In the early 1930s, the Škoda concern from Pilsen in Czechoslovakia was able to design, develop and manufacture the most modern artillery weapons, which had nothing to do with the models that formed the basis of its production in the First world war. In 1933, a series of 149-mm howitzers appeared, the first of which was K1 or mod. 1933, wholly exported to Turkey, Yugoslavia and Romania. The K1 149 mm howitzer was completely constructed from modern parts and had a heavy forked frame. She could be towed by horse or mechanical traction. But when towing, the gun barrel had to be removed and transported as a separate cargo ..

In parallel with the howitzer mod. 37 perfect new design prototypes of the former 220-mm Skoda from the First World War period were used. At the time of release heavy weapons Skoda was inferior in Europe only to the Krupp concern, and in terms of its combat effectiveness it was the first. And after Czechoslovakia gained independence in 1918, the production of classic howitzers resumed. The super-powerful guns that performed well in World War I were heavy to transport, had a low rate of fire, and were expensive to operate. The armies of the newly independent states needed lighter guns...

Among the requirements for the new German artillery park, designed to make up for the loss of guns in the First World War, was the expediency of using long-range guns in the corps, and not in the field. artillery batteries. It was this project that was set by the General Staff of the then underground German defense industry. And in 1926, the Krupp and Rheinmetall concerns presented prototypes of such a gun, and in 1930, the first production prototypes of the 105-mm howitzer K 18. As a result of a series of studies and tests, the 105-mm howitzer K 18 had a production barrel " Rheinmetall" on the bed of the concern "Krupp" ..

Since the beginning of the 20th century, the main arms concerns producing artillery pieces in Germany have been Krupp and Rheinmetall. They safely, without destroying the production complex, survived the First World War, which could not be said about their markets. In the 1920s, advanced research was carried out, and by the time the Nazis came to power in 1933, new projects were ready. Moreover, the new government invited both concerns to each competition. But the customer faced difficulties in choosing best project, since the presented prototypes of both companies met all the requirements.

When in 1933 the Wehrmacht needed a new heavy cannon for divisional artillery, the project of the Rheinmetall concern won. Using the already developed frame of the 150 mm sFH 18 howitzer, he proposed a cannon that had the longest range in the world at that time - 24,500 m (26,800 yd). The new howitzer did not immediately go into production, since at that time the main attention of the German industry was paid to the production of heavy sFH 18 howitzers. Serial production of the 150-mm gun (150-mm K18) began only in 1938. The 15-cm K18 gun, which entered service with the German troops, fully met the conditions of modern combat in terms of its tactical characteristics.

The Germans came to the possession of the gun, which later became known as the 150-mm K39 gun, in a somewhat roundabout way. At first, in the late 1930s, the gun was designed by the Krupp concern in Essen and was intended for one of their traditional customers - Turkey. The new gun was originally designed as a dual purpose gun to be both a field gun and a coastal defensive gun. To this end, he was given a forked frame and - an innovation for that time - a removable turntable, which made it possible to make a horizontal guidance angle of 360 degrees, which was especially important in the defense of the coastal strip. Two of the ordered guns were ready by 1939.

In the field of artillery design during both world wars, the Krupp concern from Essen is considered the undisputed leader. It was he who developed the famous guns of World War II. One of the novelties was the bed with "double damping rollback". The recoil forces were first perceived by the conventional brake mechanism, and then by the bed, sliding backwards on rail guides mounted on a carriage. These efforts were extinguished with virtually no displacement relative to the ground, which increased the accuracy of shooting. Krupp was the first to use a firing platform on which the barrel could rotate with the frame.

In 1935, Rheinmetall began designing a heavy long-range gun, firing a heavy long-range projectile, which was the official order of the military command of the German army. In 1938, the first samples of the German super-heavy 240-mm K 3 gun were produced. Its massive frame with “double recoil damping” was fixed on a firing table capable of turning 360 °. The vertical pointing angle of the table was 56 ° and made it possible to fire at the most powerful fortifications, ensuring the greatest efficiency of fire. The design of this gun was equipped with the latest developments.

In the late 1930s, the Italian army made an attempt to completely renew its artillery fleet. It should be noted that at that time the entire artillery park of the Italian army looked more like a museum of artillery exhibits than like military artillery pieces. Guns of modern and well-designed design were chosen, namely a 149 mm cannon and a 210 mm howitzer. The howitzer was designed and developed military organization STAM (STAM). However, the Ansaldo company was directly involved in the production of this tool. The gun was named as follows: 210-mm howitzer mod.35. It should be emphasized that the prototype of this model was created in 1935.

