107 mm gun M1910/30

107 mm gun M1910/30

M1910/30 in the Artillery Museum, Saint Petersburg.
Type field gun
Place of origin USSR
Production history
Designer KB NTK GAU
Manufacturer Bolshevik, Barrikady
Produced 1931-1935
Number built 828+
Specifications
Weight Combat: 2,535 kg
(5,589 lbs)
Travel: 3,000 kg
(6,614 lbs)
Length 7.53 metres (24 ft 8 in)
Barrel length Bore: 3.9 m (12 ft 10 in) L/36.6
Overall: 4.05 m (13 ft 3 in) L/38
(without muzzle brake)
Width 2.06 metres (6 ft 9 in)
Height 1.74 metres (5 ft 9 in)
Crew 8

Caliber 106.7 mm (4.21 in)
Breech interrupted screw
Recoil hydropneumatic
Carriage box trail
Elevation -5° to 37°
Traverse
Rate of fire 5-6 rounds per minute
Effective firing range 16,130 m (17,640 yds)

107 mm gun M1910/30 (Russian: 107-мм пушка образца 1910/30 годов > pushka obraztsa M1910/1930 godov > English: "Cannon Model of 1910 / year of 1930") was a Soviet 106.7 mm field gun.

The gun was based on an artillery piece originally developed by the French arms manufacturer Schneider prior to World War I and used by the Russian Empire as the 107 mm gun M1910. The modernized variant, adopted in 1931, differed from the original design mainly by having a larger chamber and longer barrel, resulting in longer range. The M1910/30 remained in production until the mid-1930s and was employed by the Red Army in World War II, mainly in corps artillery and Reserve of the Main Command units.

A number of captured guns were used by the Wehrmacht.

Development and production

From the late 1920s the RKKA sought to upgrade its First World War era artillery pieces. One of the modernized weapons was the 107 mm gun M1910, originally designed by the French arms manufacturer Schneider. Modernization projects were submitted by Orudiyno-Arsenalny Trest (OAT) and by the design bureau of the Scientific and Technical Committee of the Main Directorate of Artillery (KB NTK GAU). After trials it was decided to adopt the weapon designed by KB NTK GAU, but to fit it with an equilibrating mechanism as used in the OAT project. The modernized weapon was adopted in 1931 as the 107 mm gun M1910/30.[1]

The upgrade included the following:

The weapon was manufactured by the Bolshevik Plant in Leningrad and by the Barrikady Plant in Stalingrad from 1931 until 1935 or later.[1] Additionally, a number of M1910 pieces were upgraded by Bolshevik, No 7, No 13 and KKZ plants.

Description

M1910/30, left side view

The barrel of the M1910/30 was longer than the original barrel and was fitted with a slotted muzzle brake (which reduced recoil by 25%); in order to balance the barrel, a special weight was fitted to the opposite end of the tube. The breech was of the interrupted screw type. The recoil system, consisting of a hydraulic recoil buffer and a hydropneumatic recuperator, was located in a sleigh below the barrel.

The box trail carriage was nearly identical to that of the M1910. It had either unsprung wooden wheels or metal wheels with solid rubber tires. With wooden wheels, the speed of transportation was limited to about 6 km/h. A team of eight horses was needed to tow the gun; another six towed an ammunition box with 42 rounds.[1]

Organization and service

Red Army

The M1910/30 guns were issued to corps artillery. In 1941, three variants of corps artillery regiments existed:

In September 1941 rifle corps of the RKKA were disbanded, therefore corps level artillery ceased to exist. 107 mm guns were then issued to Reserve of the Main Command units, in 12, 18 or 24-piece gun regiments or 36-piece gun brigades.

When corps level was reintroduced in 1943, most 107 mm pieces were again given to corps artillery. New corps artillery regiments had 16-20 pieces and along with 107 mm guns included 122 mm guns and 152 mm howitzers.[2]

Many 107 mm guns were also used by the independent artillery regiments of fortified regions and by independent battalions and batteries belonging to fronts and armies.

The M1910/30 were used by the Red Army in the Battle of Khalkhin Gol, where four pieces were lost.[3] They also saw action in the Winter War (12 pieces in the 7th Army, 24 in the 467th Artillery Regiment of the 8th Army, 12 in the 51st Artillery Regiment of the 9th Army), apparently without losses.[4]

In June 1941, according to different sources, the Red Army possessed 828 (including four belonging to the navy)[5] or 863[1] pieces of this type. 474 107 mm guns, including a limited numbers of the new M-60, belonged to western military districts.[6] Many were lost at the beginning of the Great Patriotic War. In 1943, the RKKA had at least 490 107 mm guns of all models, the majority of them M1910/30;[2] some remained in service until the end of the war.

