parsifal
Colonel
Guys how many tanks you produce depends on the facilities available.On the one hand SU had Chelyabinsk and Nizhny Tagil while on the same scale Germany only had Nibelungenwerk in Austria .Also it would be best if people who think that German tanks took 2.000.000 hours and only 5 for the T-34 actually source their material.
Who said that it took 2 million hours versus 5 hours for Tiger and T-34 production?
A pretty good discussion of the manhours needed to produce each tank is availble on the Axis history Forums. here is a link if you are interested
Axis History Forum • View topic - Manhour required to produce armament
None of the figures given for production times are reliable, which explains why there are wildly fluctuating differences in th manhours per unit produced. I myself have seen figures ranging from 7 times the hours, down to about 2.2 times when comparing Panther to T-34.
There are numerous factors that go to explaining this fluctuation. For a start it depends on the point of reference. If you look at the first Tiger produced, a figure of around 300000 man hours is going to surface. You can then compare that to a T-34 during its peak production runs and arrive at a figure of 11000 man hours per (T-34) tank. On the face of it, the production times per Tiger tank are about 30 times that of a T-34. but this would be a gross misuse of the stats. I believe that it may well have cost 300000 man hours for Tiger production, at the beginning of its production run, and that it may well have cost just 11000 man hours for a t-34 during the height of its production. But the figures are just not comparable. Once the tiger got into stride the time taken to produce each unit came down dramatically.
But I still firmly am of the opinion that the production costs for the advanced German tank designs were prohibitive. Some of this arose from the poor management of the lines themselves, where the germans allowed constant detail changes to the designs to occur, with resultant disruptions to the production programs occurring almost continually. Some of the problems arose from materials shortages, and transport bottlenecks. Some delays occurred as a result of bombing. Some of the delays occurred because the germans were about a year behind the Russians in setting up the lines for their new designs. Ths meant that the production of these types was occurring behind a backdrop of setting up the line in the first place and that the new types were essentially prototypes whilst the Russians wre producing a tried and proven design. Some of the problems arose from the relatively small size of the factories themselves. Some problems arose becaise of the inherent innefficiencies in the Nazi system, which deeply corrupt and basically innefficient. And some of the problems arose because the designs themselves were over complex and difficult to build
Panther tank production is an intersting case study. Production began in 1943, and a target production figure of 600 vehicles per month was set. This was never attained. In 1943, the average production rate was 148 vpm. With basically the same factory space and workforce, this steadily ramped up in 1944, to a peak of 380 in September. Then the Allies bombed the MAN Diesel plant, halting engine production for nearly 5 months....production continued but at a reduced rate. . It demosntrates the difficulties the germans were labouring under....