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37 mm gun M1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 37 mm gun M1A2 on carriage M3 |
| image | 37mm Antiaircraft gun in Solomons.jpg |
| image_size | 300 |
| caption | 37 mm antiaircraft gun in the Solomon Islands. |
| origin | US |
| type | Anti-aircraft autocannon |
| is_artillery | yes |
| used_by | USA |
| wars | World War II |
| Rhodesian Bush War | |
| designer | John M. Browning and the Colt company |
| production_date | 1939–July 1943 |
| number | At least 7,278 |
| weight | 2780 kg |
| part_length | bore: 2 m (6.56 ft) / 54 calibers |
| width | 1.7 m |
| height | 1.8 m |
| cartridge | Fixed QF 37×223mmSR |
| cartridge_weight | .6 kg |
| caliber | 37 mm (1.45 in) |
| rate | 120 rounds per minute |
| velocity | 792 m/s (2,598 ft/s) |
| range | 3,200 m (3,499 yds) |
| max_range | 8,275 m (9,049 yds) |
| breech | vertical block |
| carriage | four-wheeled trailer |
| elevation | -5° to + 90° |
| traverse | 360° |
Rhodesian Bush War
The 37 mm gun M1 was an anti-aircraft autocannon developed in the United States. It was used by the US Army in World War II.
The gun was produced in a towed variant, or mounted along with two M2 machine guns on the M2/M3 half-track, resulting in the T28/T28E1/M15/M15A1 series of multiple gun motor carriages.
In early World War II, each Army Anti-Aircraft Artillery (AAA) Auto-Weapons battalion was authorized a total of thirty-two 37 mm guns in its four firing batteries, plus other weapons.
During World War II, the 37 mm gun M1 was deployed in coast defense anti-motor torpedo boat batteries (AMTB) alongside 90 mm guns, usually four 90 mm and two 37 mm guns per battery. Some AMTB batteries consisted of four 37 mm guns, but most sources have little information on these batteries. In the later part of the war, the 37 mm gun was typically replaced by the 40 mm Bofors gun M1.
Components
One or two gun units were coupled to the M5 gun director using the M1 remote control system. The system was powered by the M5 generating unit. If the remote system was inoperative, the M5 sighting system was used, but it was only usable up to 25 degrees of elevation.
Ammunition
The M1 utilized fixed ammunition. Projectiles were fitted with a 37×223mmSR cartridge case.
| Type | Model | Weight (round/projectile) | Filler | Muzzle velocity | Range horizontal/vertical | APC-T | HE-T |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| APC-T M59A1 Shot | 1.44/0.87 kg | ||||||
| (3.17/1.91 lbs) | - | 625 m/s | |||||
| (2,050 ft/s) | 5,290/3,660 m | ||||||
| (17,355/12,007 ft) | |||||||
| HE-T SD M54 Shell | 1.21/0.61 kg | ||||||
| (2.66/1.34 lbs) | 792 m/s | ||||||
| (2,598 ft/s) | 8,275/5,760 m | ||||||
| (27,149/18,897 ft) |
| Ammunition / Distance | 457 m | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| (500 yds) | 914 m | ||
| (1000 yds) | 1,371 m | ||
| (1,500 yds) | 1,828 m | ||
| (2,000 yds) | APC-T M59A1 Shot | ||
| (homogeneous armor, meet angle 30°) | APC-T M59A1 Shot | ||
| (face-hardened armor, meet angle 30°) | |||
| 23 mm | |||
| (.90 in) | 18 mm | ||
| (.70 in) | 15 mm | ||
| (.59 in) | 13 mm | ||
| (.51 in) | |||
| 25 mm | |||
| (.98 in) | 18 mm | ||
| (.70 in) | 15 mm | ||
| (.59 in) | 13 mm | ||
| (.51 in) |
Variants
- The 37 mm M9 autocannon was a derivative of the M1A2 anti-aircraft gun. It had a 74 in barrel, weighed 405 lb (the barrel alone weighing 120 pounds), had a muzzle velocity of 3,000 ft/s, and had a rate of fire of 150 rounds per minute. It was used on PT boats around 1944 in the Pacific theater during World War II, replacing the M4 autocannon.
Comparison of anti-aircraft guns
| Country | Gun model | RPM | Projectile weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| 37 mm gun M1 | 120 | .6 kg | |
| Nazi Germany | [3.7 cm SK C/30](3-7-cm-sk-c-30) | 30 | .74 kg |
| Canon de 37 mm Modèle 1925 | 15-21 | .72 kg | |
| Cannone-Mitragliera da 37/54 (Breda) | 60-120 | .82 kg | |
| Nazi Germany | [3.7 cm Flak 18/36/37/43](3-7-cm-flak-18-36-37-43) | 150 | .64 kg |
| [37 mm automatic air defense gun M1939 (61-K)](37-mm-automatic-air-defense-gun-m1939-61-k) | 80 | .73 kg | |
| QF 2-pounder naval gun | 115 | .91 kg | |
| Bofors 40 mm gun | 120 | .9 kg |
Notes
References
- Hogg, Ian. Twentieth-Century Artillery. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 2000. Pg.106
- {{cite book | author-link = Ian V. Hogg
- {{cite book
- {{cite book
- TM 9-2300 standard artillery and fire control material. dated 1944
- TM 9-235
- TM 9-1235
- SNL A-29
References
- Chamberlain, Peter. (1975). "Anti-aircraft guns". Arco Pub. Co.
- "385th AAA Auto-Weapons Battalion website".
- McGovern and Smith, p. 43
- Shell destroying tracer limited the range to about 3,200 m.
- Different methods of armor penetration measurement were used in different countries / periods. Therefore, direct comparison is often impossible.
- DiGiulian, Tony. "Germany 3.7 cm/83 SK C/30 - NavWeaps".
- DiGiulian, Tony. "France 37 mm/50 (1.46") Model 1925 and CAIL Model 1933 - NavWeaps".
- DiGiulian, Tony. "Italy 37 mm/54 (1.5") Models 1932, 1938 and 1939 - NavWeaps".
- DiGiulian, Tony. "Germany 3.7 cm/57 (1.5") Flak M43 - NavWeaps".
- Foss, Christopher. (1977). "Jane's pocket book of towed artillery". Collier.
- DiGiulian, Tony. "Russia / USSR 37 mm/67 (1.5") 70-K - NavWeaps".
- DiGiulian, Tony. "United Kingdom / Britain 2-pdr QF Mark VIII - NavWeaps".
- DiGiulian, Tony. "USA Bofors 40 mm/60 Model 1936 - NavWeaps".
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