Military Wiki
Advertisement

Question book-new

This article does not contain any citations or references. Please improve this article by adding a reference. For information about how to add references, see Template:Citation.

M43 Howitzer motor carriage
TM-9-335-8in-HMC-M43-1
M43
Type Self-propelled artillery
Place of origin United States
Specifications
Mass 83,000 Lbs
Length 289-inches
Width 124-inches
Height 129-inches
Crew 8

Shell separate loading, bagged charge
Barrels 1
Rate of fire Sustained:
Effective firing range Conventional:
Feed system hand
Sights M13 or M6

Main
armament
M115 howitzer
Engine Continental R975-C4
400 HP
Operational
range
107 Mi.
Maximum speed 24 MPH

The 203 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M43 was a United States self-propelled artillery vehicle built on a widened and lengthened Medium Tank M4A3 chassis, but with a Continental engine and HVSS that was introduced at the end of the Second World War.

History[]

Equipped with a 203 mm (8") Howitzer, it was designed to replace the earlier M12 Gun Motor Carriage. Its prototype designation was the T89, but this was changed to the M43 in March 1945. The M43 suspension had a load limit of 40.7 tons and a traverse speed of 22 d/s. It was first built with the Wright-Continental R-975C1 engine, but this proved not powerful enough for it to keep up with tanks, so it was changed to use the Wright-Continental R-975C4 engine, which had around 460 horsepower; 80 more than the first one. This engine weighed exactly the same as the older version, so the power to weight ratio was much improved. The first equipped radio set was the SCR 610, with an average signal range of 420m. This was not sufficient for the U.S. army, so it was upgraded to the SCR 619, with an average of 750m. This enabled the SP artillery piece to get co-ordinates and hit them much better than with the original radio, bringing out the amazing potential of this vehicle, which performed well in the Korean War.

Variants[]

  • 8 inch Howitzer Motor Carriage M43 - 8 in (203 mm) HMC, standardized August 1945; 48 were built.
  • The Army planned to use the same T38 chassis for a family of SP artillery.
  • Cargo Carrier T30 - a few built before cancellation in December 1944 to make more chassis' available for GMCs.

Surviving vehicles[]

[1]

  • one at the Fort Sill museum, OK
  • one in Wyoming, MI
  • one in American Society of Military History Museum, South El Monte, CA

See also[]

Notes[]

References[]

  • TM 9-747
  • SNL G232
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at M43 Howitzer Motor Carriage and the edit history here.
Advertisement