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122 mm howitzer M1938 (M-30) was a Soviet 121.92 mm (4.8 inch) howitzer. The weapon was developed by the design bureau of Motovilikha Plants, headed by F. F. Petrov, in the late 1930s, and was in production from 1939 to 1955. The M-30 saw action in World War II, mainly as a divisional artillery piece of the Red Army (RKKA). Captured guns were also employed later in the conflict by the German Wehrmacht and the Finnish Army. Post World War II, the M-30 saw combat in numerous conflicts during the mid to late twentieth century in the service of other armies, notably in the Middle East.
[edit] DevelopmentIn 1930 Red Army (RKKA) authorities started to look for a new divisional level howitzer to replace the pre-World War I 122-mm howitzer M1909 and 122-mm howitzer M1910. Although both pieces were eventually modernized, resulting in the 122-mm howitzer M1909/37 and the 122-mm howitzer M1910/30 respectively, these upgrades did not address some shortcomings in the original designs.[citation needed] The first attempt to develop a new howitzer was made by the KB-2 design bureau under the supervision of German engineers. The design, known as Lubok, reached trials in 1932 and in 1934 was adopted as 122-mm howitzer model 1934. It had a 23 calibers long barrel, a maximum elevation of 50°, a traverse of 7°, and a combat and travelling weight of 2,250 and 2,800 kg respectively. Like its predecessors, Lubok had a fixed trail carriage and although it was equipped with suspension, its wheels lacked tires, limiting towing speed to only 10 km/h. Nevertheless, it was undoubtfully superior to the M1910/30 which remained in production until 1941. However, after eight pieces were built in 1934-1935, production was stopped for unclear reasons, possibly relating to the disbanding of KB-2.[1] In the mid-1930s, the Main Artillery Directorate (GAU) considered a transfer to 105 mm caliber guns, as used by some other armies. A smaller caliber meant that the gun could be lighter and consequently more mobile. On the other hand, a 105 mm gun would also be less powerful. Moreover, 105 mm caliber ammunition was new for Russia/USSR, while for the 122 mm the country already possessed both production lines and large numbers of already manufactured shells (but similar 107 mm caliber manufacturing equipment and ammunition — for the 107-mm gun M1910 — were available). Finally in 1937 the RKKA Head of General Staff I. I. Egorov supported the 122 mm caliber.[2] Consequently, three howitzers were tried out in 1938–1939. The design bureau of UZTM (Ural Heavy Machinery Plant, Russian: Уральский Завод Тяжёлого Машиностроения, УЗТМ), which was required by GAU to design the new howitzer, developed a piece designated U-2. Similar projects were privately undertaken by the design bureaus of Motovilikha Plants, headed by F. F. Petrov (M-30), and of the No. 92 plant under V. G. Grabin (F-25). The U-2 (barrel length 21 calibers, chamber volume 3.0 litres, horizontal sliding breechblock from Lubok, muzzle brake, combat weight 2,030 kg) reached trials on 5 February 1939 and was rejected because of insufficient carriage strength and inferior ballistics. The F-25 project (barrel length 23 calibers, chamber volume 3.7 litres, horizontal sliding breechblock from Lubok, muzzle brake, combat weight 1,830 kg) was closed by GAU on 23 March 1939 as GAU considered it redundant to the M-30 which had reached trials earlier. The latter, after being returned several times for revision, was finally adopted in September 1939 as 122 mm divisional howitzer M1938 (Russian: 122-мм гаубица образца 1938 года (М-30)).[1] [edit] M-30 versus F-25A. B. Shirokorad, a well-known author of books about history of the Soviet artillery, claimed that F-25 could evolve into a better gun than M-30.[when?][1] Grabin's design was about 400 kg lighter, had bigger traverse and bigger ground clearance — all this was achieved, according to Shirokorad, without sacrificing ballistics (same barrel length, chamber volume and muzzle length). Considering how long it took to finish the development of the M-30, the F-25's schedule possibly did not significantly lag behind. There is no official document explaining in detail the advantages M-30 had over F-25. A number of factors could have influenced the decision of the GAU were:
