M114 155 mm howitzer
M114 | ||
---|---|---|
Type | Howitzer | |
Place of origin | United States | |
Service history | ||
In service | 1942–present | |
Used by | See operators | |
Wars | List of Conflicts
| |
Production history | ||
Designed | 1939–1941 | |
Manufacturer | Breech Slow-cone interrupted screw | |
Recoil | Hydro-pneumatic | |
Carriage | Split trail | |
Elevation | −2°/+63° | |
Traverse | 25° left or right | |
Rate of fire | burst: 4 rpm sustained: 40 rph | |
Muzzle velocity | 563 m/s (1,847 ft/s) | |
Maximum firing range | 14,600 m (16,000 yd) |
The M114 is a towed howitzer developed and used by the United States Army. It was first produced in 1942 as a medium artillery piece under the designation of 155 mm Howitzer M1. It saw service with the US Army during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War, before being replaced by the M198 howitzer.
The gun was also used by the armed forces of many nations. The M114A1 remains in service in some countries.
Development
After the end of the First World War a board later labeled the Westervelt Board was convened to assess the artillery experience of the combatant powers and map out future directions for the US Army artillery. The conclusion of the board vis-a-vis corps (heavy field) artillery was that an ideal heavy howitzer should have range of at least 16,000 yards (15 km) and allow the elevation of 65°[2] (as opposed to the existing World War I-era M-1918 155 mm howitzer's, a license-built French Canon de 155 C modèle 1917 Schneider, 11.5 km and +42° 20' respectively). Board also recommended that the new 155-mm howitzer and the new 4.7-inch (120 mm) gun share all the carriage, even if it compromises both designs.
The M1920 carriage resulting from this requirements was of the split-trail type with pneumatic
In 1939 the development began anew,[5] by spring 1941 the first specimen was ready to be test-fired and immediately after passing them[6] it was standardized on 15 May 1941 as Howitzer M1 on the Carriage M1. The howitzer itself differed from the older model by a lengthened barrel of 20 calibers and a new breech mechanism. Uniquely it was the sole 'slow-cone' interrupted screw mechanism to enter US service after 1920.[5]
Carriage variants
The carriage was also used by the
A mid-1960s variant was the 155mm XM123 & M123A1 auxiliary-propelled howitzers. The XM123 was produced by American Machine and Foundry and outfitted with two 20 horsepower air-cooled engines produced by Consolidated Diesel Corporation, driver's seat, steering wheel, and guide wheel on the left trail, allowing it to be more rapidly emplaced when detached from the prime mover, while the XM123A1 provided a single 20 horsepower motor with electric steering. The extra weight on the left trail displaced the howitzer after each round was fired, requiring it to be realigned, and the project was abandoned. The concept was copied from the Soviet 85mm SD-44 auxiliary-propelled antitank gun developed in 1954 and used by airborne forces.[citation needed]
Self-propelled mounts
The howitzer was experimentally mounted on a lengthened chassis of the
Ammunition
This section needs additional citations for verification. (January 2021) |
The gun fires separate-loading, bagged charge ammunition, with up to seven different propelling charges, from 1 (the smallest) to 7 (the largest). Muzzle velocity, range and penetration in the tables below are for maximum charge in form of complete M4A1 propelling charge.
Propelling charges[8] | ||||
Model | Weight | Components | ||
M3 | 2.69 kg (5 lb 15 oz) | Base charge and four incremental charges (for charges 1 to 5) | ||
M4 | 6.29 kg (13 lb 14 oz) | Base charge and two incremental charges (for charges 5 to 7) | ||
M4A1 | 6.31 kg (13 lb 15 oz) | Base charge and four incremental charges (for charges 3 to 7) | ||
Mk I Dummy | 3.63 kg (8 lb) | Base charge and six incremental charges | ||
M2 Dummy | 3.34 kg (7 lb 6 oz) | Base charge and six incremental charges |
Projectiles[8][9] | |||||
Type | Model | Weight | Filler | Muzzle velocity | Range |
HE | HE M102 Shell | 43.13 kg (100 lb) | TNT , 7.06 kg (15 lb 9 oz)
|
||
HE | HE M107 Shell
|
43 kg (90 lb) | TNT , 6.86 kg (15 lb 2 oz)
|
564 m/s (1,850 ft/s) | 14,955 m (16,355 yd) |
Smoke | FS M105 Shell | 45.14 kg (100 lb) | Chlorosulfonic acid , 7.67 kg (16 lb 15 oz)
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||
Smoke | WP M105 Shell | 44.55 kg (100 lb) | White phosphorus (WP) , 7.08 kg (15 lb 10 oz)
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||
Smoke | FS M110 Shell | 45.45 kg (100 lb) | Chlorosulfonic acid , 7.67 kg (16 lb 15 oz)
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||
