Type 88 75 mm AA gun explained

Japanese Type 88 75 mm AA gun
Design Date:1925-1926
Type:Anti-aircraft gun
Is Ranged:yes
Is Artillery:yes
Service:1927–1945
Used By:Imperial Japanese Army
Manchukuo Imperial Army[1]
Wars:Second Sino-Japanese War
Soviet-Japanese Border Wars
World War II
First Indochina War
Number:2000+
Weight:24500NaN0 Firing
27400NaN0 Traveling
Length:5m (16feet) Firing
4m (13feet) Traveling
Part Length:3.212abbr=onNaNabbr=on L/44
Width:1.6m (05.2feet) Track
1.93m (06.33feet) Maximum firing
Height:2.01m (06.59feet)
Crew:12 (min 4)
Cartridge:75 x 497mm R[2]
Cartridge Weight:6.6kg (14.6lb)
Caliber:75mm
Barrels:single
Action:Semi-automatic loading and firing
Rate:15–20 rounds/minute
Velocity:720 m/s (2,400 ft/s)
Range:90980NaN0
Breech:Horizontal sliding-block
Recoil:Hydro-pneumatic, variable
Carriage:2 wheel 36 by 6 in rubber tire, 90 psi
Elevation:0 to +85 degrees
Traverse:360 degrees

The was an anti-aircraft gun used by the Imperial Japanese Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II. The Type 88 number was designated for the year the gun was accepted, 2588 in the Japanese imperial year calendar, or 1928 in the Gregorian calendar.[3] It replaced the earlier Type 11 75 mm AA gun in front line combat service, and at the time was equal in performances to any of its contemporaries in Western armies[4] and was considered capable of handling any targets the Japanese army was likely to encounter on the Asian mainland. Although it was soon overtaken by improvements in aircraft technology and was largely obsolete by 1941, it continued to be used on many fronts until the end of the war.

History and development

The Type 88 75 mm AA gun was based on an exhaustive evaluation by the Army Technical Bureau of several existing overseas designs, amalgamating some of the best features from each design (especially from the World War I-vintage British Vickers QF 3 inch 20 cwt AA gun) into a new, Japanese design.[5] The Type 88's number was designated for the year the gun was accepted, 2588 in the Japanese imperial year calendar, or 1928 in the Gregorian calendar.[6] The Type 88 was superior to the Type 11 in accuracy and range of fire.[7]

The Type 88 75 mm AA gun entered service between 1927 and 1928, and was deployed to virtually every anti-aircraft field artillery unit as protection against medium level aircraft attacks. Although it was a difficult and expensive weapon for Japan to produce with its limited industrial infrastructure and production technology, it was produced in larger numbers than any other medium anti-aircraft weapon in the Japanese inventory. Over 2,000 units were completed by the time of the surrender of Japan.[8]

In the early phases of World War II, Allied military intelligence initially assumed that the Japanese Type 88 was a copy of the formidable German Flak 36/37 88 mm gun due to its name. However, there is no connection between the two weapons. The confusion arose from the Japanese Army's nomenclature system. "Type 88" corresponds to the year 2588 in the Japanese imperial year, and not to the caliber of the weapon.[4]

Design

The Type 88 75 mm AA gun had a single-piece gun barrel with sliding breech, mounted on a central pedestal. The firing platform was supported by five legs, each of which (along with the central pedestal) had adjustable screwed foot for leveling. For transport each of the legs could be folded, and the barrel was also partially retractable.[5]

Combat record

Tactically employed in battle as a four-gun field battery, Japanese combat forces used the weapon during the invasion of Manchuria, Soviet-Japanese Border Wars and the Second Sino-Japanese War. They found the Type 88 gun's high velocity rounds were extremely effective anti-tank weapon when fired horizontally. The weapon was the standard Japanese mobile antiaircraft artillery weapon and used against Allied forces more than any other artillery weapon.

During both the Battle of Iwo Jima and the Battle of Okinawa it was used effectively with armor-piercing rounds against American M4 Sherman tanks and as a coastal-defense gun. Against armor, it had the advantage of a 360 degree traverse, but it was not easily moved and so it was less effective when fired from ambush against tanks.

Towards the end of the war many of the Type 88s were withdrawn from front line combat service and sent back to the home islands, to help reinforce Japan's homeland defenses against Allied air raids and to prepare for the threat of Allied invasion.[9] It was assigned to civil defense units in major Japanese cities, but its maximum effective vertical range of 7250m (23,790feet) meant it was ineffective against the USAAF B-29 Superfortress bombers, which could fly as high as 9710m (31,860feet).[10] Some guns were also assigned to coastal defense batteries.

A variant was experimentally fitted to a Ki-109 bomber in an attempt to shoot down B-29 Superfortress bombers at high altitude.

Weapons of comparable role, performance and era

Ammunition

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jowett . Philip . Rays of the Rising Sun, Volume 1: Japan's Asian Allies 1931–45, China and Manchukuo. . 2004 . Helion and Company Ltd. . 1-874622-21-3.
  2. Web site: 75-77 MM CALIBRE CARTRIDGES. www.quarryhs.co.uk. 2017-09-12. 11 October 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171011053525/http://www.quarryhs.co.uk/ammotable8.html. dead.
  3. War Department TM-E-30-480 Handbook on Japanese Military Forces September 1944 p. 400
  4. Mayer, The Rise and Fall of Imperial Japan, p. 64
  5. Bishop, The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II, p. 150
  6. War Department Special Series No. 25 Japanese Field Artillery October 1944
  7. http://www3.plala.or.jp/takihome/88aa.htm Taki's Imperial Japanese Army: "Type 88 75mm AA Gun"
  8. MacLean. Japanese Artillery; Weapons and Tactics
  9. Chant, Artillery of World War II, p. 63
  10. Web site: B-29 Superfortress . Boeing . 22 March 2012.