152-mm howitzer-gun of the 1937 model (ML-20, GAU index - 52-G-544A) - Soviet howitzer-gun of the Second World War period. This gun was mass-produced from 1937 to 1946, was or still is in service with the armies of many countries of the world, was used in almost all significant wars and armed conflicts of the middle and end of the 20th century. This gun was armed with the most powerful Soviet self-propelled artillery installations of the Great Patriotic War- SU-152 and ISU-152. According to some artillery experts, the ML-20 is among the best designs.

In 1941, the Red Army was armed with many high-barreled 152-mm howitzers mod. 1930 despite the modernization, which, in general. affected not only this type of guns, they lacked the firing range. Later, there was a general idea that these howitzers should be replaced, and a new type of gun of this class should be developed. This replacement happened in 1938. So, in 1938, a completely new model appeared, which had a long 152-mm barrel AND a new solid frame. The M-1O howitzer (field howitzer of 1938), produced by factories in Perm and Votkinsk, became famous..

The heaviest of the Soviet field guns of the Second World War, the 203-mm howitzer of the 1931 model was designated V-4. It was a very powerful weapon. However, the main disadvantage of this howitzer was a very large mass. The howitzer was among the few guns mounted on a caterpillar tractor chassis, in large quantities produced in the country in the 20s and 30s. The result of the fact that this howitzer was put on a caterpillar tractor chassis was the general policy of the Soviet leadership of the 20s and 30s, aimed at the development of tractor factories, so the use of tractor ..

By the end of the 1930s, the British Main Artillery Headquarters decided to update the fleet of medium field guns. At that point in time, it became obvious that those guns that were in the arsenal of the British artillery were either outdated or did not meet the necessary standards put forward by the command of the British artillery. A new 4.5-inch gun was taken into consideration, having the same frame as the projected 5.5-inch howitzer. Mainly, this gun met the main requirement of that time - the firing range. So, the estimated range was 18290 m.

Between the First and Second World Wars, Great Britain did not pay due attention to the development of artillery. And when the need for heavy guns arose in 1940, only low-range 8-inch howitzers left over from World War I were available. As a temporary measure, it was decided to change the liner in the barrels from 8-inch to 7.2-inch, put the existing beds on wheels with pneumatic tires and develop new series shells. This is how the 7.2-inch howitzer appeared. It should be noted that, in part, when changing the 8-inch howitzer to a new gun, some problematic issues were resolved.

In 1939, the US Army returned to the project of creating a 203 mm gun and a 240 mm howitzer on a single bed. It should be emphasized that initially this project was developed immediately after the end of the First World War, in 1919. However, at that time it was decided not to start production of this weapon. The first guns appeared only in 1944, and the production of howitzers that were less difficult to manufacture began already in May 1943. The 240 mm M1 howitzer was a massive gun mounted on an enlarged frame of the 155 mm M1 gun.

After entering the First World War, among the heavy guns received by the US Army were the British 8-inch howitzers Mk VII and VIII, which subsequently began to be produced in the US by order of the UK. The US Army became interested in this high-precision gun and decided to start production of its own model after 1918 under the auspices of the Westerwelt Council, which also recommended the adoption of the 155 mm M1 gun. In this case, the howitzer and gun would have to have one bed, M1. Despite the recommendations presented by the Westerwelt Council……

After entering the First World War, among the heavy guns received by the US Army were the British 8-inch howitzers Mk VII and VIII, which subsequently began to be produced in the US by order of the UK. The US Army became interested in this high-precision gun and decided to start production of its own model after 1918 under the auspices of the Westerwelt Council, which also recommended the adoption of the 155 mm M1 gun. In this case, the howitzer and the cannon would have to have one frame, M1 Despite the recommendations presented by the Westerwelt Council ..

On February 12, 1942, the most massive Soviet gun of the Great Patriotic War ZIS-3 was adopted, which, along with the T-34 and PPSh-41, became one of the symbols of the Victory.

