76 mm mountain gun M48
The 76 mm mountain gun M-48, was developed after the Second World War to meet the requirements of Yugoslav People's Army mountain units, it can also be used as a field gun.
Description and history
The original M-48 B-1 model which was designed in 1947 and adopted by Yugoslav People's Army in 1950, it was specifically designed for mountain warfare, being able to be broken down and towed by horse or mule, though it also doubles as a field gun. In Yugoslav service the Zastava AR51 4×4 vehicle was used for towing before it was replaced a license-built version of the Fiat 1107.The M48 was also a successful military export item, sold to South Asian countries such as India, Indonesia, Myanmar, and Sri Lanka, where weight instead of range was the main factor considered.
The Romanian is related to the M48, firing some of the ammunition types used by the Yugoslav gun.
Variants
Yugoslavia/Serbia
There have been at least five variants of the M48:M48 B-1 − First production version, its fitted with pneumatic tires and a maximum towing speed of. The complete gun can also towed by pack animals or broken down for transport M48 B-1A1-I − A variant combining the wheels and tires of the B-1 and some of the suspension components of the B-1A2 versionM48 B-1A2 − A dual-purpose variant featuring light alloy wheels with solid rubber tires and a modified suspension, its maximum towing speed is. The B-1A2 can be used as a field gun, but it cannot be disassembled for transport or towed by pack animalsM48 B-2 − Last version produced in Yugoslavia, little is known about itM48 B1 A5 − A Serbian variant offered for export by Yugoimport SDPR in 2004. Specifications are almost identical to the B-1, but its operated by a crew of sevenRomania
76.2 mm Mountain Gun Model 1982 − A related design, it was designed to equip the Romanian Land Forces mountain units. The Model 82 is operated by a crew of seven, can be brought into action in about a minute, and broken down into eight pack-animal loads without the need of specialised tools98 mm Model 93 mountain howitzer − A caliber mountain gun and possibly an improved Model 82. Both Romanian mountain guns were never exported, even though they were offered for sale in the international marketAmmunition
Ammunition is of the semi-fixed type with four charges. It is based on that used for the Soviet 76 mm regimental gun M1927 which fired fixed ammunition. Ammunition types include high-explosive, high-explosive anti-tank and smoke rounds:- HE M55 projectile weighing 6.2 kg with a muzzle velocity between 222 and 398 m/s;
- High-explosive anti-tank projectile weighing 5.1 kg which will penetrate 100 mm of conventional steel armour at a range of 450 m; and
- Smoke shell WP M60 weighing 6,2 kg.
- HE M70 projectile weighing 6.2 kg with a muzzle velocity up to 398 m/s;
Users
- − 57
- − 215
- − 50 in 2011
- − 40 or 55
- − 96
- − 100
- − 6, donated by Indonesia in 2012
- − Model 82 and Model 93
- − 96
- − 14
- − 6, donated by Indonesia in 2012
- − Passed on to successor states