7.5 cm FK 7M85

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
7.5 cm Feldkanone 7M85
TypeField gun
Place of origin
TNT or amatol

The 7.5 cm Feldkanone 7M85 (7.5 cm FK 7M85) was a field gun used by Germany in World War II.

Design

The FK 7M85 was designed to a requirement issued in 1944 for a dual-purpose

leFH 18/40 carriage. The leFH 18/40 carriage had been itself adapted from the PaK 40 so this design essentially returned the carriage to its original gun, albeit with a wider range of ammunition and an extra 20° of elevation.[1]

It is possible the FK 7M85 was influenced by the success of Soviet divisional guns such as M1936, M1939 and M1942 which the Germans captured in substantial numbers earlier in the war. At 1,780 kg (3,924 lb) it was 355 kg (782 lb) heavier than the PaK 40, 664 kg (1,464 lb) heavier than the Soviet M1942 and 264 kg (582 lb) heavier than the 7.5 cm FK 16 nA which it would have replaced. This would have made manhandling the FK 7M85 into position in snow and mud difficult.[1] However, the anti-tank performance of the 75 x 690 mm shell would have been greater than the 75 × 200 mm shell fired by the FK 16 NA or the 76.2 × 385 mm shell fired by the Soviet divisional guns.

Nomenclature

In 1944–45 the Germans changed their system of artillery designations from the old "year" system. Each weapon was to have a number showing their caliber group, a letter denoting ammunition group, and the last two digits were from the weapon drawing number. In this case 7 denoted 75 mm caliber using the M group of ammunition. The shells were all to be designated as M with a 4-digit number, the first three were the drawing number and the last was the shell's category from the following list:[1]

No. Shell type No. Shell type
1
high explosive
6 gas
2
hollow charge
anti-tank
7 incendiary
3
armor-piercing
8 leaflet
4 high explosive, high capacity 9 practice
5 smoke 10 proof projectile

References

  1. ^
    OCLC 50056418
    .