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10.4 cm Feldkanone M. 15

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

10.4 cm Feldkanone M. 15
10.4 cm Feldkanone M. 15 at the Heeresgeschichtliches Museum Wien.
TypeField gun
Place of originAustria-Hungary
Service history
In service1916–1945
Used byAustria-Hungary
Nazi Germany
Kingdom of Italy
Second Polish Republic
WarsWorld War I
World War II
Production history
DesignerSkoda
Designed1909-1914
ManufacturerSkoda
Produced1914–1918
No. built577?
VariantsCannone da 105/32
Specifications
Mass3,030 kg (6,680 lb)
Barrel length3.64 m (11 ft 11 in) L/35

ShellSeparate loading, cased charge and projectile
104 x 580mm R
16.1 kilograms (35 lb 8 oz)[1]
CaliberItalian variant: 105 mm (4.13 in)
Carriagebox trail
Elevation-10° to +30°
Traverse
Rate of fire3-4 rpm
Muzzle velocity668 m/s (2,191 ft/s)
Maximum firing range12,700 m (13,900 yd)[2]

The 10.4 cm Feldkanone M. 15 was a heavy field gun used by Austria-Hungary in World War I.[3] It was derived from the successful 15 cm schwere Feldhaubitze M 14 modified to fire high-velocity 104-mm projectiles.

The 10.4 cm Feldkanone M.15 served the same role for the Austro-Hungarian Army as the 10 cm K 14 gun did for the Germans, but was 3 tons heavier and the barrel had to be removed in order to be transported by horse and wagon. Approximately 577 were produced by Skoda and MAVAG. These guns were deployed at all fronts, including Palestine. The M.15 was considered a good artillery piece, but the weight prohibited rapid deployment. The breech used a sliding wedge and they were equipped with spring reuperators and hydraulic recoil.[4]

Because the gun was too heavy to be drawn by the usual field artillery team of six horses, for transport it broke down into the two loads, with the barrel being carried on a separate carriage.[5]

An example of one of the transport wagons is preserved at Brisbane Grammar School in Queensland, Australia, which had been taken from the Ottoman Army at the Capture of Jenin in 1918 and was donated to the school in 1921 by Brigadier General Lachlan Chisholm Wilson, a former pupil. The barrel is mounted on its Rohrwagen or transport carriage rather than the gun carriage it would have been fired from. It was restored in 1996 by the South Queensland Logistics Group.[5]

Four guns were used by Poland during the Polish-Soviet war.[6]

Guns captured or turned over to Italy as reparations after World War I were taken into Italian service as the Cannone da 105/32 and were bored out to 105 mm to fit Italian ammunition. 260 M.14 and M.15 guns were recovered by the Italians after the Battle of Vittorio Veneto, of which 70 were scrapped. It was one of the principal Italian long-range guns in World War II and saw service in North Africa, Russia, and Sicily. It also saw use during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War. The Italians found that it did not compare favorably to the Canone de 105/28 due to the heavier weight, especially in Ukraine. Four guns were used by the Italian Social Republic in 1943.[7] The German army gave captured weapons the designation 10.5cm K 320(i).[8]

The ex-Ottoman M.15 barrel on its transport vehicle preserved at Brisbane Grammar School as a war memorial.

A rusting 10.4 cm Skoda was found in the Presanella mountains in the year 2000, where it supposed it was dueling an Italian 149/23 during the First World War.[9][10] Found at 3171 meters altitude, the gun came completely out of the glacier in the very warm summer of 2003. Because it was located on a 45 degree slope, the risk of it sliding down was considered too great, so the gun was relocated by lifting it with a Superpuma helicopter.[11]

References

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  1. ^ "Ammotable 11". www.quarryhs.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 February 2015. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  2. ^ "Regio Esercito - Materiale bellico - Cannone da 104/32". Archived from the original on 25 September 2008. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Great War Artillery - Austria". www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
  4. ^ Clelland, Charlie. "10.4cm Kanone M.15". Landships II. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Brisbane Grammar School WWI War Trophy". www.qldwarmemorials.com.au. The State of Queensland (Department of Environment and Science). 16 September 2015. Archived from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  6. ^ Konstankiewicz, Andrzej (2003). Broń strzelecka i sprzęt artyleryjski formacji polskich i Wojska Polskiego w latach 1914-1939, Lublin. p. 53. ISBN 83-227-1944-2. (in Polish)
  7. ^ "photoscopecannone105-32". 16 June 2008. Archived from the original on 16 June 2008. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
  8. ^ "Light & Medium Artillery". www.axishistory.com. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
  9. ^ "Il grande cannone della Presanella - di Mauro Zattera". Archived from the original on 5 September 2013. Retrieved 5 September 2013.
  10. ^ Restauro Cannone Skoda 10.4 Archived 2013-12-20 at the Wayback Machine, Museo Storico Italiano della Guerra, Provincia autonoma di Trento
  11. ^ Il recupero del cannone 10.4 Skoda Archived 2012-09-06 at archive.today, Museo della Guerra Bianca in Adamello

Bibliography

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