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StuH.42 Ausf.F (early version)


_PabloSniper_
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Would you like to see him in the game?  

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  1. 1. Would you like to see him in the game?

  2. 2. What do you want it to be added as,if you want it?

  3. 3. BR



Hello everyone!
The suggestion that I bring today is the predecessor of StuH 42 G we have in the game today.

new03.jpg

 

It is basically a StuG III Ausf.F armed with the light field howitzer leFH 18/40 caliber 105 mm.
And what was his purpose in the game?

It would be similar to the StuH 42 G, however with less armor and more mobility.

Perfect to 2.7

So you must be wondering.
But why this?

Well, we have three alternatives:
1-We can put it between Stug A and StuH 42 G in the main tree. (probably a BR 2.7)
2-It can be a premium vehicle.
3-And it can also be a rare vehicle.

 

Quote

Official designation: 10,5cm SturmHaubitze 42 Alternative designation: Sd.Kfz.142, StuH 42 Year of foundation : 1941 Year of construction of the first prototype: 1942 Completion stage: one prototype and 1211 serial copies were built. Evaluating the campaign that ended in France, the command of the Army highly appreciated the actions of self-propelled artillery units. Nevertheless, in a number of cases, the capacity of the high-explosive shotgun of 75-mm short-barreled guns was clearly not enough to combat the clusters of enemy manpower and long-term field fortifications. In this connection, in the beginning of 1941, a requirement was announced for the installation on the chassis of the middle tank of a light field howitzer leFH 18/40 caliber 105 mm. The new car received the official designation 10.5cm SturmHaubitze 42 (Sd.Kfz.142) , but it is more known to us simply as StuH 42 . The design and manufacture of 12 pre-production samples was carried out by Alkett. As a base variant, the ready-made chassis of self-propelled guns StuG III Ausf.F. Accordingly, the undercarriage was similar to the Pz.Kpfw.III Ausf.G tank and, on one side, included the following components: six rubberized torsion bar support rollers, three supporting rollers, a front drive gear wheel, a rear guide wheel, a finely caterpillar track with steel tracks. The body of the self-propelled gun underwent minor changes - the installation of a larger gun required the completion of the front part of the felling. In addition, the 10.5cm StuH 42 adapted for the installation in the automatic control unit had a separate loading, which required changing the combat layout for 36 rounds (26 high-explosive fragmentation and 10 cumulative). The gun was able to be guided within 20 ° horizontally and in the range from -6 ° to + 20 ° vertically. In the rest, the StuH 42 body repeated the design of StuG III Ausf.F, preserving its layout and the booking scheme. Additional weapons consisted of one 7.92 mm MG34 machine gun with an ammunition of 600 rounds. The crew of the self-propelled gun consisted of 4 people: the commander, the gunner, the loading and the mechanic driver. The design work for StuH 42 was completed by the end of 1941, but due to numerous delays and a changed situation on the fronts, the assembly of the first prototype was delayed until March 1942. Further supplies were very modest. By October 1942, only 5 machines were assembled on the basis of StuG III Ausf.F and 4 on the basis of the newer StuG III Ausf.F / 8 self-propelled guns. Nevertheless, the issue was constantly growing and in the course of 1943 204 StuH 42 were already produced. The largest deliveries took place in 1944, when 903 self-propelled guns were collected, and in February 1945 the last 95 vehicles were released. The last series was distinguished by the installation of a gun in the mask of the "boar head" type. Another part of the self-propelled guns received 105-mm howitzers without a muzzle brake. The first serial StuH 42 entered the troops in March 1943 and by the beginning of the offensive on the Kursk Doug there were 68 units. Subsequently, 105-mm self-propelled guns were actively used on all fronts, and the most significant battles in their career were the battle in Hungary and the defense of Berlin. At present, not less than three StuH 42 have survived. One sample is in the exposition of the museums in Kubinka and Sinsheim.


Источник: http://aviarmor.net/tww2/tanks/germany/stuh42.htm

 

One such vehicle can still be seen at the Technikmuseum Sinsheim.

Spoiler

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Encyclopedia Of German Tanks Of WW 2 - The Complete Illustrated Dictionary of German Battle Tanks Armoured Cars - Self Propelled Guns

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Source:

 

I spent a couple of hours of my time doing some research on this tank, I hope you like the suggestion.

My best regards :salute:

Edited by _PabloSniper_
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  • Senior Suggestion Moderator

Open for discussion. :salute:

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  • 2 weeks later...

So just to clarify, The StuH 42 F and StuH 42 F/8 are not the same tanks. Also you have the exact same suggestion named two different ways. This one called StuH F / F/8, and this one called StuH 42 F. https://forum.warthunder.com/index.php?/topic/425365-stuh42-ausff/

This page we are on has no information about the StuH 42 F/8, which is the StuH 42 F with applique armour added on it that brings frontal protection to the level of the later StuH 42 G.

 

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5 hours ago, _PabloSniper_ said:

Both do not has applique armour, and has only 50mm of armor.
So what's the difference?

All StuG and StuH F/8 models had 30mm applique armour on the standard F chassis
.Image result for panzer 4 f applique armour

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  • 2 months later...
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8 hours ago, Chomusuke1 said:

Why not a late StuH 42 Ausf.G instead?

 

D751arK.jpg?1

It could use the Ts Grenades as well cince it didnt use a muzzle break

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  • 3 months later...
  • 2 weeks later...
On 11/01/2020 at 19:08, _PabloSniper_ said:

In practice it's the same as the current Stuh 42

 

No, it is most certainly not as the late Stuh 42 has one piece, non-bolted frontal armor, no muzzle brake for Triebspeigel-Geschoss and Kartätschenpatrone rounds, a co-axial MG, a roof MG, a Nahverteidigungswaffe for smoke, thicker 5 + 5 mm side skirts, a Saukopf mantlet, a cupola shot deflector, and one-piece rounds which would speed up the reload rate. In fact, I will suggest one:

Edited by Chomusuke1
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