Smoke | WP M110 Shell | 44.63 kg (100 lb) | White phosphorus (WP) , 7.08 kg (15 lb 10 oz)
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Smoke, colored | BE M116 Shell | 39.21 kg (90 lb) | Smoke mixture, 7.8 kg (17 lb 3 oz) | ||
Smoke | HC BE M116 Shell | 43.14 kg (100 lb) | Zinc chloride (HC) , 11.7 kg (25 lb 13 oz)
|
564 m/s (1,850 ft/s) | 14,955 m (16,355 yd) |
Chemical | CNS M110 Shell | 44.05 kg (100 lb) | Chloroacetophenone (CN) , 6.26 kg (13 lb 13 oz)
|
||
Chemical | H M110 Shell | 43.09 kg (90 lb) | Mustard gas , 5.02 kg (11 lb 1 oz)
|
564 m/s (1,850 ft/s) | 14,972 m (16,374 yd) |
Nuclear | W48 Shell | 54 kg (100 lb) | Nuclear, 72 tonnes of TNT (300 GJ) equivalent | 564 m/s (1,850 ft/s) | 14,972 m (16,374 yd) |
Illumination | Illuminating M118 Shell | 46.77 kg (100 lb) | Illuminant candles, 4.02 kg (8 lb 14 oz) | ||
Drill | Dummy Mk I Projectile | - | - | - | |
Drill | Dummy M7 Projectile | 43.09 kg (90 lb) | - | - | - |
Concrete penetration, mm[9] | ||||
Ammunition \ Distance | 0 | 914 m (1,000 yd) | 2,743 m (3,000 yd) | 4,572 m (5,000 yd) |
HE M107 Shell (meet angle 0°) | 884 mm (2 ft 11 in) | 792 mm (2 ft 7 in) | 610 mm (2 ft) | 488 mm (1 ft 7 in) |
Different methods of measurement were used in different countries / periods. Therefore, direct comparison is often impossible. |
Operators
Country | Number | Variant | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Current operators | |||
Turkey | ~553 | M114A1 / M114A2 | [10] |
Greece | ~230 | M114 | [10] |
Portugal | ~24 | M114A1 | [10] |
South Korea | ~1800 | KH-179 | [10] |
Laos | ~12 | M114 | [10] |
Pakistan | ~144 | M114 | [10] |
Philippines | ~10 | M114 | [10] |
Taiwan | ~250 | T-65 | [10] |
Vietnam | n/a | M114 | [10] |
Iran | ~70 | M114 | [10] |
Jordan | ~18 | M114 | [10] |
Lebanon | ~18 | M114A1 | [10] |
Morocco | ~29 | M114 | [10] |
Saudi Arabia | ~50 | M114 | [10] |
Tunisia | ~12 | M114A1 | [10] |
Argentina | ~6 | M114 | [10] |
Brazil | ~103 | M114 | [10] |
Ecuador | ~12 | M114 | [10] |
Peru | ~36 | M114 | [10] |
Uruguay | ~8 | M114A1 | [10] |
Venezuela | ~12 | M114A1 | [10] |
Sudan | ~12 | M114A1 | [10] |
Ukraine | ~70 | M114 | [11][12] |
Former operators | |||
Thailand | ~48 | M114 | [10] |
Former operators
- Denmark[13]
- Italy[13]
- Japan 220 total, a small number were produced domestically as Type 58. All retired.[14]
- Norway[13]
- Netherlands[13]
- Spain[13]
- United States[13]
See also
- List of U.S. Army weapons by supply catalog designation(SNL C-39)
- M549
- M864
- M795
- W48
- M777 howitzer
References
- Notes
- ^ ISBN 979-11-5598-079-8.
- ^ a b B. P. Joyce, New "Four-Point-Seven" Guns The Field Artillery Journal (volume XII) 1922, p. 3 Retrieved 12/14/2023.
- ^ a b c d e https://tradocfcoeccafcoepfwprod.blob.core.usgovcloudapi.net/fires-bulletin-archive/1931/NOV_DEC_1931/NOV_DEC_1931_FULL_EDITION.pdf, pp. 30-32 Retrieved 12/14/2023.
- ^ Okla.), Field Artillery School (Fort Sill (17 May 1934). "Materiel (Weapons)". Printing plant, The Field artillery school – via Google Books.
- ^ a b c Hogg - Allied Artillery of World War II, p 68.
- ^ Center, Aberdeen Proving Ground (Md ) Ordnance Research and Development (17 May 1945). "Sketches of the Ordnance Research and Development Center in World War II". Aberdeen Proving Ground – via Google Books.
- ^ Hunnicutt, p 337–339, 502.
- ^ a b TM 9-1331B, 155mm Howitzer M1 and Mount M14, p 205-219.
- ^ a b Hunnicutt - Stuart: A History of the American Light Tank, p 502.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "The Military Balance 2023". IISS. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
- ^ Zoria, Yuri (15 March 2024). "Greece negotiates deal with Czechia for ammunition transfer to Ukraine". Euromaidan Press. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Zoria, Yuri (15 March 2024). "Greece negotiates deal with Czechia for ammunition transfer to Ukraine". Euromaidan Press. Retrieved 16 March 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f Wiener, Friedrich (1987). The armies of the NATO nations: Organization, concept of war, weapons and equipment. Truppendienst Handbooks Volume 3. Vienna: Herold Publishers. pp. 494–495.
- ^ "155 mm Howitzer M1". Gallery Rightwing. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
- Bibliography
- ISBN 1-86126-165-9.
- Hunnicutt, R. P. (1992). Stuart: A History of the American Light Tank. Presidio Press. ISBN 0-89141-462-2.
- Technical Manual TM 9-1331B, 155mm Howitzer M1 and Mount M14. War Department, 1953.
- ISBN 9781857438352.
External links
- The M114 155mm howitzer
- M114
- The short film STAFF FILM REPORT 66-27A (1966) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.