#1
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How a mortar works?
Just out of interest, does anyone here know how a mortar works? Is the round self contained, or do you have to have some kind of power charge (I'm talking 60mm, 81mm that type of thing)? If so, is it possible to use smaller charges for shorter distances, or do you just use real high trajectories for that?
Thanks in advance |
#2
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The internal charge is usually insufficient to provide enough power to propel the bomb any real distance. This is usually for all size mortars. Charges, which are often just semi-circle, plastic, ring shaped charges filled with propellant are added (or removed). An 81mm might have up to four. They are connected around the skinny part of the bomb near the bottom by the fins. So in some situations not only do you need to figure out bearing and elevation, but also what charge setting to use. |
#3
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I think most mortars can have their self contained propellant range increased via increment charges.
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#4
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I've found this on wiki, but it took me a while to find because I didn't know what I was looking for: The charges on the 80mm rounds govern how far that particular round with travel. Each round that the M252 mortar fires has four semi-circle shaped charges that can be easily attached, or stripped by hand. While the rounds can fire without the aid of additional charges, to reach farther targets more charges must be applied. |
#5
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Calling Paul Mulcahy! Or perhaps Gunner Law!
Paul, Law?
Any insight, albeit your skill sets aren't specific to High Angle Hell? |
#6
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The charges come pre-connected, but taking them off or putting them back on, only requires a flick of a finger so yeah, no time. They are only loosely wrapped around - not tight or anything. |
#7
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Then comes the best part of 4.2" mortar gunnery -- destroying the unused charges when you're done. You dig a bit pit, throw the charges in, then throw a burning book of matches or a stick on fire into it and run. Big fireworks display, and it sounds like a jet engine for a few seconds. Older 81mm rounds have bagged charges -- 7 for an 81mm. The 60mm are similar, but only have three charges. You just unhook what's necessary.
__________________
I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#8
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Only thing I can add is some pedantry-- a mortar shoots "bombs," not "shells," according to many sources.
__________________
My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
#9
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I am qualifed on the 60mm mortar and have always wonder how far the basic round no extra charges would travel
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I will not hide. I will not be deterred nor will I be intimidated from my performing my duty, I am a Canadian Soldier. Last edited by rcaf_777; 07-30-2009 at 06:27 PM. Reason: spelling |
#10
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I was wondering something.
Should Mortars always be used in pairs, or is a single mortar just as effective in a pinch? Anti-Armor weapons like the SMAWS, Carl Gustav or PzF-3 seem to be good when used as single weapon team (Gunner, Asst. Gunner & Ammo bearer), but I was wondering about Mortars. Can a group that has a single mortar team work just as effectively? Or a single gunner with two assistants be able to operate two mortars?
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Fuck being a hero. Do you know what you get for being a hero? Nothing! You get shot at. You get a little pat on the back, blah blah blah, attaboy! You get divorced... Your wife can't remember your last name, your kids don't want to talk to you... You get to eat a lot of meals by yourself. Trust me kid, nobody wants to be that guy. I do this because there is nobody else to do it right now. Believe me if there was somebody else to do it, I would let them do it. There's not, so I'm doing it. |
#11
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We operated guns with 2 man mortar crews. Gunner and A-Gunner with them prepping ammo before hand and the lone ammo man in the section and the corpsman and radioman and section leader lending a hand.
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"God bless America, the land of the free, but only so long as it remains the home of the brave." |
#12
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That said, you'll most likely not get the most bang for your buck when you go to FFE (Fire for Effect) if you're only using one tube. ((While I'm not an 11C, I am an Infantry Company Commander, graduate of the Infantry Mortar Leader's Course and own the Battalion's Mortar Platoon.)) |
#13
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That sort of depends on where you're from -- Americans and South Koreans call them shells, for example, while Brits and Germans call them bombs.