76-mm divisional gun model 1942 (ZIS-3)

ZIS-3 became the most massive weapon of the Great Patriotic War. The divisional cannon, developed under the leadership of Vasily Gavrilovich Grabin, appeared at the front in the second half of 1942. The light and maneuverable ZIS-3 has found a very wide application for combating both manpower and equipment of the enemy. The divisional gun turned out to be essentially universal, and most importantly, easy to learn and manufacture, just at the moment when it was necessary to send the maximum possible number of guns to the active army in a short time. In total, more than 100 thousand ZIS-3s were produced - more than all other guns combined during the war.

37 mm anti-aircraft gun model 1939

Designed to destroy low-flying air targets. Power was supplied from a cage for five artillery cartridges. But often in initial period During the war, these guns were also used as anti-tank weapons. A tool with a high initial speed shell in 1941 pierced the armor of any German tanks. The disadvantage of the gun was that the failure of one of the gunners made firing alone impossible. The second disadvantage is the lack of an armor shield, which initially anti-aircraft gun was not allowed and appeared only in 1944. In total, at least 18 thousand 37-mm automatic anti-aircraft guns were produced

Howitzer-gun ML-20

A unique weapon that combined the firing range of a cannon and the ability of a howitzer to fire flat fire. Not a single battle, including Moscow, Stalingrad, Kursk, Berlin, could not do without the participation of these guns. At the same time, not a single army in the world, including the German one, had such systems in service at that time.
It is noteworthy that the ML-20 became the first Soviet gun to open fire on German territory. On the evening of August 2, 1944 from ML-20 on German positions in East Prussia about 50 rounds were fired. And then a report was sent to Moscow that shells were now exploding on German territory. From the middle of the war, the ML-20 was also installed on soviet self-propelled guns SU-152, and later on ISU-152. In total, about 6900 ML-20 guns of various modifications were produced.

ZIS-2 (57 mm anti-tank gun sample. 1941) - a weapon with a very difficult fate. One of the two anti-tank guns of the USSR during the Great Patriotic War - the second was the "forty-five". It appeared in 1941, but then there were simply no targets for this gun - any German ZIS-2 tank was pierced through and through, and in the difficult conditions of transferring industry to a war footing, it was decided to abandon the production of a technologically complex and expensive gun. They remembered the ZIS-2 in 1943, when the German troops appeared heavy tanks. Again, these guns were at the front from the summer of 1943 on the Kursk Bulge and in the future they proved themselves well, coping with almost any German tanks. At distances of several hundred meters, the ZIS-2 pierced the 80-mm side armor of the "tigers".

85 mm anti-aircraft gun model 1939

During the Great Patriotic War, this weapon was very widely used both at the front and to protect rear facilities and large transport hubs. During the Great Patriotic War 85-mm anti-aircraft guns up to 4 thousand enemy aircraft were destroyed. During the fighting, this gun was often used as an anti-tank gun. And before the start of mass production of the ZIS-3, it was practically the only gun capable of fighting "tigers" at long distances. The feat of senior sergeant G.A. This episode of the Battle of Moscow is dedicated Feature Film"At your doorstep."

Universal ship artillery mount. On Soviet ships(for example, cruisers of the Kirov type) were used as long-range anti-aircraft artillery. The gun was equipped with an armor shield. Firing range 22 km; ceiling - 15 km. Since it was impossible to track the movement of enemy aircraft with heavy guns, firing, as a rule, was carried out by curtains at a certain range. The weapon turned out to be useful for destroying ground targets. In total, 42 guns were fired before the start of World War II. Since production was concentrated in Leningrad, which was under blockade, the ships of the Pacific Fleet under construction were forced to equip not 100-mm, but 85-mm guns as long-range artillery.

"Forty-five"

The 45-mm anti-tank gun of the 1937 model was the main anti-tank gun of the Red Army in the initial period of the war and was capable of hitting almost any German technology. Since 1942, its new modification (45-mm anti-tank gun of the 1942 model) with an elongated barrel was adopted. From the middle of the war, when the enemy began to use tanks with powerful armor protection, transporters and self-propelled guns and enemy firing points. On the basis of the 45-mm anti-tank gun, the 45-mm semi-automatic naval gun 21-K was also created, which turned out to be ineffective due to the low rate of fire and the lack of special sights. Therefore, whenever possible, the 21-K was replaced with automatic guns, transferring the removed artillery to reinforce the positions of ground troops as field and anti-tank guns.

