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Canon de 75 antiaérien mle 1913–1917

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French canon de 75 mm antiaérien mle 1915 at Salonika in World War I.
TypeAnti-aircraft gun
Place of originFrance
Service history
In service1914–1945
Used byFrance
Finland
Nazi Germany
Poland
WarsWorld War I
World War II
Production history
DesignerSchneider et Cie
Designed1897
ManufacturerSchneider et Cie
VariantsModèle 1913
Modèle 1915
Modèle 1917[1]
Specifications
Mass3,000 kg (6,600 lb)
Barrel length2.7 m (8 ft 10 in) L/33[1]

ShellFixed QF 75 × 350 mm R[2]
Shell weight6.25 kg (13.8 lb)
BreechNordenfelt eccentric screw
RecoilHydraulic
Elevation+10° to 70°[1]
Traverse360°
Rate of fire12 rpm
Muzzle velocity575 m/s (1,890 ft/s)
Effective firing range6.5 km (21,000 ft)[1]

The Canon de 75 antiaérien mle 1913–1917 were a family of French 75 mm anti-aircraft guns designed and manufactured by Schneider et Cie at Le Creusot. The guns were used by the French Army during the First World War and Second World War.

History

The origins of the modèle 1913–1917 go back to the Canon de 75 modèle 1897 field gun which was first employed on improvised anti-aircraft mounts, which were typically earthen embankments or scaffolds to get the muzzle pointed skyward. Later in the war, specialised anti-aircraft mounts were developed. These included

  • Canon de 75 mm antiaérien mle 1913 - a self-propelled version, on the back of a De Dion-Bouton truck chassis.
  • Canon de 75 mm antiaérien mle 1915 - a pit mounted high-angle steel girder framework with 360° traverse. There was also a version with a rotating platform mounted on a concrete pedestal.
  • Canon de 75 mm antiaérien mle 1917 - a single-axle towed version with three outriggers. This had all fire-control equipment mounted on the carriage and was a Schneider design.[3]

The most common anti-aircraft configuration was a fixed battery of four mle 1915 guns located near cities, factories or military bases. Target range was measured by optical coincidence rangefinders and height by optical height finders which measured the distance to the target and the elevation angle, which together gave the height of the aircraft. These coordinates were transmitted to a single Brocq fire-control station, which was an electric tachymetric device that calculated target speed, altitude and direction to determine deflection angles. The deflection calculations were transmitted to displays on each gun for the crew to aim at for barrage fire. The guns themselves had only simple sights and lacked the ability to engage individual targets.[4]

Anti-aircraft effectiveness during the First World War was poor but many of these systems remained in use without improvement until the Second World War. By which time they were nearly useless against faster, higher flying targets. During the late 1920s it was realised that the mle 1897 was outmoded as an anti-aircraft weapon and development of a new gun barrel was begun in 1928. The goals of the rearmament program were faster rate of fire, higher muzzle velocity, increased vertical range, modern fire control and greater mobility with new gun carriages. Priority for armaments was given to the Maginot Line fortifications being built and work moved at a slow pace. Lack of funds meant all three anti-aircraft versions of the mle 1897 were still in use in large numbers when World War II began in 1939. It is estimated that 913 mle 1897 anti-aircraft guns were still in service in 1940.[3]

Modernizations

Some of the first guns to be improved were in fixed emplacements around important targets such as Paris. These mle 1915 guns had their barrels replaced with new 53 calibre barrels built by Schneider. Some mle 1913 self-propelled guns and towed mle 1917 guns also had their barrels replaced to produce the Canon de 75 mm contre aéronefs mle 17/34. Large numbers of 75 mm guns were captured by Germany after the French defeat in 1940.

Guns in German service were called

  • 7.5 cm FK 97(f) - These were un-modernized mle 1897 guns. Some were sold to Axis satellites,[5] some were converted to 7.5 cm Pak 97/38 anti-tank guns and others were integrated into Atlantic Wall defences.
  • 7.5 cm Flak M.17/34(f) - modernised mle 17/34 guns in German service as anti-aircraft guns.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Chamberlain, Peter (1975). Anti-aircraft guns. Gander, Terry,. New York: Arco Pub. Co. p. 8. ISBN 0668038187. OCLC 2000222.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  2. ^ "75-77 MM CALIBRE CARTRIDGES". www.quarryhs.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  3. ^ a b c Bishop, Chris (1998). The encyclopedia of weapons of World War II. New York: Barnes & Noble Books. pp. 150–151. ISBN 0760710228. OCLC 40924461.
  4. ^ Routledge (1994). History of the Royal regiment of Artillery – Anti-Aircraft Artillery 1914–55. London: Brassey's. pp. 14–50. ISBN 1-85753-099-3.
  5. ^ "Finnish Army 1918–1945: Antiaircraft Guns part 3". www.jaegerplatoon.net. Retrieved 2017-09-07.

Media related to Canon de 75 modèle 1897 AA gun at Wikimedia Commons