Post
by Folkwulfe » Mon Jan 08, 2007 8:49 pm
Aferg got it mostly right, but here are a few added details (straight from the "horse's mouth"...so to speak) I got this from a German friend who was a loader on towed anti-tank guns whom I met while stationed in Germany during the mid '80s. The PAK-40 7.5cm gun was persussion fired only from the towed field piece. Electrical firing was used when the gun was vehicle mounted. The "semi-automatic breach" meant only that the breach had mechanical devices attached that assisted in opening, seating, and closing the breach. The handle atop the breach was connected to gears inside the breach that slide the breach-block open (to the left when facing the breach) or closed. Each time the breach was opened, the precussion striker (firing pin) was cocked. When the gunner squeezed the firing trigger, it mechanically released the stricker and fired the chambered round. The 7.5cm gun had a hell of a kick and could raise the cradle off the ground sometimes when fired. The loader, facing rearward on the right side of the cradle (and staying way out of the way of the breach when firing) immediately grabbed the handle atop the breach and turned it rearward (clockwise) sliding the breach-block open and a small block flush with the breach pushed the empty shell casing out slightly. The loader had to grab the shell and extract it completely if it didn't fall free by itself. If it wasn't taken out quickly, the spent case would "wedge" into the breach when the breach cooled faster than the copper shell casing (the breach would shrink around the casing). That meant taking a ramming stick (attached to a cradle leg) and, in the face of the enemy, getting in front of the muzzle and ramming the spent casing out of the breach in order to reload. In goes another round, the handle turned counter clockwise and locked, and the loader slapped the gunner on the head (to signify ready) and he gets out of the way. According to my source, the average crew was four...Gun Captain (an NCO), gunner, loader, and tractor driver who brought ammo from the tractor to the cradle (sometimes with the loader's help). A fifth person was sometimes added and that would be an assistant tractor driver. My source never saw one. Oh...and he said that most 8.8cm gun crews were 5 or 6. The 8.8 had an automatic shell ejecter and a breach mechanism that closed as soon as a shell was seated in the breach. The loader became an ammo-humper like the tractor driver. This was because the 8.8 was originally designed to be a rapid fire anti-aircraft gun later adapted to anti-tank and artillery purposes. Most anti-tank 8.8 crews wished they were elsewhere. The 8.8cm was difficult to move, sat large and tall, and drew instant return fire after the first shell was fired (unless they could shoot at extreme long range which naturally didn't happen often). Crews were almost completely unprotected and couldn't run.
US Army MP Corps combat veteran Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm