ThomasP
Senior Master Sergeant
I do not think the 4.5" should be considered a mistake.
The US adopted the UK 4.5" projectile and ballistics because it offered an already proven capability. When the US Army evaluated the 4.5" vs the planned US 4.7" design, they found that their own experimental 4.7" offered no appreciable advantage. The UK 4.5" projectile showed superior ballistics & accuracy to the US 4.7" projectile design at the time of the evaluation.
While the story is that the US adopted the 4.5" shell for their own gun for ammunition compatibility with the UK 4.5", this is often misunderstood as being some arbitrary decision. While it is true the US built their own 4.5" guns beginning in 1942(?) that used the compatible ammunition, they had actually adopted the UK built gun in significant numbers before entry into the war (I think beginning in late-1939 or early-1940, but I may be off on that). While the common story mentions that the 4.5" M1 only amounted to "only" 16 Corp level Artillery Battalions, the US had another 14 Army(?)/Corp/Division level Artillery Battalions equipped with 4.5" guns supplied by the UK (I am not sure how many of these were stood up before the US entry into the war (possibly 10?) and how many early-war). They were used in the MTO and ETO until the end of the war.
The 155mm Long Tom is often mooted as an example of how the 4.5" design was a mistake, but the 155mm and 4.5" were designed to parallel but very different requirements. The 4.5" was intended to act as a relatively mobile (ie to be towed by the common trucks of the time) medium caliber counter-battery weapon (with a maximum shell weight of 60 lbs for ease of one man handling) - while the 155mm was intended as a heavy caliber long range general support weapon (it only developed into a de-facto counter-battery weapon due to its range capabilities after entry into service use).
The US adopted the UK 4.5" projectile and ballistics because it offered an already proven capability. When the US Army evaluated the 4.5" vs the planned US 4.7" design, they found that their own experimental 4.7" offered no appreciable advantage. The UK 4.5" projectile showed superior ballistics & accuracy to the US 4.7" projectile design at the time of the evaluation.
While the story is that the US adopted the 4.5" shell for their own gun for ammunition compatibility with the UK 4.5", this is often misunderstood as being some arbitrary decision. While it is true the US built their own 4.5" guns beginning in 1942(?) that used the compatible ammunition, they had actually adopted the UK built gun in significant numbers before entry into the war (I think beginning in late-1939 or early-1940, but I may be off on that). While the common story mentions that the 4.5" M1 only amounted to "only" 16 Corp level Artillery Battalions, the US had another 14 Army(?)/Corp/Division level Artillery Battalions equipped with 4.5" guns supplied by the UK (I am not sure how many of these were stood up before the US entry into the war (possibly 10?) and how many early-war). They were used in the MTO and ETO until the end of the war.
The 155mm Long Tom is often mooted as an example of how the 4.5" design was a mistake, but the 155mm and 4.5" were designed to parallel but very different requirements. The 4.5" was intended to act as a relatively mobile (ie to be towed by the common trucks of the time) medium caliber counter-battery weapon (with a maximum shell weight of 60 lbs for ease of one man handling) - while the 155mm was intended as a heavy caliber long range general support weapon (it only developed into a de-facto counter-battery weapon due to its range capabilities after entry into service use).