https://youtu.be/dGzVZyMzDPI
Anyway , I was going through Ian McCollum's posts on Japanese weapons , and I got fascinated by the "knee mortar" . It isn't actually a mortar but a rifled grenade launcher. The curved butt plate allows it to be fired from about any surface. You can pack it down into lose dirt or off roots. It is rifled and it uses a lose copper band to enable it to be dropped down a rifled barrel and it is fired with a percussion cap gas pressure expands the copper band to engage the rifling. Actually I could see this thing still be used today. To bad it and other Japanese weapon designs suffer from NIH to an extreme.
Japanese "knee mortar "
- randy
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
So what advantage would it offer over the M-203 or other grenade launchers in current service?
...even before I read MHI, my response to seeing a poster for the stars of the latest Twilight movies was "I see 2 targets and a collaborator".
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
Probably little, if anything.
Now, if they're trigger fired, some shade-tree weapon mechanic could bolt a bunch of them together and make something like the naval Hedgehog ASW launcher, but for use against personnel...
Now, if they're trigger fired, some shade-tree weapon mechanic could bolt a bunch of them together and make something like the naval Hedgehog ASW launcher, but for use against personnel...
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
Longer range and more punch at the expense of being less accurate.
IMO the knee mortar is, like the M79/203/etc another alternative to rifle grenades.
Maybe we're just jaded, but your villainy is not particularly impressive. -Ennesby
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
50 mm vs 40 mm , practice ammo probably cheaper , like all weapons its utility depends a large part on the skill of the operator. A shaped charge round could probably be developed for it ?
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
You could probably make a shaped charge, but it might be less useful, because shaped charges require a direct hit to be effective, at least against armored targets. The knee mortar's lack of sights would really hamper it in anything like direct fire.
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
The knee mortar had a lot more recoil than, say an M203. You can fire the latter from your shoulder, while the former, despite weighing a bit over 10 pounds, would break your leg if you braced it against yourself. Max range was quite a bit greater. So likely projectile was quite a bit heavier too.
They were trigger fired. No reason they couldn't be used in direct fire. WAG, but I suspect with practice accuracy in direct fire would depend a lot on how well you could judge distance.....
In indirect fire one type of shell had a deliberate delay fuse so jungle canopy wouldn't set it off prematurely. Very sneaky.
Maybe we're just jaded, but your villainy is not particularly impressive. -Ennesby
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
- D5CAV
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
I love mortars. Back in the day, the longest ranging weapons in my CAV troop were the 4.2" mortars that we carried in APCs. They could put lots of hot metal on a target almost 4000m away.
Germans in WW1 and WW2 also had "knee mortars" and "trench mortars". These, like the Japanese "knee mortars", were somewhere between rifle grenades and full-fledged mortars. The idea was to make a mortar into a single person weapon vs. crew served weapon. However, a single soldier couldn't really carry enough rounds along with the weapon to make it useful. Once you morph it into a crew-served weapon, you may as well go all the way with a 60mm or 80mm mortar with baseplate, aiming mechanism, and real rate of fire.
I don't believe the US ever fielded such a weapon. Like many "tweeners", knee mortars got lost between rifle grenades and mortars.
If a problem wasn't solved by a hand-grenade or rifle-grenade, every infantry company had a mortar section. Problem solved...
Germans in WW1 and WW2 also had "knee mortars" and "trench mortars". These, like the Japanese "knee mortars", were somewhere between rifle grenades and full-fledged mortars. The idea was to make a mortar into a single person weapon vs. crew served weapon. However, a single soldier couldn't really carry enough rounds along with the weapon to make it useful. Once you morph it into a crew-served weapon, you may as well go all the way with a 60mm or 80mm mortar with baseplate, aiming mechanism, and real rate of fire.
I don't believe the US ever fielded such a weapon. Like many "tweeners", knee mortars got lost between rifle grenades and mortars.
If a problem wasn't solved by a hand-grenade or rifle-grenade, every infantry company had a mortar section. Problem solved...
“None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.” Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
I've lost track of the development on it, but the US was working on a shoot and scoot hauled by a truck that fired a round that had a homing trajectory warhead that was a smaller version of an artillery shell, Excalibur , IIRC ?. I recall a video showing a truck stopping then the mortar being dropped out the back of the truck onto its base plate, then an arm came out a dropped a round down the tube, then the truck retracted the mortar and got out of Doge.
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Re: Japanese "knee mortar "
There are a couple of test bed auto-loading mortars mounted on HMMWV chassis out there, at least one in 81mm and another in 120mm. Neither of the ones that I've seen put the mortar on the ground, though they do deploy stabilizer legs. You may be thinking of the French Ceasar truck mounted 155mm howitzer.
I think the 120mm mortar is big enough to use GPS guidance, but I don't think any systems have been fielded as of yet. Probably due to cost reasons. The 81mm versrion was magazine fed, with a 4 or 5 round magazine, which it could empty pretty quick and then displace to avoid counter fire.
I think the 120mm mortar is big enough to use GPS guidance, but I don't think any systems have been fielded as of yet. Probably due to cost reasons. The 81mm versrion was magazine fed, with a 4 or 5 round magazine, which it could empty pretty quick and then displace to avoid counter fire.
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