Military history

Tiger I in Combat

Tiger I in Combat

“The Pz. Kpfw. VI with its heavy armor, dual purpose armament and fighting ability is basically an excellent tank.” Major W. de l. Messenger, British Intelligence, 1944.

The Tiger I is the most famous tank in history. In the right hands, it enjoyed spectacular successes, but the Tiger I was also plagued by an array of technical and design flaws, which made it a death trap for novice and unwary crews.

This unique overview draws on a wide variety of primary accounts of the Tiger I in action from both the Allied and the German perspective. Rare photographs, technical drawings and contemporary reports of the Tiger in combat help to set aside the myths and bring the reality into focus.

This book is part of ‘The Hitler’s War Machine’ series, a new military history range compiled and edited by Emmy Award winning author and historian Bob Carruthers. The series draws on primary sources and contemporary documents to provide a new insight into the true nature of Hitler’s Wehrmacht.

The series consultant is David Mcwhinnie creator of the award winning PBS series ‘Battlefield’.

Introduction

Production of the Tiger

The Development Process

The Unpleasant Surprise

Deployment

The Mechanics of the Tiger I

Production History

Design Features

Getting to the Battlefield

Mobility

Tiger Recovery

Tiger Colour Schemes

Design Review

Production Run Modifications

Combat History

Road Marches

Tactical Organisation

The Russian View

Tiger Aces

Tigerphobia

Inside the Tiger

“Yank” Magazine

Tiger I Tanks in Sicily

Armour and Armament

The Two Extremes

The British Response

Tiger I Tanks in Normandy

The Soviet Response

Tigers in Italy

Tank Losses

Notable Variants

The End of the Tiger

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