Preserved Tanks .com
    World Register of Surviving Historic Armoured Vehicles

Current Query: Full entry for the tank(s)/location: by Type and Update, Location & Update with Spare Photos, NavPix & Videos

Query Buttons: Full entry for this tank. All tanks of this type. All tanks at this location.


UNIQUE ID 129: STURMGESCHÜTZ III ASSAULT GUN

(Model: Ausf G)

Panzermuseum, Munster, Germany

(Location: Panzermuseum)


Powered By Subgurim(http://googlemaps.subgurim.net).Google Maps ASP.NET
Powered By Subgurim(http://googlemaps.subgurim.net).Google Maps ASP.NET

MAP CONTROLS: Use slider or mousewheel to zoom, and hold down left mouse button to drag.
KEY: Location markers are coloured from Green meaning exact to Red meaning gone or unknown (details here)

Sample Photo from Tank with UniqueID 129


Unique ID: 129
Added to Database: May 2008
Last Edited: May 2008
Type (ID): Sturmgeschütz III (80)
Model (ID): Ausf G (161)
Location Category (ID): Panzermuseum (100)
Location (ID): Panzermuseum (100)
Serial Number:
Registration:
Name:
Other Identification:
Collection Reference:
Links: Links: Armor for the Ages – bottom-left picture
References:
Associated Tanks:

Location History:
(see map)

1: Altmärkische Kettenfabrik (Alkett) GmbH, Berlin-Spandau, Germany (Primary manufacturer)
2: U.S. Army Ordnance Museum, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Harford County, Maryland, USA (From 1945)
3: Patton Museum of Cavalry and Armor, Fort Knox, Kentucky, USA (Until 1979)
4: Panzermuseum, Munster, Soltau-Fallingbostel, Lower Saxony, Germany (Current location)


Text in original Preserved German Tanks publication:

This Ausf G was manufactured in December 1944. The details of its wartime history and parent unit are not known, however it is known that it was captured in 1945 by US troops and transported to Aberdeen Proving Ground in the USA. It went subsequently to Fort Knox in Kentucky and was donated in September 1979 to Kampftruppenschule 2 by the Patton Armour Museum at Fort Knox. It was restored by Panzer Werkstatt (Armour Workshop) No. 1 between 1983 and 1987 and is now in running order. It carries the number “101”.
It is a late-production model with steel return-rollers. It has a Saukopf mantlet with coaxial machine-gun and a cast cupola shield. It is unusual in that its front plate to the right of the gun is made from one piece of 80mm armour.

Text in Preserved German Tanks Update:

[No entry]

Images - Photographs and NavPix (click to expand or browse)

Date Unknown

Front right view
1: Front right view

Taken: Date Unknown
Contributor: T. Larkum
Photo ID: 64
Added: 27 May 2008
Filename: Scan_Stu...
Views: 284
Select/Has Priority: 1/0