8 cm FK M 18

8 cm Feldkanone M 18

Type Field gun
Place of origin Austria-Hungary
Service history
In service 1918-1945
Used by Austria-Hungary
Austria
Nazi Germany
Republic of China
Wars World War I
World War II
Production history
Designer Böhler
Designed 1917-18
Manufacturer Böhler
Specifications
Weight 1,478 kilograms (3,258 lb)
Barrel length 2.756 metres (9.04 ft) L/33

Shell 9.99 kilograms (22.0 lb) fixed
Caliber 83.5 mm (3.29 in)
Recoil hydro-pneumatic
Carriage box trail
Maximum firing range 12,078 metres (13,209 yd)

The 8 cm Feldkanone M 18 was a field gun used by Austria-Hungary during World War I. The initial guns used the standard Austro-Hungarian 76.5 mm caliber, but testing was underway for the heavier 83.5 mm version when the war ended. However, only six guns had been delivered by the end of World War I.[1] Its post-war service is unclear, but it seems that it served in small numbers with the Austrian Army, although it doesn't appear that the Germans placed it into service following the Anschluss, possibly because it used non-standard ammunition. Gander and Chamberlain don't list it in their book, but the older work by Chamberlain and Gander claims it saw service with the German Army as the 8 cm leichte Feldkanone 18(ö). A copy was also manufactured in China by Liao as "Type 14 77mm" since 1925.

It was a far more innovative design than Skoda's 8 cm FK M. 17. The carriage of the M 18 had a bent axle which allowed the whole carriage to traverse since the spade pivoted around a vertical pin, so that neither the spade nor the wheels had to be moved to traverse. For use in mountains it could be fitted with a special narrow set of wheels. For transport it broke down into three animal carts.

References

Notes

  1. Ortner, p. 505


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