Brandt Mle 27/31
The Brandt mle 27/31 mortar was a regulation weapon of the French army during the Second World War. Designed by Edgar Brandt, it was a refinement of the Stokes mortar. The Brandt mortar was highly influential, being licensed built or copied by numerous countries.
Development history
In 1915, about the same time when British civil engineer Wilfred Stokes turned to developing trench mortars for the troops, the French applied artist, silversmith and ironsmith Edgar Brandt did the same while serving in the French Army. He developed two pneumatic weapons, obusier pneumatique Brandt de 60 mm modèle 1915 on a tripod carriage and later also modèle 1916 on a cast aluminium baseplate. The first type of the shell had an aerodynamic teardrop body with flat stabilizers and an obturation groove around its widest part, both features that would define the design of mortar shells in decades to come.In September 1917, the under-secretary of state for inventions sent a circular letter requesting inventors to design a better projectile for the successful Stokes mortar, and Brandt scaled his 60 mm projectile up to 81 mm. Both the British and French militaries adopted the scaled-up design except for the grooves in 1918 as projectile BM modèle 1918 and Mk. II HE bomb respectively.
After several years of further development, Brandt applied for a patent in January 1925 on a mortar shell with several obturation grooves, a design which has not in principle changed in the century since. The French shell FA modèle 1924/27 was soon adopted in place of the BM Mle 1918, closely followed the drawing in the patent; the FA modèle 1932 offered even more improvement in range. It was this refined projectile design that made the Stokes-Brandt mortar so superior compared to the WWI Stokes: with Brandt-type WWII shells, the latter was able to reach in range.
Description
The Brandt mle 27/31 was a simple and effective weapon, consisting of a smoothbore metal tube fixed to a base plate, with a lightweight bipod mount. The mle 27/31 could be disassembled into three loads, plus the ammunitions loads, and a complete crew was 10 men. When a mortar bomb was dropped into the tube, an impact sensitive primer in the base of the bomb would make contact with a firing pin at the base of the tube, and detonate, firing the bomb towards the target. HE and smoke mortar bombs fired by the weapon weighed 3.25 kilograms.Users
Brandt's innovative projectile design along with the Stokes Mortar provided the pattern for most World War II era light mortars.In 1928, an unlicensed Polish copy was made as the Avia wz.28 but, due to French pressure, it was abandoned in 1931 because the French Brandt company held the patent for the ammunition. The Polish then produced a licensed copy as the wz.31 model starting in 1935; 1,050 were made in Pruszków. By 1939, the Polish army was equipped with some 1,200 Stokes-Brandt mortars, most of them the newer 1931 model. Each Polish infantry battalion was intended to be equipped with four such mortars, but there were not enough available to fulfill this disposition. The upgraded 1931 version was used by the Polish Army during, amongst others, the Battle of Westerplatte in 1939. An unspecified amount, probably a few hundred, were sold to Republican Spain in 1936-1938.
In Romania, the mortar was licence-produced at the Voina Works in Brașov, with a production rate of 30 pieces per month as of October 1942. 360 mortars captured by the Germans from the French were also received in 1942.
| Country | Weapon name | German designation for captured mortars | Observation |
| 8 cm GrW 33 | - | ||
| 81.4 mm minomet, | 8.14 cm GrW 278 | License-built variant | |
| 8 cm minomet vz. 36 | 8 cm GrW M.36 | Modified variant | |