[edit] ProductionMass production of M-30 howitzers had begun in 1940 at Plant No. 92 in Gorky and No. 9 in Sverdlovsk. The former took part in the production of M-30 only in 1940, building a total of 500 pieces. In addition to towed howitzers, Plant No. 9 produced M-30S barrels for arming SU-122 assault guns. Some 700 barrels (including both serial-production and experimental) were manufactured for this purpose. Mass production of M-30 continued until 1955 inclusively.[citation needed]
[edit] DescriptionThe barrel of the M-30 was of built-up construction and consisted of a liner, a jacket and a breech. The breechblock was of interrupted screw type, with forced cartridge case extraction when opened after firing. The gun was equipped with hydraulic recoil buffer and hydropneumatic recuperator. A panoramic sight was used for both indirect and direct fire.[citation needed] The M-30 had a modern split trail carriage with leaf spring suspension and steel wheels with rubber tires. It was usually towed by vehicle without a limber. The carriage allowed a towing speed of up to 50 km/h on paved road and up to 35 km/h on a country road, although the gun could also be moved by a team of six horses, in which case a limber was used. The suspension was locking automatically when swinging the trails open. In an emergency it was possible to shoot in a "single trail" mode, however at a price of a drastically reduced traverse (1°30'). The time required to set the gun up for combat was about 1 — 1.5 minutes.[citation needed] The carriage of the M-30 was later used for the D-1 152 mm howitzer.[citation needed] [edit] Organization and employment M-30 in Sevastopol. [edit] Red ArmyThe M-30 was a divisional level howitzer. According to the organization of 1939, each rifle division had two artillery regiments; one light regiment (a battalion of 76 mm guns; two mixed battalions with one battery of 76 mm guns and two batteries of 122 mm howitzers) and one howitzer regiment (a battalion of 122 mm howitzers and a battalion of 152 mm howitzers), giving 28 122 mm howitzers per division. In June 1940 one more battalion of 122 mm howitzers was added to the howitzer regiment, bringing the number of guns in each unit to 32. In June 1941 the howitzer regiment was removed and the number of howitzers dropped to 16. This organization was used throughout the war, except in Russian Guards rifle divisions which from December 1942 had three artillery battalions (two batteries of 76 mm guns and one battery of 122 mm howitzers each), totaling 12 howitzers. From December 1944 they received an extra howitzer regiment (5 batteries, 20 howitzers) and from June 1945 rifle divisions were reorganized identically.[citation needed] Mountain rifle divisions in 1939–1940 had one battalion of 122 mm howitzers (3 batteries, 9 guns). From 1941 they received instead one artillery regiment (2 battalions, each from 3 four-gun batteries) with 24 howitzers, but in early 1942 only one battalion (2 batteries, 8 howitzers) remained. From 1944 howitzers were removed from mountain rifle divisions. Motorized divisions had two mixed battalions (battery of 76 mm guns, two batteries of 122 mm howitzers), totaling 12 howitzers. Tank division had one battalion with 12 howitzers. Cavalry divisions until August 1941 had two batteries of 122 mm howitzers, totaling eight, before the divisional artillery was removed. Until late 1941 rifle brigades had a battery of four 122 mm howitzers. 122 mm howitzers were also used by the howitzer brigades of the Reserve of the Main Command (72-84 pieces).[1] By 1 June 1941 1,667 M-30s were in service, comprising only a fraction of the RKKA divisional howitzers. As the war progressed, its share grew rapidly due to mass production and because many older guns were lost in combat in 1941-42. M-30 howitzers were primarily employed for indirect fire against enemy personnel. It was also used against field fortifications, clearing minefields and breaching barbed wire. Firing HE-fragmentation shells it presented a danger to armoured vehicles. Fragments created by the explosion could penetrate up to 20 mm of armour, which was enough against thinly armored vehicles and could damage chassis, sights or other elements of heavier armored ones.[citation needed] For self-defense against enemy tanks a HEAT shell was developed in 1943. Before 1943, crews were required to rely only on the high-explosive action of their regular ammunition, with some degree of success. According to a German report from 1943, even a Tiger was once heavily damaged by SU-122 assault guns firing high-explosive shells.