- Source: 37 mm trench gun M1915
37-mm trench gun M1915 (Russian: Траншейная 37-мм пушка обр. 1915 года) was a Russian battalion gun employed in World War I.
With World War I switching into a trench warfare phase late in 1914, a need for a highly mobile artillery system to be used against enemy machine gun emplacements and other strongpoints became apparent. In 1915 colonel M. F. Rosenberg, a member of the Artillery Committee, developed such a weapon. The gun was compact enough to fit into machine gun emplacements. It weighed only about 180 kg and could be dismantled into three pieces - barrel (about 74 kg), carriage (82 kg) and wheels (25 kg), making it easy to move around. To protect the crew from enemy fire, the gun was equipped with a shield 6 or 8 mm thick. The weapon was sufficiently accurate at ranges of up to roughly 1 mile or about 1.6 km—this was earlier set out as 1,000-1,200 paces, and a pace is normally the height of the person walking, so this is not a uniform measure.
Similar Weapons
3.7 cm Infanteriegeschütz M.15
3.7 cm TAK 1918
Canon d'Infanterie de 37 modèle 1916 TRP
Type 11 37 mm infantry gun
Notes
External links
37 K/15 at jaegerplatoon.net
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- 37 mm trench gun M1915
- 37 mm caliber
- Canon d'Infanterie de 37 modèle 1916 TRP
- 305 mm howitzer M1915
- Type 11 37 mm infantry gun
- 76 mm mountain gun M1909
- Infantry support gun
- 76 mm gun M1900
- 107 mm gun M1910
- M1915