__________________
I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#14
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Part of keeping them in groups (of say 4 tubes) is due to the area effect of the bombardment (like Eddie said) with having a suitable FFE factor. However, another part is due to the limited number of personnel in your mortar platoon and the limitations of the crew... Beyond 60mm, larger mortars are usually behind the FEBA so that they are indirect only. That means you need a MFC (mortar fire controller) to coordinate with fire controllers (spotters), and work out the calculations. There are only so many of these guys, so splitting up all you mortars up means you would have some tubes sitting idle (as in there isn't one MFC per tube). So one MFC can only do so much at a time. So if a battalion has an eight 81mm mortar platoon, they are likely split into two 4-tube groups. Each group would have a one MFC team. A single mortar is usually not able to preform indirect fire missions independently of a MFC. They have enough to do as it is without worrying about communicating with spotters and plotting. The MFC also will limit the number of rounds per fire mission, so you don't have gunners blowing off more than they should (or not enough). I know I am not explaining this very well, its been a looong day here at work. But to summarize - they are grouped for the effects of firepower and due to how many MFCs you have. For the question of 3 guys dividing their time on two mortars? If they are mortar trained, then yeah, but their effectiveness would be obviously reduced. It would probably be best to just add a 4th guy and split 2 men each (instead of 3). Last edited by Fusilier; 07-31-2009 at 06:12 AM. |
#15
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That said, if your gunner know a few tricks, like propping up the legs of an 81mm mortar or hand-holding a 60mm mortar without the bipod, you can literally drop the round right on top of your self, or very close to yourself. Those minimum ranges are for safety. A 4.2" mortar, on the other hand, has a definite elevation maximum; on charge 0 at max elevation (which is NOT recommended) you can expect that heavy round to travel no more than about 50 meters. For the 81mm on max elevation on charge 0, you can just about quarter the minimum range above (and the old M-29 can superelevate; don't know about the newer ones). For the 60mm, if you are using it handheld, you can almost use it as a grenade launcher; some countries make a HEAT round for their 60mm because of that. If you are using the bipod, you can expect about 20 meters on charge 0. 60mm mortars are the most difficult to quantify, since they can be used as indirect fire weapons and to an extent direct fire weapons, when they are handheld.
__________________
I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#16
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__________________
I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end... |
#17
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Here is a pic (stolen from the Post-apoc picture thread here on the forums), showing the charges on the bottom of a mortar:
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#18
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ahh, nice. thanks very much
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#19
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Okay, I have qualed with the 60mm and 81mm and spent a few years on a 60mm gunteam.
81s They have the following components; Guntube Bipod Baseplate the round type Sight Other equipment; Aimming stakes <the red and white candy cane metal stake that comes in three sections and slides together> Aimming stake lights, three of them, 2 red I think the third is orange, this clip to the aimming stake so you can sight in and aim at night. Bore sight; this slips over the muzzle and you can level the gun using the bubbles and fire this way. Further, a compass placed on the dozetail slot of the bipod can be used instead of a gunsight to sight in a gun. Sectional cleaning pole with worm <corkscrew looking thing> Plotting board, a square board with grids, a rotating arm in the center of the board. So it looks like a large piece of graph paper with a protractor arm that roates 360 so you can plot your rounds. A data book as well as the knowledge of the gun crew who know what charges and elevation and deflection to use, and of course calculations are done by the FDC, the FDC at Bn level for 81mms and above has a larger dedicated FDC crew. And the mortarmen also can be issued a funky vest that looks like a grenadiers vest that has pockets to hold mortar rounds on the front, it held I think about half a dozen rounds. I only saw them twice once in Infantry School and once in the armory on a working party. And in some movie about Korea where some Americans and Greeks are lost behind enemy lines, they encounter some British Troops in a Sherman Tank and they see an American mortar team of two running across a field and one of them had a vest as I am describing. And of course binoculars are also available. And the only spare part issues to mortarcrew, a FIRING PIN <for the 81mm> At the 60mm level, Same equipment as above, They will also have a small rectangular baseplate They do not have the spare firing pin! The following is the EXACT SAME as the 81mm; Aimming Sight Aimming Stakes and Lamps Round Baseplate Plotting Board The 60mm can be trigger fired, and it can be fired via a trigger, or the firing pin can be locked and it can be drop fired, the 81mm can only be drop fired. A Fire Direction Center, at this level I have seen consist of the section leader who was also helping on a gun with the platoons Corpsman running the radio. These were called fire missions so the Corpsman who we brought up to speed took the info, plotted the info, the Section Leader would check and verify, issue the order, the guns would be dialed, the teams would prep the ammo and then the guns would be "up" and ready to fire. In our section we had 3 60mms, seldom did we have more than 2 guns ready with just three man crews with the section leader and the Corpsman running the radio and FDC. In our unit, most mortarmen were well skilled as FO's since they had to know the assorted calls for fire to be able to plot in the FDC. Simply put, when the guys calling for fire called whatever the fire mission, you had to know and put that data into firing data for the guns. And this also required excellent map and compass and distance determination skills. Also, the whole aiming and leveling of mortars is similiar to other artillery the sight was the same! Thus, in theory, myself as a mortarman, I would be able to dial in the data on a 60mm mortar and the same method dail in the data on a 155 or 105, the problem of course is familiarization with the weapons system, the assorted adjustment knobs to bring the muzzle