Elan Vital
Airman 1st Class
- 153
- Aug 24, 2024
For the French, I already mentionned the 37/28 and 75/65 mm guns with conical muzzle devices. Sadly I've not found any documentation on their performance or the base guns.
Obviously by 1940 the squeezebores had strong competition from Brandt APDS and LCFA APCR.
The 37mm casemate Mle 1934 (and a related towed version that started development in 1940) with a Littlejohn-style design would have been analogous to the 2pdr Littlejohn.
The 47mm SA37/39 would be a good candidate.
The tank guns (37mm SA38 and 47mm SA35) may yield useful results with similar devices.
I discussed the actual squeezebore gun projects (28/20 Larsen-Gerlich-APX L824) and the Tulle arsenal (MAT) 20/16 and 20/14mm weapon in Secret Projects Forum:
www.secretprojects.co.uk
The latter was basically a response to the problem of arming the infantry at even lower levels and even closer to the first line than the 25mm SA 37. It's an intermediate between AT rifles and the 25mm gun, but it's half the weight of the Fallschirmjäger version of the German 28/20 and has a 10-round magazine with semi and automatic modes to alleviate the issue of limited behind-armor effects for small caliber weapons.
The French 28/20 (similar weight class and origin to the German gun) was deemed too weak and it was suggested to have a weapon with a final diameter of 23mm, though I don't know if it keeps the original caliber of 28mm or something larger.
In general the squeezebore concept was suggested for application to larger calibers to obtain lighter guns for a given power level, like the Germans, but I'm not aware of any official projects.
The big enabler for the French down the line would be tungsten cores, as they had presently been trying to find better steel grades and core geometries. The use of steel meant that the 28/20 was superior against certain targets compared to the 25mm, but worse against other targets, so the squeezebore concept wasn't yet a straight upgrade.
Obviously by 1940 the squeezebores had strong competition from Brandt APDS and LCFA APCR.
The 37mm casemate Mle 1934 (and a related towed version that started development in 1940) with a Littlejohn-style design would have been analogous to the 2pdr Littlejohn.
The 47mm SA37/39 would be a good candidate.
The tank guns (37mm SA38 and 47mm SA35) may yield useful results with similar devices.
I discussed the actual squeezebore gun projects (28/20 Larsen-Gerlich-APX L824) and the Tulle arsenal (MAT) 20/16 and 20/14mm weapon in Secret Projects Forum:
French antitank weapon and tank destroyer projects before June 1940
Hi everyone, Just like my previous threads in the same section, talking about French antitank weapon projects in development in the interwar period or up to 1940 that didn't get to enter service, based on my archive findings. I'm gonna start with the ones that caught me completetely off-guard...
The latter was basically a response to the problem of arming the infantry at even lower levels and even closer to the first line than the 25mm SA 37. It's an intermediate between AT rifles and the 25mm gun, but it's half the weight of the Fallschirmjäger version of the German 28/20 and has a 10-round magazine with semi and automatic modes to alleviate the issue of limited behind-armor effects for small caliber weapons.
The French 28/20 (similar weight class and origin to the German gun) was deemed too weak and it was suggested to have a weapon with a final diameter of 23mm, though I don't know if it keeps the original caliber of 28mm or something larger.
In general the squeezebore concept was suggested for application to larger calibers to obtain lighter guns for a given power level, like the Germans, but I'm not aware of any official projects.
The big enabler for the French down the line would be tungsten cores, as they had presently been trying to find better steel grades and core geometries. The use of steel meant that the 28/20 was superior against certain targets compared to the 25mm, but worse against other targets, so the squeezebore concept wasn't yet a straight upgrade.
