24 cm Haubitze 39

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24 cm houfnice vz.39
(24 cm Haubitze 39)
TNT
Filling weight23.66 kg (52 lb 3 oz)

The 24 cm houfnice vz.39 (German designation: 24 cm Haubitze 39) (Howitzer model 39) was a

Army's Artillery Regiment 814 and entered service shortly before the Battle of France in 1940. The regiment participated in Operation Barbarossa and in the Sieges of Sevastopol and Leningrad
.

Description and development

de Bange obturator to provide the gas seal with bagged propellant. The carriage revolved on a ball-race firing platform that had to be dug-in before firing, a task that took six to eight hours to accomplish. It broke down into three loads for transport, the barrel, carriage and the ground platform. A modified version entered service in 1942 as the H 39/40 although the changes merely simplified production.[1] A total of eighteen were delivered to Germany.[2]

Ammunition

It used both Czechoslovak and German-designed ammunition. The Czechoslovak-designed 24 cm Gr 39(t)

TNT. The German copy, the 24 cm Gr 39 umg had only a German nose fuze, soft-iron driving bands and a smaller charge of 22.9 kilograms (50 lb). It also used a Czechoslovak-designed anti-concrete shell, the 24 cm Gr 39 Be, that had copper driving bands. It used 5 bagged charges
that were enclosed in a single larger bag. Increments were simply removed to adjust range as necessary. [3]

Combat history

The 1st Battalion of Artillery Regiment 814 was formed on 15 March 1940 with four batteries of H39s. A month later, the Third and Fourth Batteries were used to form the 2nd battalion of the regiment. The 2nd Battalion was still forming when the

1st Panzer Group in Army Group South for Operation Barbarossa.[5] It was transferred to 11th Army for the Siege of Sevastopol in late 1941—42.[6] It accompanied that army as part of its siege train when it was transferred north to attack Leningrad in the late summer of 1942.[7] It remained under the command of Army Group North until it re-equipped with smaller guns in July 1944. Nothing is known of any units that might have been equipped with the howitzers after July 1944. Artillery Regiment 814 is the only unit known to have been equipped with the H39 howitzer.[8]

Notes

  1. ^ Chamberlain & Ellis, p. 206
  2. ^ "German Weapon and Ammunition Production 1 Sep 39-1 Apr 45". Archived from the original on 2 March 2009. Retrieved 28 May 2009.
  3. ^ Hogg, pp. 101-2
  4. ^ Niehorster, Leo W. G. (1990). Mechanized GHQ units and Waffen-SS Formations (10 May 1940). German World War II Organizational Series. Vol. 2/II. Hannover: Niehorster. p. 27.
  5. ^ Niehorster, Leo W. G. (1992). Mechanized GHQ units and Waffen-SS Formations (22 June 1941). German World War II Organizational Series. Vol. 3/II. Hannover: Niehorster. p. 26.
  6. .
  7. .
  8. ^ "Heeres Independent Artillery Units of WW II". Archived from the original on 21 March 2009. Retrieved 28 May 2009.

References