A surviving piece can be seen in the Artillery Museum in Saint Petersburg.

Wehrmacht

A number of M1910/30 guns were captured by the Wehrmacht and pressed into service in both field and coastal artillery. In German service, the gun was designated the 10,7 cm K 352(r). In March 1944, the Wehrmacht still possessed 17 pieces, all on the Eastern Front.[7]

Summary

The modernization of the M1910/30 gave the Red Army a relatively lightweight, reliable corps artillery piece with improved range and a wide array of ammunition. On the other side, it failed to address other drawbacks of the weapon. Because of its unsprung wheels, the M1910/30 was unsuitable for high-speed transportation. A very small traverse of 6 degrees limited the effectiveness of the gun against enemy tanks, despite decent armor penetration.

For the sake of comparison, the standard German 105 mm gun, the 10.5 cm sK 18, surpassed the M1910/30 in range (19 km, or 21 km for a modernized K 18/40), traverse (60 degrees) and transportation speed (up to 40 km/h). This, however, came at a price of a much larger weight of about six tons.

In 1940, the RKKA adopted a more modern 107 mm gun, the M-60. Although originally intended - and officially designated - as a divisional gun, in practice the M-60 was never used by rifle divisions; from 1943 it mainly served in the reintroduced corps artillery. However, soon after the outbreak of war, production of the M-60 was stopped. In 1943 another 107 mm gun, the 9S-1, was developed, but it was never adopted, leaving the M1910/30 the last mass production 107 mm piece in Red Army service.

Ammunition

The gun fired separately loaded, cased charge ammunition. Two different charges – full and reduced – were used. Use of the full charge was prohibited with the muzzle brake removed, or with old high-explosive ammunition, shrapnel and smoke rounds.

The explosion of the OF-420 shell, with the fuse set to the fragmentation action, resulted in damage to 90% of targets in the 6 to 14 meters area and to 50% of targets in a 20 to 42 meter area. When the fuse was set to high-explosive action, the shell made a crater 1–1.5 m in diameter and 40–60 cm deep in an average soil.

The shrapnel shell contained more than 600 bullets and covered an area about 800 m long and 45–50 m wide.

Ammunition available[1]
Type Model Weight, kg HE weight, kg Muzzle velocity, m/s Range, m
Armor-piercing
APCBC B-420 18.71 0.44 655 3,000
High-explosive and fragmentation projectiles
HE-frag, long range, steel OF-420 17.2 2.15 670 16,130
HE-frag OF-420U 17.4 2.01 670 16,130
HE F-420U 16.54 1.8 581 (reduced charge) 14,150
HE, old F-422L 16.41 1.56 580 (reduced charge) 11,220
HE, old F-422K 16.41 1.54 580 (reduced charge) 11,220
HE, old F-422M 16.41 1.7 580 (reduced charge) 11,220
Shrapnel projectiles
Shrapnel with 45 sec tube Sh-422 16.54-17.25 0.44 579 (reduced charge) 9,400
Shrapnel with T-6 tube Sh-422T 16.44 0.44 579 (reduced charge) 10,700
Smoke projectiles
Smoke D-422U 16.73 0.32/1.76 580 (reduced charge) 11,220
Incendiary projectiles
Incendiary, with T-6 / T-7 tube Z-420 17.2 0.035/1.6 670 10,800 (15,000)
Incendiary, with T-6 / T-7 tube Z-420 16,37 0,035/1,6 680 10,180 (15,260)
Chemical projectiles
Frag-chemical OH-420 17.2 670 16,130
Chemical HS-420 16.9 670 16,130
Chemical with "NOV" HN-422 16.4 580 (reduced charge) 11,220
Chemical with "SOV" HS-422 16.4 0.35/1.7 580 (reduced charge) 11,220
 
Armor penetration table[1]
APCBC projectile B-420
Distance, m Meet angle 60°, mm Meet angle 90°, mm
100 95 117
250 93 115
500 90 111
750 87 107
1,000 84 103
1,500 78 95
2,000 72 89
2,500 67 82
3,000 62 76
This data was obtained by Soviet methodics of armour penetration measurement (penetration probability 75%). It is not directly comparable with western data of similar type.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Shirokorad - Encyclopedia of the Soviet Artillery.
  2. 1 2 Military History Journal, no 5, 2005.
  3. Kolomiets - The Battle of River Khalkhin-Gol.
  4. Shirokorad - Northern Wars of Russia.
  5. Red Army on 22 June 1941, Statistics, no 1.
  6. tank.uw.ru.
  7. Shirokorad - The God of War of The Third Reich.

References

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