Close-up view of the turret of a Tiger II heavy tank, Budapest, Hungary, Oct 1944

Historical Information
Caption     Close-up view of the turret of a Tiger II heavy tank, Budapest, Hungary, Oct 1944 ww2dbase
WW2-Era Location Name Budapest, Hungary
Date  Oct 1944
Photographer   
 
Source Information
Source    ww2dbaseGerman Federal Archives
Identification Code   Bild 101I-680-8282A-09
 
Related Content
More on...   
PzKpfw Tiger Ausf. B 'Tiger II'   Main article  Photos  
 
Licensing Information
Licensing  Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 Germany License (CC BY-SA 3.0 DE).

See Bild 101I-680-8282A-09 on Wikimedia Commons

According to the German Federal Archive (Bundesarchiv), as of 21 Jul 2010, photographs can be reproduced with if these preconditions are met:
- quote the "Federal Archives" as source,
- add the signature of the pictures and
- of name of the originator, i.e. the photographer.
...
You also can use fotos from the Federal Archives for free on Wikimedia Commons
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Bundesarchiv
According to the German Federal Archive (Bundesarchiv), as of 19 Jul 2023, "You also can use fotos from the Federal Archives on Wikimedia Common free of charge".

Please contact us regarding any inaccuracies with the above information. Thank you.
 
Metadata
Added By C. Peter Chen
Photo Size 800 x 535 pixels



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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Commenter identity confirmed Bill says:
21 Dec 2014 12:31:44 PM

BIG GUNS:

Good close up of the Henschel/Wegmann turret and the massive 8.8cm 88mm KwK 43 L/71 gun. Tiger II 233 of sH.Pz.Abt.503 (Heer) German Army check out the Turmzielfernrohr 9b Turret Telescopic Sight Monocular Sight that's above the drivers head. You just gotta love those German compound words

ZIMMERIT:

What was Zimmerit it was an anti-magnetic mine paste made from sawdust, clay and mica, check out the waffle-pattern around the turret. Introduced
in 1943 and later discontinued 1944.
I guess it added to the man hours needed to build and fitting out a tank. Did you know Zimmerit wasn't itself anti-magnetic but its raised and ridged surface prevented a magnetic shaped-charge from sticking to the tanks surface.

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