It is German for Tank Fist
Panzerfaust Records was created in 1998.
Panzerfaust Records ended in 2005.
The cast of Peter Panzerfaust - 2013 includes: Travis Aaron Wade as Gilbert Dante Basco as Alain Summer Glau as Wendy Ron Perlman as Captain Haken Enn Reitel as Older Gilbert Elijah Wood as Peter
The Germans used the PanzerFaust (tank fist). It was a disposable anti tank weapon.
Bazooka , RPG , B40 , LAW , AT4 , NebelWerfer , Stalin Organ and PanzerFaust . A Verry pistol ? sending up a flare when in trouble at sea
It's the Soviet designation for a rocket launcher. The first model was the RPG-2, which was based largely on the German Panzerfaust. The most famous model is the RPG-7.
A German made rocket launcher with a rectangle sight is called a panshereck
Germany-Kar98k(bolt action standard rifle)Panzer tank, luger, mp 44, panzerfaust, striegelhande(grenades), tons of other less comon stuff. Japan that stuff minus the panzerfaust and the panzer tank and add on the arisaka bolt action rifle. America- m1 garand semi auto rifle standard, m1 bazooka, tiger tank, BAR automatic rifle, springfield bolt action rifle. stuff like that nothin fancy
* World Class Tanks. * Cruise Missles. * Ballistic Missles. * Rocket Aircraft. * Jet Aircraft. * Panzerfaust. All of that advantage, and they still lost the War.
A comparison is impossible to my way of thinking because the MG42 was a machine gun and the bazooka was a rocket launcher. It is an apples versus oranges contest. The German counterpart to the bazooka would be the panzerschreck, or possibly the panzerfaust. The US counterpart to the MG42 would be the Browning M1919.
the Germans used a panzerfaust and panzersherk which were carried by foot soldiers and artillery pieces such as the pak (short for Panzerabwehrkanone) 38,48 and 50 one of the most famous anti tank weapons they used was known as an 88. the 88 cannon was also used as an anti air gun as well
The RPG is developed from, a direct descendant of, the Nazi "Panzerfaust" of WWII. This was the hand-held German anti-tank weapon, and far superior to the US bazooka. Both make use of "shaped charge" technology to focus the blast, but the Panzerfaust was more powerful and reliable than the bazooka. Soldiers in the field voted for the Panzerfaust in the most demonstrative way - whenever they could, they carried and used captured German Panzerfausts. But the US made no move to develop a program to produce them on its own. Similarly, the most feared and useful artillery piece of the war was the German 88MM high-velocity cannon. This was an amazing design, a naturally "balanced" piece and again, far superior to the US 90MM high-velocity weapon. Again the US made no effort to replace its procurement program with the copied German design. The US has weapons which produce a similar effect to the RPG today. They have not widely used these in the recent conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq because the US policy is to restrict the possibility of "collateral damage" - killing people you don't mean to kill. This has reduced the array of weapons from the light infantry arsenal available to troops in the field to small arms only. The opponents of US troops have no such compunctions about the possibility of innocents being harmed, and thus no restrictions on the use of high-explosives in urban settings.