43M Zrínyi

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Zrínyi
40-43M Zrínyi II - Hungarian Assault gun (23946901978).jpg
Zrínyi II in Kubinka Tank Museum
TypeAssault gun
Place of originKingdom of Hungary
Service history
In service1943-1945
Used byKingdom of Hungary Kingdom of Hungary
WarsWorld War II
Production history
DesignerManfréd Weiss
Designed1942-1943
ManufacturerManfréd Weiss, Ganz
Produced1943–1944
No. built72 (43M Zrínyi II)
Variants43M Zrínyi II
Specifications (Zrínyi II)
Mass21.5 t
Length5.90 m (19 ft 4 in)
Width2.99 m (9 ft 10 in)
Height1.90 m (6 ft 3 in)
Crew4

Armour13–75 mm (0.51–2.95 in)
Main
armament
40/43M 105 mm MÁVAG L/14 or L/20.5 howitzer
42 rounds
EngineManfréd Weiss Z-V8H-4 8 cylinder
260 hp
Power/weight12 hp/t
Operational
range
220 km (140 mi)
Maximum speed 43 km/h (27 mph)

The 43M Zrínyi II was a Hungarian assault gun of the World War II period. While the Turán in itself wasn't particularly successful, it did give birth to a rather good self-propelled-gun: the Zrínyi assault gun.

Development[]

Knocked out Zrínyi II Assault Gun at Vérmező park, Budapest, 1945

The Zrínyi's development process started in 1942; after the Hungarian delegation had the chance to witness the success of the StuG III Ausf. F armed with a long 75 mm anti-tank gun or short 105 mm howitzer.[1]

Hungary attempted to negotiate with Germany to try and acquire StuG IIIs. However, they could only receive a fraction of what they needed, and started to design a similar vehicle of their own.[2]

Following the success of assault guns on the Eastern Front, the situation required the fastest way possible to start the production of a vehicle of the same role. The engineers at the Manfréd Weiss Works decided to use the base of the Turán tank as it was a proven, solid chassis already in use in the Hungarian army.[3]

As for the armament, both a first variant mounting the long-barrelled 43M 75 mm anti-tank gun (which was still in development), and another version equipped with the 40M 105 mm MÁVAG howitzer which was compatible with the leFH 18's ammunition was considered.[1]

Design[]

The hull of the Turán was made wider and higher to make space to house the large caliber cannon, with the front armor being reinforced to a total thickness of 75 mm.[1]

The first variant would become the armed with the 43M 75 mm gun and 100 mm frontal armor, being accepted for service in 1944, and the latter one resulted in the 43M Zrínyi II. The Zrínyi II was armed with a short barrel (14 or 20.5 calibers) 105 mm MÁVAG 40/43M howitzer.[4] The Zrínyi II's design was a traditional infantry support vehicle, while the Zrínyi I was hoped to fulfill an anti-tank role.[5]

Production[]

After the successful army trials in December 1942, the military leadership ordered 40 Zrínyi IIs. These were finished until the end of 1943. In January 1944, 50 more vehicles were ordered, 20 of these rolled out of the factories between March and July.[1]

Captured Zrínyi II near Kolozsvár in late 1944

On July 27, after 6 new Zrínyis were finished in the morning, an aircraft raided and bombed the factory which crashed. Around 20 semi-finished Zrínyi 105s were saved and at least 6 of them were rebuilt by Ganz. A total number of 72 43M Zrínyi IIs were delivered to the armored units leastwise.[1]

Service[]

The 43M Zrínyis were sent to the 1st, 2nd and 3rd assault battalions, and mainly fought in Galicia in the summer of 1944 against the massive Soviet offensive.[5]

Several Zrínyi IIs were captured by the USSR during the Soviet occupation of Hungary, one was also captured by Romania during October 1944, but it was later confiscated by the Red Army.[6]

There is only one surviving Zrínyi II in the Kubinka tank museum near Moscow.

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Magyar Harckocsik a II. Világháborúban". War Thunder - Official Forum. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
  2. ^ "40/43M. Zrínyi II and 44M. Zrínyi I assault guns | For the Record". Retrieved 2021-10-16.
  3. ^ "43M Zrinyi". www.militaryfactory.com. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
  4. ^ "40M 10,5 cm tábori tarack | A II. Világháború Hadtörténeti Portálja". www.roncskutatas.com. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
  5. ^ a b "43M Zrinyi tank hunter". www.tanks-encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
  6. ^ Axworthy, page 221

Sources[]

  • Bíró Ádám: A 40/43. M Zrínyi–II rohamtarack fejlesztése és alkalmazása. Haditechnika, I. rész: 1996/1, 66–71., II. rész: 1996/2, 43–45.; III. rész: 1996/4, 66–69. (In Hungarian)
  • Mark Axworthy, Cornel Scafeș, Cristian Crãciunoiu, Third Axis. Fourth Ally. Romanian Armed Forces in the European War, 1941-1945, Arms and Armour, London, 1995. ISBN 1-85409-267-7

External links[]

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