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| 15 cm schwere Feldhaubitze 13 | |
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15 cm sFH 13 L/14 howitzer displayed as a monument in Brantford, Ontario. |
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| Type | Heavy field howitzer |
| Place of origin | |
| Service history | |
| In service | 1914-1945 |
| Used by | |
| Wars | World War I World War II |
| Production history | |
| Designer | Krupp |
| Designed | 1913 |
| Manufacturer | Krupp, Rheinmetall, Spandau |
| Produced | 1913-1918 |
| Number built | 3409+ |
| Variants | kurz sFH 13 lg. sFH13 lg. sFH13/02 |
| Specifications | |
| Weight | 2,250 kg (4,960 lbs) |
| Length | 2.54 m (8 ft 4 in) |
| Barrel length | 2.096 m (6 ft 11 in) L/17 |
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| Shell | separate-loading, cased charge (7 charges) |
| Shell weight | 42 kilograms (93 lb) (HE) |
| Caliber | 149.1 mm (5.89 in) |
| Breech | horizontal sliding block |
| Recoil | hydro-spring variable recoil |
| Carriage | box trail |
| Elevation | −4° to +45° |
| Traverse | 9° |
| Rate of fire | 3 rpm |
| Muzzle velocity | 381 m/s (1,250 ft/s) |
| Effective range | 8,600 m (9,400 yd) |
The 15 cm schwere Feldhaubitze 13 (15 cm sFH 13), was a heavy field howitzer used by Germany in World War I and the beginning of World War II.
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Variants were the original "kurz" (L/14 - 14 caliber short barrel version) The lg. sFH13 with a longer barrel; and lg. sFH13/02, first manufactured in 1902, with modifications to simplify wartime manufacture of the lg. sFH weapons. There were also serious issues of weak recoil spring mechanisms that would break, and gun barrel explosions. The problems were solved with the upgrades.[1]
The British referred to these and their shells as "5 point 9"s or "5 9"s as the bore was 5.9 inches (150 mm). The ability of these guns to deliver mobile heavy firepower close to the frontline gave the Germans a major firepower advantage on the Western Front early in World War I, as the French and British lacked an equivalent. It was not until late 1915 that the British began to deploy their own 6 inch 26 cwt howitzer.
Guns turned over to Belgium and the Netherlands as reparations after World War I were taken into Wehrmacht service after the conquest of the Low Countries as the 15 cm sFH 409(b) and 406(h) respectively.
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