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3.7 cm Flak 43 - Wikipedia

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Anti-aircraft gun

3.7 cm Flak 43

A Flak 43 Zwilling in Northern France, mid-1944

Type Anti-aircraft gun Place of origin Nazi Germany In service 1944-1945 Used by Germany Wars World War II Designer Rheinmetal-Borsig Designed 1939–1943 Produced 1944–1945 Mass 355 kg (783 lb) Barrel length 2.106 m (82.9 in) (57 calibers) Crew 3–4 Shell 37 × 263B Shell weight 635–700 g (1.4–1.5 lb) Caliber 37 mm (1.5 in) Breech Gas-operated Elevation -10° to +90° Traverse 360° Rate of fire Muzzle velocity 790–820 m/s (2,600–2,700 ft/s) Effective firing range Feed system 8-round clips

The 3.7 cm Flak 43 was a light anti-aircraft (AA) gun used by Nazi Germany during World War II. It was derived from the 3.7-centimeter (1.5 in) Flak 18/36/37 series of AA guns. It was provided with single- and twin-gun mounts, the latter being designated as the 3.7 cm Flak 43 Zwilling and was in service from 1944 to 1945. In addition to versions used by the Kriegsmarine (German Navy), it served as the main armament of the Ostwind and Möbelwagen and was proposed for use in the Flakpanzer Coelian self-propelled AA guns.

Background and description[edit]

Rheinmetall-Borsig redesigned the Flak 36/37 to incorporate the gas-operated breech mechanism of the 3-centimeter (1.18 in) MK 103[1] and to reduce the number of man-hours required to manufacture it from 4320 to 1000.[2] The most obvious change was the adoption of a horizontal feed system from the vertical system of the earlier guns. The feed tray was positioned inside the oversized trunnions at the gun's center of gravity so it could be reloaded without disturbing the gun's aim. These changes significantly lightened the gun and made it faster to traverse and elevate.[2]

A Flak M43 on a single Flak LM 43 mount

The Kriegsmarine used a version of it on surface ships as the 3.7 cm Flak M43 in its own single- and twin-gun mounts; its Flak LM 44 mount had the guns side-by-side, unlike the Zwilling.[3]

The first Flak 43s were reported in Luftwaffe service in August 1944, 431 single guns and 41 Zwilling mounts. By February 1945, these increased to 1032 single guns and 380 Zwillings.[4]

  1. ^ Williams, p. 96
  2. ^ a b Chamberlain & Gander, p. 18
  3. ^ Campbell, p. 255
  4. ^ Gander & Chamberlain, p. 131

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