around. I personaly find the rules very lacking for mortars in the game. As I recall we had three main drills; Setting the gun up from each man carrying a seperate component. This was sometimes a exercise in commical acrobatics! We would move like sliding into place but slamming our component where it needed to go, as well as doing tumbles and rolls and leaps to get in place and out of the way. And when the Gunner called, "OFF MY GUN!" It was all on him to dial it in. We had it down to under 20 seconds! And then we had large deflection and small deflection changes. Large we had a time limit of about 30 seconds, we had it do to under 20! Small deflection changes we had i think 19, we had it down to under 10! And then use, 60mms can fire direct fire! You can boresight them, and we could even fire them without sights! Just use a rough guestimate of distance and direction, the 60mm had a cool range band level thingy on the gun so it determine the distance by the degree you lowered or raised the muzzle. And also, you can put more than the max charge on a mortar. It is done OFTEN! I think the max charge was charge 5, the max we did was charge 8! It increased the range by about 40 or 50%. Here is another thing to consider. We had used rounds from the late 40s these were old and had less range, I had my "lil green book" stolen with all the nomenclature so I can't tell you, it had the types, years they were used, colors, ranges, weights, danger range and all that other good stuff. But the Korean War and WWII stuff was old with less range, the Vietnam stuff into the 80s was the normal stuff we used, then we got some new stuff! AWESOME!!!!!! And with stocks in Europe, I think we would have especialy with the many build ups that we had durring Korea, durring the assorted times of buildups in the 50s, 60s and 70s I would imagine LOTS of ammunition from those times would be the most common rather than top of the line modern ammo, at the very least, it would be equal, with shipping shiploads of ammo over, but then alot of that ammo would have been taken from assorted ammo dumps in the US that had been stockpiled over decades as well.
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"God bless America, the land of the free, but only so long as it remains the home of the brave." |
#20
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Thanks for the info, but now I have another question: the tw2 book describes the wojo combo mortar as having wooden sabots to use 60mm mortar bombs - would these sabots shoot out of the barrel when fired and be lost down range or at least damaged?
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#21
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Almost certainly. The sabot is designed to wrap around the round and are fired out of the barrel. After firing, they fall away from the round and, if they weren't damaged in the intial firing, chances are they'll be in less than perfect condition after hitting the ground.
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#22
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I would also add that the sabots would for the mortar reduce its range and accuracy.
And yes, they would be burnt and cracked in the initial firing, and as was stated them falling from so far, or hitting the ground at any speed they would be cracked, chipped, dented and in pretty sad shape.
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"God bless America, the land of the free, but only so long as it remains the home of the brave." |
#23
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"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
#24
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#25
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True but wooden sabots would have their own problems. Pine would be easy to work with but contains alot of resin so it would present cleaning issues too. And many lighter woods expand greatly and/or warp when exposed to moisture so they would have to be carved smaller than the bore diameter to avoid nasty firing accidents. Harder woods would be less prone to warping and would probably be reusable as sabots but would be harder to source and machine. I guess you would lathe a length of wood to the required diamter, bore a hole down the middle, saw it into disks then cut each disk in half.
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"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
#26
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That said, the problems from wood would be a lot more easily mitigated with more options than paper mache or styrofoam, because no matter what type of paper you use, it's still mache. The same with styrofoam. |
#27
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The styrafoam would melt, and cover the barrel with melted goey plastic that would harden and made the gun unusable, or worse, cause a hangfire <BAD MOJO!> styrafoam also can burn, imagine fire touching those charge bags? Another case for BAD MOJO!
Paper Mache, it would be blown to pieces, or burn up and you would not get the tightness in the bore, which would cause the round to wobble as it left the bore which would result in a "IRRADIC ROUND!" this is another case for BAD MOJO! When you have such casses the whole crew shouts, screams, waves their arms and does a monty python reinactement of "RUN AWAY! RUN AWAY!" because that round is going someone other than where you intended it to go, and it is going to go much shorter too. Granted, an 81mm round down the pipe of an 82mm no biggie but when its a 60mm down an 82, and its sabot was bad well that as I put it in my Spanish class, "muy malo....muy muy malo."
__________________
"God bless America, the land of the free, but only so long as it remains the home of the brave." |
#28
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Okay, so foam and paper mache would be bad. Surely there would be a better way than a wooden sabot. A slide-in metal tube insert of the correct bore diameter?
__________________
"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
#29
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As a complete armchair military man... 0 actual service..
Can anyone tell me how a single person could man an 81mm - would it just take 3x as long? Rules have fire rate of 1 per round. Also, the smaller 60mm, would that be easier and therefore not x3 or ? It's just I have a player in my campaign that loves to get a mortar set up and fire it solo and I dont know how difficult this would be. |
#30
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The 60 should be the same, unless fired direct. Then it can just be using the tube (no bipod), and can be (and is) handled by one man. Especially so if he sets it to lever action and not drop fire. |
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equipment, mortars |
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