Beginning in 1932 with the 45mm M1932 and the 45mm
M1937, the Soviet Union followed the same path of caliber escalation. Adopted
in 1942, the 45mm M42 was essentially a larger-bore copy of the German 37mm
antitank gun. The M42 was quickly superseded in 1943 by the more potent caliber
57mm ZIS-2. The excellent ZIS-2 was, in turn, superseded in 1944 by the
semiautomatic 100mm Field Gun M1944 (BS-3). Originally based on a naval design
and mounted on a dual-tire split trail carriage, the M1944 fired a 35-pound high-explosive
shell to a maximum range of 22,966 yards and an antitank projectile to an
effective range of 1,093 yards. With a crew of six, the M1944 was capable of
firing up to 10 rounds per minute. Although the 100mm T-12 eventually replaced
the M1944 in Soviet service, many remain in use around the world.
The BS-3 was based on a B-34 naval gun. The
development team was led by V. G. Grabin.
The gun was employed by light artillery
brigades of tank armies (20 pieces along with 48 ZiS-3) and by corps artillery.
In the Second World War the BS-3 was
successfully used as a powerful anti-tank gun. It was capable of defeating any
contemporary tank at long range. The gun was also used as a field gun. Though
in this role it was less powerful than the 122 mm A-19, as it fired a smaller
round, the BS-3 was more mobile and had a higher rate of fire.
The BS-3 entered production in 1944, and
then only 341 were built that year: 66 at Zavod Number 7, 275 at Zavod Number
232. In 1945, including the last half of the year when the war was effectively
over, another 1140 were built: 720 at Zavod 7, 420 at Zavod 232.
The first artillery units with the 100mm
gun were not actually antitank units. According to a General Staff order
GOKO-6270ss dated 29 July 1944, 5 Corps Artillery Brigades were to be formed to
shtat 8/613 and 8/917 with 2 regiments, one of 20 152mm howitzers and one with
20 100mm BS-3 cannon. (Most of the Corps Brigades so formed never went to the
front, but instead were reformed as Howitzer Brigades in late 1944, probably so
that the 100mm cannon could be diverted to antitank units)
Initially, one battery in each antitank
regiment was going to be equipped with 100mm guns, but this order was rescinded
in December 1944, when a new NKO Order, number 0050 dated 25 December 1944,
ordered that one regiment in each of 12 antitank artillery brigades was to be
re-equipped with 100mm guns (16 per regiment) by 15 January 1945. When the 9th
Guards Army was formed in early 1945, it received a 13th antitank brigade with
a 100mm gun regiment, and also three new Corps Artillery Brigades (61st, 62nd,
63rd Guards) each equipped with a regiment of 100mm guns.
Therefore, by the end of the war in Europe,
the Red Army had 13 antitank brigades and 3 Corps Artillery Brigades each with
one regiment of 100mm guns, for a total of 268 BS-3 100mm cannon in service
with the units.
100mm
Field Gun M1944 (BS-3)
Adoption date: 1944
Caliber: 100mm
Weight: 7,617 pounds
Breech : semiautomatic vertical sliding block
Barrel length: 239 inches
Elevation: 45°
Traversal: 58°
Projectile weight: 35 pounds
Muzzle velocity: 2,953 fps
Maximum range: 22,966 yards
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