M74/M75 mortar

120 mm M74 and M75 Mortars
Type Mortar
Place of origin  Yugoslavia
Service history
In service 1981-present
Used by see operators
Wars Yugoslav Wars
Production history
Designer Military Technical Institute Belgrade
Specifications
Weight 105 kg for M74, 177 kg for M75 in firing position
Crew 5

Caliber 120 millimetres (4.7 in)
Rate of fire 12 rpm for M74, 15 rpm for M75
Effective firing range 6400m for M74, 9056m for M75
Feed system manual

The M74 and M75 Mortars are Yugoslavian built smooth bore, muzzle-loading, high-angle-of-fire weapon used for long-range indirect fire support.[1] Today they are produced by Serbian company PPT Namenska[2] and BNT[3] from Bosnia and Herzegovina.

History

Deployed as infantry support for destruction of personnel and enemy firing positions, for opening routes through barbed wire obstacles and mine fields, for demolition of fortified objects, for destructing infrastructure elements, illumination and deploying smoke screen. With an HE M62P8 shell fired at 5000 meters, the probable error in range was 76 meters, while the probable error in line was 28 meters. [4]

The M75 model is heavier and used to provide fire support in infantry battalions. M75 in comparison to M74 weighs more, but provides greater rate of fire and possibility of longer firing period. On the other hand, the M74 can be carried and dismantled by just three crew members.

The M74 model is generally deployed for brief fire missions, while the M75 is deployed for sustained bombardments. Both models entered serial production in 1981. Mortars in former Yugoslavia were considered to be very important arms as they are very effective and simple to use weapons deployed in a fire support role.

Ammunition

HE Mortar Shell[5]

Smoke Mortar Shell[6]

Illuminating Mortar Shell[7]

Operators

Map with M74 operators in blue with former operators in red

Current operators

Former operators

References

  1. "Yugoslavian mortars - List of mortars developed in Yugoslavia".
  2. "PPT - Production capacities".
  3. "BNT - BNT military production".
  4. Olasolo, Hector (2008). Unlawful Attacks in Combat Situations: From the IctyÆs Case Law to the Rome Statute. Martinus Nijhoff. pp 225. ISBN 978-9004162006.
  5. "Krusik HE - HE mortar shell".
  6. "Krusik Smoke - Smoke mortar shell".
  7. "Krusik Illuminating - Illuminating mortar shell".
  8. 1 2 О военной помощи Грузии со стороны иностранных государств // "Зарубежное военное обозрение", № 6 (735), 2008. стр.94-95
  9. UN Register - Georgia Standard Report. (Import, Calendar Year 2005)

See also

External links


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