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  2. 81 mm mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/81_mm_mortar

    81mm L16 mortar. An 81-mm mortar is a medium-weight mortar. It is a smooth-bore, muzzle-loading, high-angle-of-fire weapon used for long-range indirect fire support of light infantry, air assault, and airborne units across the entire front of a battalion zone of influence. [1] [2] Many countries use or have used an 81-mm mortar in their armed ...

  3. M252 mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M252_mortar

    The range of a mortar is controlled by the number of propellant charges attached to the tail of the mortar designated M223. A charge is a semi-circular donut of nitrocellulose, which resembles a "horseshoe". [17] [18] A round for the M252 mortar comes with four charges attached. Longer-range shots require more propellant than can fit in the ...

  4. KMS114 81 mm mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KMS114_81_mm_mortar

    The 81 mm mortar KMS-114 is a South Korean infantry mortar, one of the weapon systems operated by the infantry battalion. The mortar system is made up of a light mortar (KM-114), a digital compass (GYG-14K), a digital calculator (PYK-14K), a digital communication device (PYT-14K), a forward observer device (TAS-14K) and a loading and carrying vehicle.

  5. Cardom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardom

    The Cardom system takes target-acquisition data that provides range, bearing, position and other data from an observation point and transmits it directly to the Cardom system. Using electrical servo motors, the mortar barrel is then set at the exact traverse and elevation angles to fire upon the target. The 120 mm Cardom has a burst rate of 16 ...

  6. L16 81mm mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L16_81mm_mortar

    The L16 81mm mortar is a British and Canadian standard mortar used by the Canadian Army, British Army, and many other armed forces. It originated as a joint design by the UK and Canada. The version produced and used by Australia is named the F2 81mm Mortar; the U.S. armed forces version is the M252.

  7. M29 mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M29_mortar

    The M29 is an American-produced 81 millimeter mortar. It began replacing the M1 mortar in U.S. service in 1952 being lighter and with greater range. It was subsequently replaced by the M252 mortar in 1987. Variants included the M29E1 and M29A1, adopted in 1964.

  8. Type 99 81 mm mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_99_81_mm_mortar

    The Type 99 81 mm mortar (Japanese as "Kyukyu Shiki Shohakuyekiho", meaning "99 model small trench mortar") was a Japanese mortar used by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. Its primary role was that of a lightweight mortar for assault and airborne troops that could be quickly assembled or disassembled.

  9. 81/14 Model 35 Mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/81/14_Model_35_Mortar

    The 81/14 Model 35 Mortar was an Italian World War II infantry mortar. It was the standard weapon of the Italian Army during the war, of typical Brandt-system construction, but relatively lightweight, with good range and considered very successful.