Historical Information for Panzerjager I  
      The Panzerjäger I ("Tank Hunter I") was the first of the Panzerjager  designs for German tank destroyers in the Second World War. It was based on the  converted chassis of the Panzer I Ausf. B and was armed with the Skoda  47 mm PaK L/43 anti-tank gun. The Panzerjäger  proved to be a cheap and fairly effective solution to help counter French  tanks, and served to extend the usable lifetime of obsolete Panzer I tanks. 
       
      The Panzerjaeger  I had an open superstructure. 
      As with most early tank  destroyers, the crew was highly vulnerable, their only protection coming from a  frontal gun shield; the gun also had a very limited traverse. 
      202 Panzer I tanks were  converted, 132 by Alkett and 70 by Skoda. The Skoda  conversion is recognizable by its seven-sided gun shield versus the Alkett  model's five-sided shield. 
      They were first used in France, and continued to see action in North Africa and on the Eastern Front. After being replaced  by better self-propelled guns in 1943, the Panzerjägers were relegated to  missions patrolling occupied Europe such as  operations against partisans in the Balkans. 
      The Panzerjäger's formal name was 4.7cm PaK(t) (Sf) auf Panzerkampfwagen I. The (t) stands for "tschechisch"  (German for "Czechoslovakian") and the (Sf) stands for  "Selbstfahrlafette" (German for "Self-propelled carriage"). 
        
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