9 products were found matching your search for StuG III in 1 shops:
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Stug Iii Sd.kfz. 142
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 26.81 $Unread book in perfect condition.
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Stug III and Stug IV: German Army and Waffen-SS Western Front, 1944-1945 (TankCraft)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 24.22 $In the last years of the Second World War the Sturmgeschütz III (StuG III) and Sturmgeschütz IV (StuG IV) played a vital role as assault guns during the German army’s struggle to block the Allied advance on the Western Front. As the Wehrmacht’s tank forces declined, these armored vehicles were thrown into every defensive operation. They are not as well known as the Tigers and Panthers, but German resistance would have been much weaker without them. They were also among the most frequently encountered German armored vehicles on the battlefields, which is why they are such a fascinating subject for Dennis Oliver in this volume in the TankCraft seriesHe uses archive photos and extensively researched color illustrations to examine the StuG III and StuG IV deployed by the German army and the Waffen-SS during these doomed campaigns. A key section of his book displays available model kits and aftermarket products, complemented by a gallery of beautifully constructed and painted models in various scales. Technical details as well as modifications introduced during production and in the field are also examined providing everything the modeler needs to recreate an accurate representation of these historic armored vehicles.
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Assault Gun StuG III Ausf.D SdKfz 142 (Armor PhotoGallery)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 112.94 $Technical/historical background illustrated with b/w photos and a selection of detailed walk around photographs highlighting technical details of German assault guns which combined the PzKpfw III tank chassis and the 7.5 cm StuK L/24 assault gun. Includes 161 full color exterior and interior photos of the SdKfz 142 StuG III Ausf. D preserved at the Pansarmuseum in Axvall, Sweden, 45 b&w historical photos of StuG III Ausf. A-E, and 7 pp 1/24th, 1/35th & 1/72nd scale drawings of both standard and tropicalised StuG III Ausf. D.
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Assault Gun Stug III Ausf.D SdKfz 142 (Armor Photogallery # 10) [first edition]
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 37.75 $Technical/historical background illustrated with b/w photos and a selection of detailed walk around photographs highlighting technical details of German assault guns which combined the PzKpfw III tank chassis and the 7.5 cm StuK L/24 assault gun. Includes 161 full color exterior and interior photos of the SdKfz 142 StuG III Ausf. D preserved at the Pansarmuseum in Axvall, Sweden, 45 b&w historical photos of StuG III Ausf. A-E, and 7 pp 1/24th, 1/35th & 1/72nd scale drawings of both standard and tropicalised StuG III Ausf. D.
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M10 Tank Destroyer vs StuG III Assault Gun (Paperback)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 25.53 $Although tanks like the Sherman and Panther captured the headlines, the Allies' M10 tank destroyer and the Germans' Sturmgeschütz (StuG) III were the unsung workhorses of the northwest European battlefields of 1944-45. While their mission was not principally fighting one another, their widespread use ensured their frequent encounters, from the Normandy bocage to the rubble-strewn streets of Aachen. The StuG III was the quintessential assault gun: a low-slung, heavily armored, turretless vehicle intended to provide direct-fire support for infantry formations. It was a jack of all trades, being used both for the traditional direct-fire role, but also increasingly for antitank defense; when its armament was improved from a short 75mm gun to the better-known long 75mm gun, it reached its pinnacle and remained largely unchanged from 1943 to 1945. It proved exceptionally valuable in Normandy as its low profile and excellent armament made it a useful infantry support weapon while at the same time it had more than adequate firepower to destroy standard Allied tanks such as the Sherman.The M10 3in Gun Motor Carriage was originally developed as a tank destroyer. It was based on the Sherman tank chassis but with less armor and a more powerful gun. By 1944, however, its 3in gun proved ineffectual against the most thickly armored German tanks such as the Panther and Tiger. As a result, by 1944, the US Army's M10 battalions were usually deployed in support of US infantry divisions to conduct direct-fire support. Essentially, the M10 became the US Army's principal assault gun in the 1944-45 ETO campaign, whether intended for this role or not.Widely deployed in roles their designers had not envisaged, these two armored fighting vehicles clashed repeatedly during the 11-month campaign that saw the Allies advance from Normandy to the heart of the Reich. Fully illustrated with specially commissioned artwork, this is the story of their confrontation at the height of World War II.
