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Bulgaria – post war use, known as D-30 "Krup" 150mm Republic of China; Czechoslovakia – post war use Finland – 48 pieces, known as 150 H/40; Nazi Germany Italy – known as Cannone da 149/28 Portugal – post war use, known as Obus K 15 cm/30 m/941 Soviet Union – post war use; Spain – 1937–39 and Blue Division Yugoslavia – post ...
The Type 89 15 cm cannon (八九式十五糎加農砲, Hachikyūshiki Jyūgosenchi Kanōhō) was the main gun of the Imperial Japanese Army's heavy artillery units. The Type 89 designation was given to this gun as it was accepted in the year 2589 of the Japanese calendar (1929). [4]
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The gun was a development of the previous standard howitzer, the 15 cm sFH 02.Improvements included a longer barrel resulting in better range and a gun shield to protect the crew.
The 15 cm SK C/28 [Note 1] was a German medium-caliber naval gun used during the Second World War.It served as the secondary armament for the Bismarck class and Scharnhorst-class battleships, Deutschland-class cruisers and the Graf Zeppelin-class aircraft carriers.
The 15 cm SK L/40 gun was constructed of A tube, two layers of hoops and used a Krupp horizontal sliding-wedge breech block. It used separate loading metallic cased propellant charges and projectiles.
M107 projectiles, all with fuzes fitted An M107 155 mm high explosive projectile with a M739A1 point detonating (PD) fuze. The M107 is a 155 mm high explosive projectile used by many countries.
The 152 mm gun-howitzer M1955, also known as the D-20, (Russian: 152-мм пушка-гаубица Д-20 обр. 1955 г.) is a manually loaded, towed 152 mm gun-howitzer artillery piece, manufactured in the Soviet Union during the 1950s.