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120 mm 95 France: The UBM-52 is the Hotchkiss-Brandt MO-120-AM50 built under license in Yugoslavia. [24] [65] UBM 52: 120 mm Yugoslavia: Type 53: 120 mm 50 People's Republic of China [23] OFB E1 120 mm 18 India [66] Type-87: 82 mm 366 People's Republic of China [24] M29A1: 81 mm 11 United States [24] BOF type-BD-20 60 mm Bangladesh
HE projectile. Americanised version of the French Schneider 155 mm HE projectile for the Canon de 155 C modèle 1917 Schneider. [27] United States: M107: 1940s-current Standard HE projectile developed from the M102 for use in the 155 mm Howitzer M1. The projectile is one of the most widely used of all Western artillery projectiles and is fired ...
In June 2021, a Turkey 105 mm and 155 mm artillery shell production line establishment agreement was signed between Bangladesh and Turkish company REPKON. With the modern Free Flowforming (REPKON patented) technology and computerized machinery from REPKON, BOF will produce high-quality 105 mm and 155 mm artillery shells.
Officially designated projectile, 155 mm howitzer, M110, the original round was a 26.8-inch (68.1 cm) steel shell with a rotating band near its base and a burster rod down its center. [7] The original shell typically contained 9.7 pounds (4.4 kg) of sulfur mustard (H) or distilled sulfur mustard (HD) , which would fill the hollow space in the ...
Pages in category "155 mm artillery shells" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
The M107 is a 155 mm high explosive projectile used by many countries. It is a bursting round with fragmentation and blast effects. It is a bursting round with fragmentation and blast effects. It used to be the standard 155 mm high explosive projectile for howitzers of the US Army and US Marine Corps , but is being superseded in the US military ...
The 155 mm gun M1 was a 155 millimeter caliber field gun developed and used by the United States military. Nicknamed "Long Tom" (an appellation with a long and storied history in U.S. field and naval artillery), it was produced in M1 and M2 variants, later known as the M59 .
155 mm M114/howitzer M1 a WWII–1980s-era towed howitzer used by the United States Army; M198 155 mm howitzer; M119 howitzer a lightweight British 105 mm howitzer also used by the United States Army; M777 155 mm medium howitzer; Self-propelled artillery. T92 howitzer motor carriage experimental self-propelled 240 mm howitzer