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M10 Tank Destroyer vs StuG III Assault Gun: Germany 1944 (Duel, 53)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 20.58 $Although tanks like the Sherman and Panther captured the headlines, the Allies' M10 tank destroyer and the Germans' Sturmgeschütz (StuG) III were the unsung workhorses of the northwest European battlefields of 1944-45. While their mission was not principally fighting one another, their widespread use ensured their frequent encounters, from the Normandy bocage to the rubble-strewn streets of Aachen. The StuG III was the quintessential assault gun: a low-slung, heavily armored, turretless vehicle intended to provide direct-fire support for infantry formations. It was a jack of all trades, being used both for the traditional direct-fire role, but also increasingly for antitank defense; when its armament was improved from a short 75mm gun to the better-known long 75mm gun, it reached its pinnacle and remained largely unchanged from 1943 to 1945. It proved exceptionally valuable in Normandy as its low profile and excellent armament made it a useful infantry support weapon while at the same time it had more than adequate firepower to destroy standard Allied tanks such as the Sherman.The M10 3in Gun Motor Carriage was originally developed as a tank destroyer. It was based on the Sherman tank chassis but with less armor and a more powerful gun. By 1944, however, its 3in gun proved ineffectual against the most thickly armored German tanks such as the Panther and Tiger. As a result, by 1944, the US Army's M10 battalions were usually deployed in support of US infantry divisions to conduct direct-fire support. Essentially, the M10 became the US Army's principal assault gun in the 1944-45 ETO campaign, whether intended for this role or not.Widely deployed in roles their designers had not envisaged, these two armored fighting vehicles clashed repeatedly during the 11-month campaign that saw the Allies advance from Normandy to the heart of the Reich. Fully illustrated with specially commissioned artwork, this is the story of their confrontation at the height of World War II.
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Stug IIl Enthusiasts' Manual (Hardcover)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 34.15 $The German Sturmgeschütz series of assault guns was a successful and cost-effective range of armoured fighting vehicles; of which some 10,000 were built during the Second World War. Based on the chassis of the Panzer III tank; the turret was replaced by an armoured fixed superstructure fitted with a more powerful 7.5cm StuK 40 L/48 gun. Originally intended as a mobile assault weapon for infantry support; the StuG was constantly modified and saw extensive use on all battlefronts as an assault gun and tank destroyer. Its fixed superstructure with limited-traverse mounting for the main armament was simpler and cheaper to build than the turret of the battle tank; plus its low height meant it was easy to camouflage and conceal. Towards the end of the war; more StuGs were built than tanks. StuGs also saw combat when used by several Axis allies; notably Romania and Finland. They were also exported to Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, and Spain. The Soviet Union gave some of their captured German vehicles to Syria in the 1950s, which continued to use them up until the War over Water against Israel in the mid-1960s. By the time of the Arab-Israeli Six-Day War in 1967; all of them had been either destroyed, stripped for spare parts, or placed on the Golan Heights as static pillboxes.
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SturmgeschTz III a, B, F, F L43, F/8, G (Paperback)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 20.18 $Paperback. First prototypes of German tank destroyer Sturmgeschutz III (StuG III) were built in 1937 and based on PzKpfw III Ausf. B tank. Vehicles were armed with short-barelled 75mm gun. From spring, 1942, StuG IIIs were equipped with StuK 40 75mm gun. Self propelled guns StuG III served in separated assault artillery units, and later in self propelled guns brigades. They were also used in support units of armoured divisions. The Sturmgeschuetz III was Germany's most-produced fully tracked armoured fighting vehicle during World War II. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Armour in Theatre: Camouflage & Markings Volume 1: Eastern Front, Spring and Summer 1943
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 21.38 $64 pages, softcover, color profiels and bw photos Color side views for: KV-15 SU-76 Panzer IVG Marder II Pz III Ausf L Valentine Flak 88 Pz IV Pz IIIM StuG III Panther T-34 Su-122 Ferdinand Armored Car 231 Cricket T-70 BT-7 M3 Lee Wespe Hummel Sturmpanzer IV Brummbar Sd.Kfz 2519 Panzer IVH Matilda KV-85 Pz IV Ausf D
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