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25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer


FieldValue
name25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer
image25 cm Minenwerfer of Polish Army 1918-1925 (cropped).png
image_size300
caption25 cm schwered Minenwerfer n/A model with wheels attached, Warsaw, 2007.
originGerman Empire
typeHeavy trench mortar
is_artilleryyes
is_UKno
service1910–1918
used_byGerman Empire
warsWorld War I
designerRheinmetall
design_date1907–09
manufacturerRheinmetall
production_date1910–18
numberapprox. 1,234
variants25 cm sMW n/A
weight768 kg
part_lengtha/A: 75 cm L/3
n/A: 1.25 m L/5
cartridgeseparate-loading, 4 disk charges
caliber250 mm
rate20 rounds per hour
velocity200 m/s
range540 m
max_range970 m
sightspanoramic
recoilhydro-spring
carriagebox trail
elevation+45° to 75°
traverse12°

n/A: 1.25 m L/5 The 25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer (heavy mine launcher), often abbreviated as 25 cm sMW, was a heavy mine shell launching trench mortar developed for the Imperial German Army in the first decade of the 20th century.

Design and development

It was developed for use by engineer troops after the Siege of Port Arthur during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05 illustrated the usefulness of this class of weapon in destroying bunkers and fortifications immune to normal artillery. The 25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer was a muzzle-loading, rifled mortar that had a hydro-spring type recoil system. It fired either a 97 kg shell or a 50 kg mine shell; both containing far more explosive filler than ordinary artillery ammunition of the same caliber. The low muzzle velocity allowed for thinner shell walls, hence more space for filler for the same weight shell. The low velocity also allowed the use of explosives like ammonium nitrate–carbon that were less shock-resistant than TNT, which was in short supply. Shells filled with these substitutes nonetheless were the cause of many premature detonations, making the Minenwerfer riskier for the gun crew than normal artillery pieces. File:25 cm minegranat.png|To the left, a 25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer mine shell; to the right, a 24 cm conventional high-explosive shell. File:25 cm minenwerfer.png|25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer in a trench. The left soldier is showing a 25 cm mine shell as used in the artillery piece. File:25cmMinenwerferCrewLoading.jpg|Loading a 25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer.

Service

The wheels were removed and the sMW was then placed in a pit or trench at least 1.5 m deep, protecting the mortar and its crew. Despite the extremely short range, the sMW proved to be potent as its massive shells were almost as effective in penetrating fortifications as the largest siege guns in the German inventory, including the 42 cm Dicke Bertha (Big Bertha), a howitzer that was more than 50 times the weight of the sMW. The value of the sMW is indicated by the number in service, which increased from 44 when the war broke out, to 1,234 at its end.

In 1916, a new longer-barrelled version was put into production. This new model, which had a longer range with an L/5 barrel, was named the 25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer neuer Art (new pattern), which was abbreviated to 25 cm sMW n/A. The older, short-barrel L/3 model was then renamed 25 cm sMW a/A (alter Art) (old pattern).

A middle variant, which consisted of simply adding a 500mm barrel extension to existing a/A mortars, was the 25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer 16a.

References

References

  1. Tillmann Reibert. "Die Entwicklung des Granatwerfers im Ersten Weltkrieg {{!}} Die Entstehung eines neuartigen Waffentyps als Reaktion auf die Bedingungen des Stellungskrieges". University of Hamburg.
  2. Bernard Plumier. "Surviving Gun File #171".
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