifle 2009
Deadfall Adventures Pzb.38 Anti-Tank Has Granatbüchse 39 sights 2013
Post Scriptum Introduced with Plane Jaune update 2018
Battlefield V Panzerbüchse 39 Introduced in Chapter 4 update (June 2019) 2018
Heroes & Generals Panzerbüchse-39 2019

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