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. German troops used a wide range of anti-tank weapons during the war: some were taken from the enemy, others were the result of their own promising developments. In 1939, the standard anti-tank gun with which the Wehrmacht entered the war was 37 mm Cancer 35/36.

Wehrmacht anti-tank artillery anti-tank gun Pak 36 photo

The name RaK is a standard abbreviation for Panzerabwehr Kanon - anti-tank gun. Small, lightweight and relatively easy to use, the PaK 35 gun was far from ideal for encounters with heavy, bullet-proof armored vehicles that were coming into service by the start of the war in the Allied army.

photo 3.7 cm PaK 36 close-up France, June 1940

The standard German 37 mm anti-tank gun at the beginning of the war, the RaK 35. Designed in 1920, it was a light and handy weapon in combat, but in 1940, after being used in the European theater, its calculations realized that it could not cope with a thick British armor and French tanks. Indeed, the gunners sympathetically christened her "knock on the door" because of them weak characteristics. Attempts to improve armor penetration included the use of tungsten core shells and HEAT grenades with stabilizers that were loaded from the muzzle - Stielgranate 41

German soldiers pull artillery piece on the river bank

The PaK 35 gun had a maximum firing range of 4025 m with a high-explosive projectile and could penetrate 35 mm armor at an angle of 30 ° with a 500 m conventional projectile or 180 mm armor with a 300 m Stielgranate 41 grenade. Over 20,000 of these guns were manufactured during the war. Conscious of the shortcomings of the RaK 35/36, the Wehrmacht demanded a larger caliber weapon. Developed since 1938, the 38-mm gun PaK 38 entered service in 1940. Cancer 38 had a maximum firing range of 2652 m with a high-explosive projectile. With a tungsten core projectile, it could penetrate 55 mm armor from a distance of 1 km.

Wehrmacht anti-tank artillery 50mm pak 38 at the time of the invasion of the USSR infantry division the state had 72 anti-tank guns, of which 14 pcs pak 38 50 mm and 58 pcs Cancer 35/36 37 mm

Anti-tank artillery of the Wehrmacht in World War II photo , Skoda guns. The Germans also used the 47-mm anti-tank gun of the Czech company Skoda, which they inherited after the annexation of Czechoslovakia in 1939. It was designated as 4.7cm Cancer 36(t). She weighed 400 kg in combat position, fired a 1.45-kg armor-piercing projectile with an initial speed of 900 m / s. The gun could penetrate 51 mm armor from 500 m.

47-mm anti-tank gun of the Czech company Skoda 4.7 cm RaK 36 t

Another booty that went to Austria and capitulated by Poland and Denmark was the Austrian 47-mm anti-tank gun Boler (Voleg). In Germany it was designated 4.7 cm Cancer or "Boler" and and was attached to the mountain divisions.

47-mm Austrian anti-tank gun Boler photo

The appearance of the KV-1, protected by thick armor, added urgency to the need to develop a new anti-tank gun. As a result, two new 75 mm guns were designed. Cancer 40, produced by Rheinmetall-Borsig (Pheinmetall-Borsig), and RaK 41, produced at the Krupp factories, soon entered the army.

Wehrmacht anti-tank guns 7.5 cm PaK 40 photo

Both of them turned out to be quite powerful, although the RaK 40 is a more efficient, larger modification of the RaK 38.

German 7.5 cm PaK 40 camouflaged in snowy terrain, Russia, February 1943 photo

75 mm Cannon RaK 40- one of the most effective and numerous anti-tank guns of the war; RaK 40 was used on all fronts after it entered service in 1941. Until 1945, more than 23,000 guns were produced.

Moving a 7.5 cm Pak 40 anti-tank gun on the muddy roads of Northern France, October 1943

Cannon RaK 41, with significantly improved performance, was new development. The Krupp design is one of the first cannons with a "stretched barrel" to enter service. inner hole the barrel gradually narrowed from the breech to the muzzle. The pressure behind the armor-piercing projectile with a tungsten core Pzgr Patr 41 (NK) increased as the projectile moved in the barrel, making it possible to obtain an exit velocity of 1125 m/s.

anti-tank gun 42-mm RaK 41 photo

The projectile had a light aerodynamic fairing, behind which was a tungsten carbide core. The core was enclosed in an outer shell with protrusions in the center and base. The protrusions withstood the pressure of gases during movement in the barrel. The armor penetration of the newly introduced improved weapons was remarkable: the shells fired from the PaK 41 could penetrate 145 mm of armor from a range of 1 km. Fortunately for the Allies, Germany was short of tungsten. Another problem is barrel replacement: high pressure meant that gun barrels had to be replaced after 500 shots. In the end, only 150 RaK 41 guns were made.

