Misplaced Pages

Teller mine

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
German antitank mine in World War II
Various Tellermines strapped to a tree. Fuzes and pressure-plates have not been fitted

The Teller mine (German: Tellermine) was a German-made antitank mine common in World War II. With explosives sealed inside a sheet metal casing and fitted with a pressure-actuated fuze, Teller mines had a built-in carrying handle on the side. As the name suggests (Teller is the German word for dish or plate) the mines were plate-shaped.

Design

Containing little more than 5.5 kilograms of TNT and a fuze activation pressure of approximately 200 lb (91 kg), the Teller mine was capable of blasting the tracks off any World War II-era tank or destroying a lightly armored vehicle. Due to its rather high operating pressure, only a vehicle or heavy object passing over the Teller mine would set it off.

Of the two types of pressure-fuze available for Teller mines, the T.Mi.Z.43 fuze was notable for featuring an integral anti-handling device as standard: when the T.Mi.Z.43 fuze is inserted and the pressure plate (or screw cap) is screwed down into place, it shears a weak arming pin inside the fuze with an audible "snap". This action arms the anti-handling device. Thereafter, any attempt to disarm the mine by unscrewing the pressure plate (or screw cap) to remove the fuze will automatically release the spring-loaded firing pin inside it, triggering detonation.

Since it is impossible to determine which fuze type has been installed, no pressure plate or screw cap can ever be safely removed from a Teller mine. The T.Mi.Z.43 fuze can be fitted to the Teller mine 35, 42 and 43 series.

To hinder demining, all Teller mines featured two additional fuze wells (located on the side and underneath) to enable anti-handling devices to be attached, typically some form of pull-fuze.

Models

There were four models of Teller mine made during World War II:

Approximately 3,622,900 Teller mine 43 mines were produced by Germany for the Wehrmacht from 1943 to 1944.

Gallery

  • Teller mine on Utah beach. Intended to explode against landing craft at high tide Teller mine on Utah beach. Intended to explode against landing craft at high tide
  • British engineers removing the charges which the Germans had set to blow the Nijmegen bridge, September 1944 British engineers removing the charges which the Germans had set to blow the Nijmegen bridge, September 1944
  • Tellermine 43 anti-tank mine Tellermine 43 anti-tank mine

References

  1. "T.Mi.Z.43". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-02-23.
  2. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-06-27. Retrieved 2008-06-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. "Saving Private Ryan Online Encyclopedia: Teller Mine 43". 2009-04-13.


Stub icon

This article relating to landmines is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: