AT-Rifle Team: Difference between revisions

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The AT-Rifle team is a unit in Flames of War availble for the German army to recruit. In reality, German AT-rifles were largely an ad hoc collection of captured equipment, outdated weapons, or typically overengineered weapons that were introduced just too late to be relevant in the battlefields of WWII.
The '''AT-Rifle team''' is a unit in [[Flames of War]] availble for the German army to recruit. In reality, German AT-rifles were largely an ad hoc collection of captured equipment, outdated weapons, or typically overengineered weapons that were introduced just too late to be relevant in the battlefields of WWII.


==IRL==
==IRL==
The Origin of the Anti-tank rifle starts in the battlefields of WWI. See, there were these big fat [[Rhino|MEHTAWL BAWKSES]] called armoured cars, which the Germans and allies hated very much. Early attempts by both sides to make standard infantry rifles work as At-rifles range from interesting but overdone to laughably terrible. By the time even the kinks in these weapons had been ironed out, the Germans brought up their own solution: Just manufacture a dedicated rifle that only shot armored vehicles, the Mauser M1918
[[File:Pzb39.jpg|thumb|"If ze Soviet tanks are as strong as they say, what good is das Gewehr gonna be?"]]


While it had a good chance of breaking the user's collarbone if shouldered incorrectly and produced a ton of noise, the design was surprisingly effective. After the end of the war, AT-Rifle development slowed, with very few actually being developed outside of Poland, Britian, Germany, and Finland. The most likely weapons you'll be looking at on these models is the Panzerbuchse 38 (a renamed Mauser M1918) and 39(an improved version).
The Origin of the Anti-tank Rifle started in the battlefields of WWI. See, there were these big fat [[Rhino|METHUWL BAWKSES]] called armoured cars, which both sides hated very much. Now, early attempts by both sides to make standard infantry rifles work as AT rifles... range from interesting but overdone to absolutely terrible, look it up for a good laugh. By the time even the kinks in these weapons had been ironed out, the Germans brought up their own solution: just manufacture [[Tau|a dedicated rifle meant to shoot armoured vehicles in the first place!]] Enter the Mauser M1918, also known as the ''Tankgewehr''. While it had a good chance of breaking the user's collarbone if shouldered incorrectly and produced a ton of noise, the design was surprisingly effective. The design was relatively straightforward: combine the idea of a bolt action rifle and a breech loading cannon, strap it into a system that can be fired from the ground, throw a big fucking round into the gun, aim at a tank, and turn the occupants into mush.  


The design was relatively straightforward: combine the idea of a bolt action rifle and a breech loading cannon, strap it into a system that can be fired from the ground, throw a big fucking round into the gun, aim at a tank, and turn the occupants into mush. However, this was extremely complex, and several other nations had already improved the concept with 5 round magazines, along with making them far more mobile and less likely to destroy your arm when firing.  
After the end of the war, AT rifle development slowed, with very few actually being developed outside of Poland, Britain, Germany, the USSR, Japan, and Finland. The most likely weapons you'll be looking at on these models is the Panzerbüchse 38, a renamed Mauser M1918, and Panzerbüchse 39, a version with a slightly larger round, but otherwise had no real changes compared to his daddy the 38. In spite of this, the PzBs both shared the traditional German weapon problem of being way too complex to operate reliably on a battlefield. Its mechanical system was incredibly complex, which slowed production and made maintenance a pain in the ass. Worse was that the Russians and British had both made 5 shot versions (The Boyes and the PTRS-41). Even the Katana wielders figured out how to make their [[Awesome|Type 97s take 20mm ammunition.]] Once the allies discovered the AT-rifle had become irrelevant against heavier armor, they simply replaced them with M2 Browning machine guns to deal with lighter threats, and developed Bazookas and PIAT's to deal with heavier armour.


The other problem was that the Americans had devloped this neat thing called the M21918 MG, which is the drunken lovechild of an AT-Rifle and a MG in one package that could penetrate soft skinned vehicles, be used against infantry, and as a bonus could throw some shots at enemy aircraft. So while the Germans had their AT-Rifles, the Allies began early transition to rockets or used the M2 instead.
In spite of its shortcomings they were retained until 1944 (when armor technology had long exceeded the ability for the AT rifle to remain relevant) and was completely phased out in favor of more powerful weapons such as the Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck, or were converted to fire rifle grenades. Today, the AT rifle concept is still in service as an "anti-materiel rifle". After all, why chuck an expensive guided missile at a target like a truck or car when a couple of .50 cal bullets/shells will do the work just fine...
 