Germany experimented with two more tapered barrels during the war. The small sPz B 41 entered service in 1942 and was considered by the German army as a heavy anti-tank rifle, more preferable than a cannon.

heavy anti-tank gun Wehrmacht sPz In 41 photos

Soldiers from the division "Grossdeutschland" 2.8cm anti-tank rifle sPzB 41 mounted on an armored personnel carrier Sd.Kfz.250

It fired a 28mm projectile from a barrel tapering from 28mm at the breech to 20mm at the muzzle, resulting in a terrifying speed of 1402m/s and a maximum range of 1km. The airborne version of the sPz B 41 gun - le Feldlafette 41 - weighed only 118 kg in combat position, but, like the main version, it could only penetrate 50 mm armor at an angle of 30 ° from 500 m.

Airborne version of the gun sPz B 41 - le Feldlafette 41photo

At a cursory glance, the 42 mm Pak 41 looked like a Pak 35/36 with an elongated barrel. In reality, its barrel narrowed from 42 to 28 mm. The gun had a maximum firing range of 1 km and penetrated 70 mm armor at an angle of 30 "from 500 m and 50 mm armor from 1 km. It was not widely used, but it is known that it was used in some airborne divisions in 1942-1943.

Anti-tank artillery of the Wehrmacht in World War II photo .

In 1944, the Rheinmetall plant introduced the 80 mm PaW 600 barrel-loaded cannon, which fired a 2.7 kg feathered shaped charge projectile. It was a very advanced development for that time, the gun penetrated 140 mm armor at an angle of 30 ° from 750 m, but could not open fire on the enemy beyond this distance.

A sample of the 80 mm PAW 600 gun on display at the Aberdeen Museum

anti-tank gun, 8.8 cm Pak 43 was developed on the basis of Krupp Gerat 42, mentioned in the article. A new cruciform carriage is used, with a lower position, it is now much easier to hide, the lower silhouette makes it difficult to hit the gun. To provide better protection, thicker and more angular shield armor is used. Then, to simplify the design and reduce the dimensions Pack 43 mounted on a carriage from a 105-mm field howitzer.

Various modifications of the Pak 43 based on the 88 mm FlaK anti-aircraft gun

The Tiger's standard armament, the KwK 43 tank gun, was essentially Pack 43 slightly modified to accommodate it in the tower.

  1. Models Pak 43 88mm appeared
  2. in "Elephant" (former name "Ferdinand"),

A heavily armored "Elephant" was discovered, too bulky and mechanically unreliable. "Rhinoceros" too slow chassis; its armor only provides protection against shell fragments and 30-caliber bullets. In total, about 900 pieces were made.

88 mm pak 43-41 Wehrmacht anti-tank guns photo

All gun versions 8.8 cm Pak 43 could penetrate about 200 mm of armor at a distance of 1000 m, which allows Pack 43 and its modifications, guaranteed to hit any enemy tank of that period. The Model 1943 projectile of the 88mm cannon has a very high muzzle velocity, which allows gunners to hit even distant moving targets.

Ukraine, December 1943 PaK 43

The projectile's trajectory was so flat that, with some adjustments, the gunner could make his own calculations of altitude ranges of 3,400 meters for HE rounds and 4,400 meters for AP rounds. The flat trajectory, of course, means that gunners can open fire on tanks and other armored vehicles without prior calculation. Model 8.8 cm Pak 43, but as we do 88 mm had certain disadvantages. With increasing projectile speed, the Germans tried to reduce the weight of the gun. The result is a barrel with a significantly reduced safety factor. Thus, the German crews of the gun were warned not to use high-velocity ammunition in the 1943 gun models, after firing 500 shells, the barrel needed to be replaced. To keep the gun barrel from eroding, they could fire high-explosive fragmentation projectiles at 1,080 feet per second. This ammunition gives a maximum range of only 7765 meters.

