On 26 May 1941,
Henschel and
Porsche were asked to submit designs for a 45-ton heavy tank capable of mounting the high velocity
8.8 cm Kwk 36 L/56 gun which was derived from the German
88 mm Flak 37 antiaircraft gun. Both the Henschel and Porsche tanks were to be fitted with the same turret supplied by
Krupp. The Porsche company worked on updating the
VK 30.01 (P) medium tank, Porsche's medium tank prototype, and adapted parts used on it for the new tank. The new Porsche tank, designated the VK 45.01 (P) was to be powered by twin
V-10 air cooled Porsche Type 101
gasoline engines which were mounted to the rear of the tank. Each of the twin engines would then
drive a separate generator, one for either side of the tank, which would then power each of two
electric motors, one powering each track from the rear drive sprocket. But the engines and drive train were generally new and unorthodox designs for a tank (other than
some brief experiments in the very early years), and due to being underdeveloped were prone to break down or require frequent maintenance. It was also difficult for the Third Reich to obtain additional amounts of quality copper to build whole new fleets of vehicles with electric drives in addition to the increasing demands of the
U-boat fleet (which used very similar
diesel-electric transmissions, which worked perfectly well); while it was easy enough to obtain quality copper to build a single prototype, once series production began, this became more difficult. These problems, and the fact that trials proved the tank to be less maneuverable than its competitor, were the reason why Henschel's identically armed and more conventional VK 45.01 (H) H1 prototype, which became the
Tiger I, was adopted for production instead. The VK 45.01 (P) chassis was later chosen to be the basis of a new heavy
Jagdpanzer (although designated a
Panzerjäger) which would eventually be called the
Ferdinand and mount the new, longer, 88 mm
Pak 43/2. Only one tank went into service as a command tank in the Ferdinand (
Elefant) unit, and served in Panzerjäger Abteilung 653. It was deployed in April 1944 and lost that subsequent July. == Design ==