Campaign in the Soviet Union The Panzerwerfer 42 auf Maultier was used for larger scale rocket barrages against Soviet positions where a large bombardment of a big area would be more effective than more accurate
artillery fire. The Panzerwerfer's rocket barrages covered much larger areas and added more psychological elements to the fight: the amount of noise, smoke,
splinters, and flying debris as the rockets hit and exploded was considerable. The extensive use on the Eastern Front showed that this weapon could be employed effectively on the
Western Front as well. The weapon was finally introduced throughout the army on May 14, 1944, in France.
Campaign in France The western
Allies first went into action against the Panzerwerfer 42 after
D-Day. American intelligence before D-Day pointed to the use of rocket launchers such as the
Nebelwerfer by the German
Wehrmacht, but they were unprepared for the effects of a mobile, armored, camouflaged, and highly destructive rocket launcher mounted on a half-track chassis. The British and Canadians were the first of the western Allies to see the German rocket launchers in action against troop concentrations and Allied positions. The 7th Werfer Brigade, made up of the 83rd and 84th Regiments, was sent to
Normandy from
Beauvais after D-Day, and on June 10 it was in
Falaise; the next day, it was about 10 kilometers from
Caen. The unit was part of the attack on the Orne Bridge, which was a British held position over the
Orne River. The 84th Regiment of the brigade had fourteen combat ready Panzerwerfer, and the 83rd had about the same. Some other Werfer units were the 101st SS Werfer Abteilung, 101st Stellungs-Werfer Regiment, and the 102nd SS Werfer Abteilung, which was part of the
2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich. The 7th Werfer Brigade fired 8,000 tons of ammunition, notably onto Hill 112 (during
Operation Jupiter) in support of its recapture by German forces on June 30. The British were usually at the receiving end of the Panzerwerfer rockets in Normandy, but the 15 cm Nebelwerfers were used in large numbers against American, British, and Canadian troops throughout the summer of 1944.
Ardennes and Berlin The
Battle of the Bulge saw intensive use of German armored rocket launchers. The most concentrated, massed salvos were used in the
Ardennes region of Belgium in 1944 during the weeks of the German offensive. Panzerwerfer saw extensive use during April and May 1945, as the Soviets were quickly advancing on
Berlin and the German forces employed rocket artillery in a defensive mode. Rocket launchers were used in large numbers defending positions inside of Germany and close to Berlin as the Soviets advanced from the east and the Allies from the west. == Vehicle performance and weapon specifications ==