Bulky but effective anti-tank gun PaK 43/41

pak 43/41 very heavy (9660 pounds) 4,381 kilograms, fully loaded it weighs almost the same as the 150-mm howitzer SFH 18. This weight excludes manual rotation of the gun, the main reason for the death of the gun and crew, attacking a position not from the firing sector. immobility leading to big losses, both the servants of the gun and the materiel. The entry into battle of the guns meant either victory on the battlefield or defeat, without the ability to maneuver. It is impossible to describe in one article, all the variety of Wehrmacht artillery weapons used to fight tanks, namely, anti-tank artillery caused the most significant damage tank troops allies.

west of Kyiv 41-42, shelling of the village

An interesting photo, if a machine gunner fires, then nothing, but a shot from a gun can cause irreparable damage to the farm, a machine gunner.

The 37-mm anti-tank gun of the 1930 model (1-K) was developed by the German company Rheinmetall and transferred to the latter under an agreement between Germany and the USSR. In fact, it was similar to the German Pak-35/36 anti-tank gun with interchangeable ammunition: armor-piercing, fragmentation shells and buckshot. A total of 509 units were manufactured. TTX guns: caliber 37 mm; barrel length - 1.6 m; height of the line of fire - 0.7 m; firing range - 5.6 km; initial speed - 820 m / s; rate of fire - 15 rounds per minute; armor penetration - 20 mm at a distance of 800 m at a meeting angle of 90 °; calculation - 4 people; the speed of transportation on the highway - up to 20 km / h.

Airborne gun mod. 1944 had a shortened barrel recoil and was equipped with a specially designed 37-mm BR-167P sub-caliber projectile (weight - 0.6-07 kg.). The gun was disassembled into three parts: a swinging part, a machine tool and a shield. The two-wheeled machine had sliding beds with fixed and driven coulters. The shield in the stowed position on wheels was placed along the movement of the gun. The gun was transported in Willys (1 gun), GAZ-64 (1 gun), Dodge (2 guns) and GAZ-A (2 guns) cars, as well as in the sidecar of a Harley Davidson motorcycle. From a motorcycle it was possible to fire at speeds up to 10 km / h. In 1944-1945. 472 guns were made. TTX guns: caliber - 37 mm; barrel length - 2.3 m; weight - 217 kg; projectile weight - 730 g; fire line height - 280 mm; maximum firing range - 4 km; rate of fire - 15-25 rounds per minute; muzzle velocity - 865 - 955 m / s; armor penetration with a caliber armor-piercing projectile at an angle of 90 ° at a distance of 500 m - 46 mm, with a sub-caliber - 86 mm; shield thickness - 4.5 mm; calculation - 4 people; the time for transferring the gun from marching to combat is 1 minute.

The gun of the 1932 model was created by replacing the barrel of the 37-mm anti-tank gun of the 1930 model. The gun was transported both by horse-drawn and mechanical. In the transport position, a single-axle ammunition box clung, and behind it the gun itself. The 19-K gun had wooden wheels. The gun adapted for installation in a tank received the factory designation "20-K" (32.5 thousand guns were produced). In 1933, the gun was modernized - the weight in combat position decreased to 414 kg. In 1934, the gun received pneumatic tires, and the weight increased to 425 kg. The gun was produced in 1932-1937. A total of 2974 guns were produced. TTX guns: caliber - 45 mm; length - 4 m; width - 1.6 m; height - 1.2 m; clearance - 225 mm; barrel length - 2.1 m; weight in combat position - 560 kg, in marching position - 1.2 tons; firing range - 4.4 km; rate of fire - 15-20 rounds per minute; armor penetration - 43 mm at a distance of 500 m; calculation - 5 people; the speed of transportation on the highway on wooden wheels is 10 - 15 km / h, on rubber wheels - 50 km / h.

Cannon arr. 1937 was put into service in 1938 and was the result of the modernization of the 19-K anti-tank gun. The gun was mass-produced until 1942.

It differed from the previous model in the following innovations: semi-automatic worked when firing all types of ammunition, a push-button descent and suspension were introduced, an automobile wheel was installed; cast parts of the machine are excluded. Armor penetration - 43 mm at a distance of 500 m. To improve armor penetration, a 45 mm sub-caliber projectile was adopted, which pierced 66 mm armor at a distance of 500 m along the normal, and when firing at a distance of 100 m - 88 mm armor. A total of 37,354 guns were made. TTX guns: caliber - 45 mm; length - 4.26 m; width - 1.37 m; height - 1.25 m; barrel length - 2 m; weight in combat position - 560 kg; in the march - 1.2 tons; rate of fire - 20 rounds per minute; initial projectile speed - 760 m / s; direct shot range - 850 m; weight of an armor-piercing projectile - 1.4 kg, maximum firing range - 4.4 km, carriage speed along the highway - 50 km / h; calculation - 6 people.