[3] M-30 howitzers were towed by a variety of means: horses, Soviet and lend-lease trucks (such as Dodge 3/4 ton "heavy jeep"), purpose built light artillery tractors Stalinets STZ-5 and Ya-12 and occasionally manhandled by Soviet artillerymen themselves. The gun was eventually replaced by the 122-mm howitzer D-30 after the latter was adopted for service in 1960. A small number of operational M-30 howitzers is still present in the Russian Army ordnance depots. They are being gradually withdrawn from reserve. M-30s were featured in many Soviet movies used for novice artillery crews training. These movies were made in 1960s when more modern D-30 howitzers became available, however M-30 was considered by authorities as much more suitable for training purposes. The movies are still in use now, despite the absence of M-30 howitzers even in practice exercises. [edit] Other operatorsA number of M-30s fell into the hands of the Wehrmacht in 1941–1942 and were adopted as 12,2 cm s.F.H.396(r) heavy howitzers. Germany opened mass production of 122 mm ammunition for this and other captured howitzers, producing 424,000 shells in 1943, 696,700 in 1944 and 133,000 in 1945. Some of the captured M-30s were used in the Atlantic Wall fortifications.[4] The Finnish Army captured 41 guns of the type and adopted them as 122 H 38. Those guns fired 13,298 shells in combat; and only a few pieces were lost. The gun was well liked; some were used for training or stored in depots until mid-80s.[5] After World War II the gun was supplied to many countries around the globe. With the Egyptian and Syrian armies it saw action in the Arab-Israeli Wars. Some of these guns were captured by Israel, although it is unclear whether they were ever employed by the Israeli Defense Forces. The People's Republic of China organized their own production of M-30 howitzers under the Type 54 designation.[citation needed] [edit] Variants
[edit] Self-propelled mountsM-30 was mounted on the following armoured fighting vehicles (AFV):
[edit] SummaryIn the M-30, RKKA units finally received a modern divisional howitzer which successfully combined increased firepower and better mobility with reliability and ease of use. A summary of its employment by the Red Army was provided by Marshal G. F. Odintsov, who said that "Nothing can be better".[2] The long post-war employment of the howitzer is additional testimony to its high combat and exploitation characteristics. It is hard to compare the M-30 directly with contemporary foreign guns, since the artillery of France, Germany and United States employed in similar roles was either much smaller 105 mm (Great Britain used even smaller — 87.6 mm — 25 pounder gun-howitzer) or much larger 150 to 155 mm caliber guns. Howitzers of similar calibers existed, but most of those were World War I era pieces, such as the Vickers 114 mm howitzer used by the Finnish Army. Naturally, 150 mm howitzers were more powerful, but much heavier than M-30; while 105 mm pieces were lighter but their smaller shells contained less explosive.[citation needed] The most direct German equivalent was the 10.5 cm leFH 18 light howitzer. Weighing 1985 kg, it had maximum elevation of 42°, muzzle velocity of 470 m/s and maximum range of 10,675 m. In upgraded version, leFH 18/40, muzzle velocity was improved to 540 m/с, elevation to 45° and range to 12,325 m. About even in range, the German howitzer had less powerful HE shell and its smaller maximum elevation made it less effective against dug-in troops, but it also weighed some 400 kg less than M-30. Both guns were well suited for mass production with 16.887 M-30s and 15.388 leFH 18 built in 1941–45.[citation needed] [edit] Ammunition dataThe M-30 could fire all types of the 122 mm howitzer ammunition used by RKKA, including old Russian and imported shells. During and after World War II new types of ammunition were developed, notably HEAT shells. World War II era HEAT shell BP-460A could pierce 100-160 mm of armor at 90°; post-war BP-1 - 200 mm at 90°, 160 mm at 60°, 80 mm at 30°. HE-Frag projectiles OF-462, initially developed for the M-30 howitzer, are still in Russian Army service and can be fired from modern 122 mm ordnance pieces.[citation needed]
[edit] Surviving piecesM-30 howitzers are on display in a number of military museums and are widely used as memorial pieces. Among other places, the gun can be seen:[citation needed]
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
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