In spite of its shortcomingsthey were retained until 1944, when armor technology had exceeded the ability for the AT rifle to remain relevant, and was completely phased out in favor of more powerful weapons such as the Panzerfaust and Panzershrek. Today, the AT rifle concept is still in service as an "anti-material rifle", which is really just a cheaper alternative to chucking a guided missile at a target like a truck or car.


{{Template:German Forces in Flames of War}}
{{Template:German Forces in Flames of War}}

Latest revision as of 10:25, 17 June 2023

The AT-Rifle team is a unit in Flames of War availble for the German army to recruit. In reality, German AT-rifles were largely an ad hoc collection of captured equipment, outdated weapons, or typically overengineered weapons that were introduced just too late to be relevant in the battlefields of WWII.

IRL[edit]

"If ze Soviet tanks are as strong as they say, what good is das Gewehr gonna be?"

The Origin of the Anti-tank Rifle started in the battlefields of WWI. See, there were these big fat METHUWL BAWKSES called armoured cars, which both sides hated very much. Now, early attempts by both sides to make standard infantry rifles work as AT rifles... range from interesting but overdone to absolutely terrible, look it up for a good laugh. By the time even the kinks in these weapons had been ironed out, the Germans brought up their own solution: just manufacture a dedicated rifle meant to shoot armoured vehicles in the first place! Enter the Mauser M1918, also known as the Tankgewehr. While it had a good chance of breaking the user's collarbone if shouldered incorrectly and produced a ton of noise, the design was surprisingly effective. The design was relatively straightforward: combine the idea of a bolt action rifle and a breech loading cannon, strap it into a system that can be fired from the ground, throw a big fucking round into the gun, aim at a tank, and turn the occupants into mush.

After the end of the war, AT rifle development slowed, with very few actually being developed outside of Poland, Britain, Germany, the USSR, Japan, and Finland. The most likely weapons you'll be looking at on these models is the Panzerbüchse 38, a renamed Mauser M1918, and Panzerbüchse 39, a version with a slightly larger round, but otherwise had no real changes compared to his daddy the 38. In spite of this, the PzBs both shared the traditional German weapon problem of being way too complex to operate reliably on a battlefield. Its mechanical system was incredibly complex, which slowed production and made maintenance a pain in the ass. Worse was that the Russians and British had both made 5 shot versions (The Boyes and the PTRS-41). Even the Katana wielders figured out how to make their Type 97s take 20mm ammunition. Once the allies discovered the AT-rifle had become irrelevant against heavier armor, they simply replaced them with M2 Browning machine guns to deal with lighter threats, and developed Bazookas and PIAT's to deal with heavier armour.

In spite of its shortcomings they were retained until 1944 (when armor technology had long exceeded the ability for the AT rifle to remain relevant) and was completely phased out in favor of more powerful weapons such as the Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck, or were converted to fire rifle grenades. Today, the AT rifle concept is still in service as an "anti-materiel rifle". After all, why chuck an expensive guided missile at a target like a truck or car when a couple of .50 cal bullets/shells will do the work just fine...

German Forces in Flames of War
Tanks: Panzer II - Panzer III - Panzer IV - Panther - Tiger - Tiger II - Panzer 38(t) - Captured Tank Platoon (Germany)
Transports: SdKfz 250 - SdKfz 251 - Opel Blitzwagen
Infantry: MG34 Platoon - AT-Rifle Team - Assault Pioneer Platoon - Grenadier Company - Fallshirmjager Company
Artillery: PaK-40 Anti-Tank Gun - Hummel - Panzerwerfer 42 - Wespe - Grille - PaK-43 - 12cm Mortar - 8cm Mortar - 21cm Nebelwerfer 42 - 30cm Nebelwerfer 42
Tank Destroyers and Assault guns: Marder - StuG III - Jagdpanzer IV - Nashorn - Elefant - Jagdtiger - Brummbar - Hetzer - Sturmpanzer II Bison
Armored Cars: SdKfz. 234/2 'Puma' - Sd.Kfz 222/223 - SdKfz. 231
Aircraft: JU-87 Stuka - HS-129 - ME-262 Sturmvogel
Anti-Aircraft: Flak 88mm - Flakpanzer IV Wirbelwind & Ostwind