Kugelpanzer
Kugelpanzer | |
---|---|
Type | Either light tank or armored car |
Place of origin | Germany (presumed) |
Service history | |
In service | 1945 (presumed) |
Used by | Nazi Germany, Japanese Empire (Kwantung Army); presumed |
Wars | World War II Second Sino-Japanese War (?) |
Production history | |
No. built | 1 (presumed) |
Specifications | |
Mass | 1.8 tons |
Crew | 1 (?) |
Engine | single-cylinder engine |
The Kugelpanzer (lit. "spherical tank") is a one-man armoured vehicle built by Germany during World War II. The history of the vehicle is practically unknown other than the fact that at least one example was exported to Japan and used by the Kwantung Army. The machine remains something of a mystery due to the lack of records and the incompleteness of the sole surviving model.
Surviving example[]
Only one example of the Kugelpanzer still exists today. It was captured by the Soviets in Manchuria and is on display in the collection of German armored vehicles at Moscow's Kubinka Tank Museum where it is described simply as "exhibit no. 37". There is no record of it ever having been used in combat.[1][2] The vehicle was modified after its capture, repainted and its drive removed. In 2000 the original paintwork was restored.
Theories about the vehicle[]
Only five points seem certain based on the single known example:
- It is a German-made vehicle that was shipped to Japan.
- It was used as a light reconnaissance vehicle.
- It was captured by Soviet troops in 1945, presumably in Manchuria.
- The outer armour is only 5mm thick.
- The vehicle was powered by a single-cylinder two-stroke engine.
One can only deduce the functionality of the vehicle based on its exterior. It seems to be a one-man reconnaissance tank, equipped with an armoured outer wall and a viewing slot. The drive was probably located under or behind the driver. At the rear there is a steerable wheel to shift the center of gravity behind the axis of the two track wheels and to support rotary movements that are carried out with the track wheels. In stationary operation, the tank could probably serve as an armoured refuge or makeshift bunker. Based on available images, it cannot be determined whether there was an opening below the viewing slot to allow for the use of firearms from inside the tank.
Similar vehicles[]
Although not immediately equivalent, a possible precursor to the Kugelpanzer from the First World War era was a one-man tank known in France as a bouclier roulant.[3] In 1936, an article in the magazine Popular Science described a Texan inventor's design for a spherical armoured vehicle that was dubbed a tumbleweed tank. It was considerably larger than the German Kugelpanzer - offering space for three people and three machine guns along with necessary motors and other equipment. [4]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ FitzGerald, Michael (10 September 2018). Hitler's Secret Weapons of Mass Destruction: The Nazis' Plan for Final Victory. Arcturus Publishing. ISBN 9781789502640 – via Google Books.
- ^ Buckland, Robin (21 January 2019). Modelling German WWII Armoured Vehicles. The Crowood Press. ISBN 9781785005169 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Les Boucliers roulants", humanbonb.free.fr (in French), retrieved 11 November 2014
- ^ "Tumbleweed Tank", Popular Science, 1 June 1936, archived from the original on 23 December 2014, retrieved 11 November 2014
Books[]
Robert Dale Arndt Jr.: Strange Vehicles of Pre-War Germany & the Third Reich (1928–1945). 2006, IRP Publication
External links[]
- Media related to Kugelpanzer at Wikimedia Commons
- World War II stubs
- World War II tanks of Germany