The gun of the 1942 model (M-42) was created as a result of the modernization of the 45-mm gun mod. 1937 Modernization consisted in lengthening the barrel (up to 3.1 m) and strengthening the propellant charge. Shield cover armor thickness has been increased from 4.5 mm to 7 mm for better protection calculation from rifle armor-piercing bullets. As a result of modernization, the muzzle velocity of the projectile increased from 760 to 870 m/s. A total of 10,843 units were produced. TTX guns: caliber - 45 mm; length - 4.8 m; width - 1.6 m; height - 1.2 m; barrel length - 3 m; weight in combat position - 625 kg; in the march - 1250 kg; projectile weight - 1.4 kg; initial speed - 870 m / s; maximum firing range - 4.5 km; direct shot range - 950 m; rate of fire - 20 rounds per minute; speed of transportation on the highway - 50 km / h; armor penetration - 51 mm at a distance of 1000 m; calculation - 6 people.

The 57-mm anti-tank gun of the 1941 model (ZIS-2) was created under the leadership of V. G. Grabin in 1940, but its production was suspended in 1941. Only with the advent of heavily armored German tanks in 1943 was mass production resumed under a new designation. The gun of the 1943 model had a number of differences from the guns of the 1941 issue, aimed at improving the manufacturability of the gun. The towing of the gun was carried out at the beginning of the war by a semi-armored Komsomolets tractor, GAZ-64, GAZ-67, GAZ-AA, GAZ-AAA, ZIS-5 cars, from the middle of the war, land-supplied - Lease semi-trucks "Dodge WC-51" and all-wheel drive trucks "Studebaker US6". Based on the ZIS-2, the ZIS-4 and ZIS-4M tank guns were created, which were installed on the T-34. The gun was also used to arm the ZIS-30 anti-tank self-propelled guns. The gun was equipped with ammunition in the form of a unitary cartridge with shells: caliber and sub-caliber armor-piercing; fragmentation and buckshot. The weight of the projectile ranged from 1.7 to 3.7 kg, depending on its type, the initial velocity ranged from 700 to 1270 m/s; armor penetration - 109 mm at a distance of 1000 m at a meeting angle - 90 °. A total of 13.7 thousand guns were fired. TTX guns: caliber - 57 mm; length - 7 m; width - 1.7 m; height - 1.3 m; barrel length - 4.1 m; clearance - 350 mm; weight in combat position - 1050 kg; in the marching - 1900 kg; rate of fire - 25 rounds per minute; highway transportation speed - up to 60 km / s; fire line height - 853 mm; firing range - 8.4 km; direct shot range - 1.1 km; the thickness of the shield cover was 6 mm; calculation - 6 people.

Structurally, the ZiS-3 was an overlay of the barrel of the F-22USV divisional gun model on the light carriage of the ZiS-2 anti-tank 57-mm gun. The gun had suspension, metal wheels, with rubber tires. To move by horse traction, it was completed with a unified limber model 1942 for regimental and divisional guns. The gun was also towed by mechanical traction: trucks types "ZiS-5", "GAZ-AA" or "GAZ-MM", three-axle all-wheel drive "Studebaker US6", light all-wheel drive cars "Dodge WC". The ZIS-3 gun was put into service in 1942 and had a dual purpose: a divisional field gun and an anti-tank gun. Moreover, to fight tanks, the gun was used more in the first half of the war. The gun was also armed with self-propelled guns "SU-76". During the war, divisional artillery had 23.2 thousand guns, and anti-tank units - 24.7 thousand. During the war years, 48,016 thousand guns were fired. TTX guns: caliber - 76.2 mm; length - 6 m; width - 1.4 m; barrel length - 3; weight in the stowed position - 1.8 tons, in combat - 1.2 tons; rate of fire - 25 rounds per minute; armor penetration of a projectile weighing 6.3 kg with an initial speed of 710 m / s - 46 mm at a distance of 1000 m; barrel survivability - 2000 shots; maximum firing range - 13 km; transition time from transport to combat position - 1 minute; the speed of transportation on the highway is 50 km/h.