L-11 76.2 Mm Tank Gun
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The 76.2 mm tank gun M1938/39 (L-11) was a
Soviet The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR), commonly known as the Soviet Union, was a List of former transcontinental countries#Since 1700, transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 until Dissolution of the Soviet ...
tank gun, used on the earliest models of the
T-34 The T-34 is a Soviet medium tank from World War II. When introduced, its 76.2 mm (3 in) tank gun was more powerful than many of its contemporaries, and its 60-degree sloped armour provided good protection against Anti-tank warfare, ...
Model 1940 medium tank and KV-1 Model 1939
heavy tank A heavy tank is a tank classification produced from World War I to the end of the Cold War. These tanks generally sacrificed mobility and maneuverability for better armour protection and equal or greater firepower than tanks of lighter classes. ...
during
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
.


History

The ''L-11'' was designed in 1938 by IA Makhanov of the SKB-4 design bureau at the Kirov Plant in Leningrad. It was 30.5 calibers long, had a semi-automatic vertical sliding-wedge breech, used fixed quick-fire 76.2 x 385 mm R ammunition and had a hydro-pneumatic recoil mechanism. It has been claimed that the ''L-11'' was based on the 76 mm air-defense gun M1914/15 designed by VV Tarnovsky and F. F. Lender. What can be said is that both the M1914/15 and L-11 had similar lengths, similar muzzle velocities (592 m/s vs 613 m/s), were built in the same factory and fired the same ammunition. Through a combination of administrative interference by Marshal Grigory Kulik and bureaucratic inertia, the first models of the T-34 and KV-1 were both armed with the ''L-11''. Testing of both tanks highlighted an undesirable situation where both a medium tank and heavy tank were equal in firepower and neither had the firepower necessary to defeat a foreign tank of similar capabilities. Although an acceptable tank gun by the standards of the time the ''L-11'' did not have a substantial performance advantage over foreign designs. Therefore, the ''L-11'' was a stopgap until improved guns for the T-34 and KV-1 could be produced. An early favorite to replace the ''L-11'' was a modified version of the 76 mm air defense gun M1931, but delays and difficulties saw it passed over despite excellent performance. During 1941 the ''L-11'' was replaced on T-34 production lines by the 42.5 caliber '' F-34'' and on KV-1 production lines by the 31.5 caliber '. Despite being considered a superior design the performance of the ''F-32'' gun was not substantially better than the L-11 and inferior to the ''F-34'' gun used on the T-34. Eventually, the ''F-32'' gun was replaced on the KV-1 production lines by a modified version of the ''F-34'' gun called the ''ZiS-5'', finally giving the T-34 and KV-1 parity in firepower.


Comparison of guns


Variants


L-17 casemate gun

During the 1930s the Red Army proposed creation of a new 76 mm casemate gun capable of withstanding a direct hit from a 76 mm armor-piercing projectile fired from a distance of or the explosion of a high-explosive projectile at a distance of from the pillbox. The design bureau of the Kirov Plant under the leadership of IA Makhanov responded by creating a variant of the L-11 which it called the L-17. The L-17 was mounted in a heavily armored gun mantlet with the barrel inside of an armored tube. In May 1939, the Kirov plant received an order for six-hundred L-17 guns. During testing between September 29 and October 8, 1939 the L-17 withstood the impact of a 76 mm armor piercing projectile fired from a M1902/30 field gun at a velocity of at a distance of . The first L-17's were installed in June 1940 in the Kamenets-Podilsky fortified area.


Field gun conversion

During 1941-1942 a field gun based on the L-11 was introduced. It consisted of an L-11 barrel on the split-trail carriage used by the ZiS-3. This adaptation was probably done to address the huge losses of artillery suffered during the summer of 1941 and to use surplus L-11 barrels. The Soviet designation for this gun is not known, but the Germans referred to them as the 7.62 cm FK 250(r).


Notes


References

* Chamberlain, Peter. Gander Terry. 1975. Light and medium field artillery. New York: Arco. . * Zaloga, Steve. 1994. T-34/76 Medium Tank 1941-45. Osprey Publishing. * Zaloga, Steve. Grandsen, James. 1984. Soviet tanks and combat vehicles of World War Two. London: Arms and Armour Press. p225. {{ISBN, 0853686068.


External links

* http://www.armchairgeneral.com/rkkaww2/weapons/art_tanks.htm * http://tankarchives.blogspot.com/2016/02/minor-modernization-t-150.html * http://www.plam.ru/tehnauka/genii_sovetskoi_artillerii_triumf_i_tragedija_v_grabina/p15.php World War II tank guns World War II artillery of the Soviet Union Tank guns of the Soviet Union Military equipment introduced in the 1930s