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REMEMBER WHEN.. WE GOT THE L5?
L5 PACK HOWITZER
The L5 Pack Howitzer
was designed and built in Italy by OTO Mellara and was originally known
as the Model 56. Specifications for the design stated the requirement
for it to be fully transportable throughout the mountainous regions of
Italy and Europe. Hence the pneumatic tyres for high speed towing and
the ability for it to be dismantled into 112 sections for transport
across rough terrain. In fact it was on occasions, in its very early
life, broken down and carried on horseback. It was to be light enough,
fully assembled, to be air portable and able to be air dropped. The
weapon was, in fact, light enough to be carried slung underneath the
Bell UH1 Iroquois helicopter.
Original production
began in 1957 and was soon adopted by many countries throughout the
world. Production ceased in 1984 with some 4200 weapons delivered. The
weapon has seen action in many combat areas, including by the British in
South Yeman and Borneo, and New Zealand in South Vietnam. Argentina used
the weapon in the 1982 Falklands campaign.
The L5 has a very short
barrel with a multi baffle muzzle brake, a hydraulic buffer and helical
recuperator and a vertical sliding wedge breech block. One of the more
unusual features of the weapon is the configuration of the wheels and
axles. The wheels can be fitted in two positions, the normal field
position with the wheels overslung giving an elevation of +65° and a
depression of -5° plus a total traverse of 36° (18° left and right).
With the wheels underslung the weapon assumed an anti tank role, giving
an elevation of +25° and a depression of -5°. The main advantage of this
configuration was the overall height of the weapon reduced from 2m to
just under 1.5m, making it much easier to conceal.
The weapon's normal
crew was seven men and was towable by a long wheelbase Landrover. An
advantage of the L5 was that it fired the same 105mm ammunition as the
American M101 and M102 field guns. This type of ammunition was
manufactured world-wide and included High Explosive (HE), smoke,
illumination and High Explosive Anti Tank (HEAT). A modification
developed during the Vietnam conflict was the Flechette round, designed
for local defence, in which a round fired at close range exploded
shortly after leaving the barrel, sending out thousands of 2" finned
steel darts. The maximum range, at full charge, was 10575m or 11565
yards.
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