38 cm Belagerungshaubitze M 16

38 cm Belagerungshaubitze M 16

Škoda 380 mm Model 1916 howitzer, at the Heeresgeschichtliches Museum, Vienna, Austria.
Type Superheavy siege howitzer
Place of origin Austria-Hungary
Service history
In service 1916-1918
Used by Austria-Hungary
Kingdom of Italy
Wars World War I
Production history
Designer Skoda
Designed 1915-16
Manufacturer Skoda
Produced 1916-18
Number built 10
Specifications
Weight 81,700 kilograms (180,100 lb)
Barrel length 6.46 metres (21 ft 2 in) L/17

Shell 750 kilograms (1,650 lb)
Caliber 380 millimetres (15 in)
Breech horizontal sliding wedge
Recoil hydro-pneumatic
Carriage firing platform
Elevation 40° to 75°
Traverse 360°
Rate of fire 1 rd per 5 minutes
Muzzle velocity 459 m/s (1,510 ft/s)
Maximum firing range 15,000 metres (16,000 yd)

The 38 cm Belagerungshaubitze M 16 (38 centimetres (15 in) Siege Howitzer Model 16) was a superheavy siege howitzer used by Austria-Hungary during World War I.

History and Design

Two howitzers were initially ordered and both 'Barbara' and 'Gudrun', as they were nicknamed, were delivered in time to participate in the South Tyrol offensive of May 1916. They were very successful and the Austro-Hungarians ordered another fourteen howitzers and two spare barrels, although only eight of these were delivered before the end of the war.

The design was based on a scaled-up Škoda 30.5 cm Mörser M. 16 design, which sped things up considerably. The howitzer was transported in four loads, the barrel, mount and one for each half of the firing, or bedding, platform. Each load was carried by an eight-wheeled electric-powered trailer with the electricity provided by a Daimler Artillerie-Generatorzugwagen (Artillery Generator truck) M. 16, designed by Ferdinand Porsche. The 6-cylinder, 150 hp (110 kW), 20.32 liter gasoline engine powered two electric generators which fed electric motors in each wheel of the trailer and the rear wheels of the truck. Top speed was 14 kilometers per hour. The solid rubber tires could be removed and the trucks could tow their trailers on the rails. For longer distances they could be towed by ordinary locomotives.

Combat use

A 52 cubic meter pit had to be excavated to hold the firing platform which took eight to twenty hours, depending on soil conditions. The bedding halves then were winched into position on rails and jacked down into the pit. The carriage was then mounted on the bedding and the barrel mated to it. All this took six to eight hours to prepare for firing. A small tilting crane was mounted on the left side of the turntable to move shells from their transport carts to the loading tray. It was also used to assemble the loading tray and to change the breech. The howitzer could only be loaded at 11° elevation because the shells had to be rammed by a hand-powered winch with pushrod. The eight later weapons used the same carriage as the 24 cm Kanone M. 16; it had trunnion mounts for both types and the gun used the forward mounts while the howitzer used the rear ones.

The fate of these weapons is unclear. None were put into service by the Nazis after the Anschluss, possibly because of a lack of ammunition, and it is not certain that Romania actually used their weapon during World War II. Howitzer No. 6 survives in the Heeresgeschichtliches Museum, Vienna, Austria, while 'Gudrun', Howitzer No. 2 is in Bucharest, in the National Military Museum, Romania.

See also

Weapons of comparable role, performance and era

References

External links

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