Canon de 75 mle GP III

The Canon de 75 mle GPIII was a field gun used by Belgium during World War II. Cockerill mounted a sleeve in the barrels of ex-German 7.7 cm FK 16 guns received as reparations after World War I to convert them to the standard Belgian 75mm ammunition. After 1940, the Wehrmacht designated captured guns as the 7.5 cm FK 236(b). This gun was nearly the equivalent of the German 7.5 cm FK 16 nA and apparently saw wider service than the other captured Belgian guns.

Canon de 75 mle GPIII
In Belgrade military museum
Typefield gun
Place of originBelgium
Service history
In service1919?-1945
Used by Belgium
 Nazi Germany
WarsWorld War II
Production history
DesignerCockerill
ManufacturerCockerill
Specifications
Mass2,337 kg (5,152 lb) (travel)
1,390 kg (3,060 lb) (combat)[1]
Barrel length2.8 metres (9 ft 2 in) L/37.3[1]

ShellFixed QF 75 x 150mm R
Caliber75 mm (2.95 in)
CarriageBox trail
Elevation-8° to +35°
Traverse
Muzzle velocity579 m/s (1,899 ft/s)
Maximum firing range11 kilometres (6.8 mi)

Notes

  1. Chamberlain, Peter (1975). Light and medium field artillery. Gander, Terry. New York: Arco. p. 3. ISBN 0668038209. OCLC 2067331.
gollark: Thing done; I managed to obtain cheese, Facility 141's defenses are holding, and the [REDACTED] incursions have been mostly countered.
gollark: Anyway, I have to do a thing, so bye for n minutes where n = something.
gollark: You're clearly engaging in mortalist prejudice and I'd like to request that you stop.
gollark: Also², ignoring all the storage hassles they are, IIRC, the cheapest power supply around per watt.
gollark: Also, I think the time to degrade is a few decades, which is perfectly usable.

References

  • Chamberlain, Peter & Gander, Terry. Light and Medium Field Artillery. New York: Arco, 1975
  • Gander, Terry and Chamberlain, Peter. Weapons of the Third Reich: An Encyclopedic Survey of All Small Arms, Artillery and Special Weapons of the German Land Forces 1939-1945. New York: Doubleday, 1979 ISBN 0-385-15090-3


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