In Tactical and Technical Trends, No. 24, p. 24 was published an account
based on the best sources then available, of a German 100-mm mortar. A more
recent report indicates that there are not one, but two such weapons, and the original
account was inaccurate in many details because of incomplete source data. More information
on these mortars has now come in.
a. The 100-mm (4-inch) German Smoke Mortar (10-cm Nebelwerfer 35)
This mortar, the standard smoke-CW weapon of the German Army, is
actually 105 mm in caliber. HE ammunition, however, is also fired, and the
mortar is used to some extent by airborne troops. It consists of a barrel, bipod,
and baseplate constructed on the familiar German lines--a scaled-up version
of the German 81-mm mortar with the exception of the traversing gear. In
this case, the traversing screw is housed in a sleeve by the two ends of a
bow-shaped yoke, secured to the top of the elevating screw (see figure 1).
The particulars of the mortar follow:
Weight in action | 231 lbs | |
Weight of bomb | 16 lbs |
Weight in barrel | 72 lbs | |
Maximum range | 3,300 yds |
Weight of bipod | 73 lbs | |
Rate of fire | 12-15 rpm |
Weight of baseplate | 85 lbs | |
Crew | 5 men |
Transport, two-wheeled handcart |
The details of the HE bomb are:
Weight | | 16 lbs | |
Color | | greenish gray |
Weight of filling | 3 lbs 12 ozs | |
Length over-all | 17.12 in |
Filling | TNT | |
Maximum diameter | 4.09 in |
Fuze | Nose-percussion, type WgrZ.* 38 | |
No of charges | primary plus four augmenting |
Weight of primary charge | 262 grains | |
Weight of augmenting charge, each | 324 grains |
Booster | Standard mortar bomb booster, type Zdlg** c/98 Np with small smoke box | |
Packing | Singly in container; weight with bomb, about 20 pounds. |
b. 100-mm (4-inch) Smoke Mortar 40 (10-cm, Nebelwerfer 40)
While full details are not yet at hand, it will be seen from figure 2 that
the mortar is fired from a two-wheeled, rubber-tired carriage, provided with a
rectangular baseplate. It is, in addition, known to be breech loading, an unusual
feature in mortars, and has a rather long, smooth-bore barrel of 5.64 feet which
presumably forced the adoption of breech loading. It would be interesting to
learn how the breech mechanism operates.
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Under the barrel will be noted in the illustration a tube that looks quite
like a recoil mechanism, presumably to take up some of the stresses. The
weapon throws a 19-pound bomb, either HE or smoke, from a 550-yard minimum,
to the very respectable maximum range of 6,780 yards, nearly 4 miles, at a rate
of from 8 to 10 rounds per minute. The elevation is from 44.8 to 84.6 degrees,
and the traverse 7 degrees, right or left. Three charges can be used; charge I,
2.08 ounces, giving a muzzle velocity of 427 foot seconds; II, 4.76 ounces,
755 foot seconds, and III, with 8.78 ounces, which develops a velocity of 1,017 foot
seconds. Altogether, this rather odd weapon presents a curious combination of a mobile,
smooth-bore, gun-howitzer of considerable power on a light, handy mount, with extremely
interesting tactical possibilities.
*Werfergranatzünder - mortar shell fuze
**Zündladung - detonation charge