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Danisch's Jagdpanther 131 - Heavy Tank Hunter | 1:25 Scale

Danisch's Jagdpanther 131 - Heavy Tank Hunter | 1:25 Scale

$121.99 USD
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Sd.Kfz. 173 Jagdpanzer V "Jagdpanther" — Nr. 131 | schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 654 

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Panther chassis. The long 88. Fixed gun. No turret. No mercy.

The Jagdpanther didn't need a turret. It needed a firing lane.

Take the Panther chassis — the best balance of mobility and protection Germany had. Delete the turret. Build a sharply sloped fixed casemate into the hull. Mount the 8.8 cm Pak 43/3 L/71 — the same long 88 that armed the Königstiger — behind 80mm of frontal armor angled at 55 degrees, making the effective protection far heavier than the raw number suggests. The result was roughly 46 tonnes of purpose-built ambush predator that could kill anything the Allies or the Soviets fielded at ranges where they couldn't effectively fight back.

Wartime U.S. intelligence didn't mince words. They noted the gun's exceptionally flat trajectory and formidable armor penetration. They noted the vehicle's sophisticated one-radius steering that made it surprisingly agile despite the fixed gun. They called it a "handy weapon." Coming from the people who had to face it, that's as close to a compliment as the enemy gets.

Germany built roughly 400 Jagdpanthers — published totals vary depending on whether post-surrender completions are counted. Not enough to change the war. But every Allied tanker who saw that low, angular silhouette in a treeline remembered it. Three Jagdpanthers from a single unit knocked out 11 Churchill tanks on Hill 226 in Normandy. That's the kind of kill ratio that earns a vehicle its reputation inside a single afternoon.

The Jagdpanther is consistently regarded by historians and armor enthusiasts as the finest tank destroyer of the Second World War. Not the biggest. Not the heaviest. The best.


NO. 131 — COLMAR POCKET, JANUARY 1945

Nr. 131 belonged to 1. Kompanie, schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 654 — not a scratch formation, but a long-service army tank destroyer battalion with Eastern Front lineage going back to 1941. By January 1945, the 654th was fighting in Alsace during the bitter Colmar Pocket battles, the last major German-held territory west of the Rhine.

January 26, 1945. Near Riedwihr and Holtzwihr.

Nr. 131 was already running with mechanical trouble before the assault launched around 1400 hours. Its commander, Unteroffizier Karl-Heinz Danisch, was given the option to pull back for repairs. He chose to push into the attack so the infantry wouldn't lose Jagdpanther support.

The assault was repulsed by heavy artillery fire. On the withdrawal, Nr. 131 overheated between Riedwihr and Wickerschwihr around 1600 hours. Danisch and his driver, Stabsgefreiter Rensen, dismounted to inspect the engine deck — exposed, under fire, in the open.

Rensen was killed by a tank round during the repair attempt.

Danisch got back inside. The engine wouldn't restart. He traversed the gun onto enemy infantry and kept firing from a dead halt until anti-tank rounds set the vehicle ablaze. Secondary accounts record 16 anti-tank impacts from roughly 800 meters before the surviving crew bailed out and fought their way back to Elsenheim on foot.

Nr. 131 burned where it stopped. It never moved again.

That's not a legend. That's a crew story. A vehicle with mechanical trouble, a commander who chose to stay in the fight, a driver killed in the open, and a gun that kept firing until the machine was on fire around it. The Jagdpanther's story isn't just about the engineering. It's about the men who operated it under pressure that most of us can't imagine.


THE KIT

This is a Heritage Line release — our premium tier, built by the same manufacturing partner behind the Wittmann's Tiger I S04, the Lucky Tiger S33, and the Knight's Königstiger.

What you're building:

  • 1,463 pieces in 1:25 scale
  • The unmistakable Jagdpanther silhouette — low-slung casemate, sharply sloped armor, the long 8.8 cm Pak 43/3 protruding from the mantlet
  • Authentic Hinterhalt-Tarnung camouflage scheme
  • Functioning suspension — road wheels articulate, the stance settles naturally
  • Full interior detail — fighting compartment, breech, driver's station
  • 100% pad-printed markings — zero stickers. Nr. 131, Balkenkreuz, all printed directly onto the bricks.
  • Working tracks
  • Opening hatches
  • No crew figures included
  • Based on Jagdpanther Nr. 131 of schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 654, Alsace, January 1945

🎖️ BATTALION EXCLUSIVE PRICING

Retail: $121.99

YOUR INTRO PRICE: $101.99

$20 off before the public ever sees it. Battalion gets first claim.