106.25mm Howitzer
| 106.25mm Howitzer | |
|---|---|
| [[File:|300px]] | |
| Gondaran lightweight brigade-level field howitzer | |
| Service Data | |
| Classification | Lightweight field howitzer |
| Type | Towed indirect fire weapon |
| Origin | Gondara |
| Manufacturer | Gondaran State Arsenals |
| Used By | Army of Gondara |
| Design Date | 1935 |
| Service Entry | 1939 |
| Cost | ~8,500 G |
| Technical Data | |
| Crew | 7 |
| Caliber | 106.25mm |
| Barrel Length | L/22 |
| Operation | Manual breech-loaded |
| Carriage | Lightweight split-trail carriage |
| Weight | ~4,200 lb |
| Elevation | -5° to +65° |
| Traverse | ~45° total |
| Rate of Fire | 4–6 rounds per minute |
| Muzzle Velocity | ~470 m/s |
| Effective Range | ~9,000–10,500 m |
| Maximum Range | ~11,500 m |
| Ammunition | HE, Smoke, Illumination, Limited HEAT |
| Towing | CT-32E Heavy Tow Vehicle |
| Deployment | Towed brigade-level artillery, crew-served |
Overview
The 106.25mm Howitzer is the standard lightweight brigade-level field howitzer of the Army of Gondara. Designed to provide greater range, shell weight, and battlefield shaping power than the 75mm Pack Howitzer, the system serves as the primary indirect fire weapon of Mobile Infantry brigade formations.
The howitzer is based on the general concept of a lightweight 105mm-class field gun but adapted to Gondaran caliber standardization and mobile infantry doctrine. It emphasizes transportability, rapid emplacement, reliable field service, and ammunition commonality within Gondara’s standardized artillery system.
Design Characteristics
The 106.25mm Howitzer is built around a medium-length L/22 barrel mounted on a lightweight split-trail carriage. The system is designed to remain towable by standard Gondaran heavy transport vehicles while still delivering sufficient shell weight for brigade-level fire support.
Key design features include:
- Lightweight split-trail carriage
- Manual breech-loading operation
- Recoil system simplified for field maintenance
- High elevation for indirect fire
- Sufficient traverse for rapid fire correction
- Compatibility with CT-32E Heavy Tow Vehicle towing doctrine
The weapon is deliberately lighter than heavier divisional artillery systems, allowing Mobile Infantry brigades to displace and reestablish fire support rapidly during consolidation operations.
Field Serviceability
The 106.25mm Howitzer is designed for repair and maintenance under forward field conditions.
Field serviceability is supported by:
- Manually operated breech system
- Simplified recoil components
- Standardized artillery tools
- Modular carriage components
- Compatibility with brigade motor pool support
The weapon does not require specialized artillery tractors and can be maintained by trained brigade artillery crews with normal motor pool assistance.
Operational Use
The 106.25mm Howitzer provides brigade-level indirect fire support for Mobile Infantry formations.
Typical uses include:
- Suppression of enemy counterattacks
- Smoke fire for maneuver and concealment
- Illumination during night operations
- Destruction of field fortifications
- Disruption of enemy assembly areas
- Reinforcement of battalion defensive sectors
- Fire support during breach consolidation
The weapon is not intended for prolonged siege operations or deep corps-level counterbattery work. Its primary purpose is to give the Mobile Infantry Brigade responsive and mobile battlefield shaping fire.
Ammunition
The 106.25mm Howitzer fires a semi-fixed 106.25mm artillery ammunition family.
Primary ammunition types include:
- High Explosive (HE) — general suppression, fragmentation, and destruction
- Smoke — concealment, screening, and movement support
- Illumination — night battlefield visibility
- Limited HEAT — emergency direct-fire use against armored threats
The standard HE shell provides significantly greater explosive effect than 75mm ammunition while remaining manageable for crew handling and vehicle transport.
Transport
The 106.25mm Howitzer is normally towed by the CT-32E Heavy Tow Vehicle.
Each gun is assigned:
- 1 × CT-32E Heavy Tow Vehicle
- 1 × 7-man gun crew
- Initial engagement ammunition carried by the prime mover
- Additional ammunition carried by brigade sustainment assets
The weapon may be displaced rapidly compared to heavier artillery but still requires coordinated crew effort for emplacement and movement.
Deployment Doctrine
Within Mobile Infantry brigade service, the 106.25mm Howitzer is employed as a responsive brigade fire-support weapon.
Doctrine emphasizes:
- Rapid emplacement after arrival
- Preplanned defensive fires
- Smoke support for battalion movement
- Counterattack disruption
- Fire concentration against enemy assembly areas
- Frequent displacement to avoid counterbattery fire
The howitzer supports the brigade’s consolidation mission by allowing Mobile Infantry battalions to hold newly secured terrain while brigade-level fires suppress and disrupt enemy response.
Limitations
The 106.25mm Howitzer has several limitations:
- Heavier and slower to reposition than the 75mm Pack Howitzer
- Requires CT-32E towing support
- Ammunition weight creates significant sustainment demand
- Less range than heavier divisional artillery
- Vulnerable to counterbattery fire if kept in static positions too long
These limitations are accepted in exchange for mobility, reliability, and compatibility with Mobile Infantry brigade doctrine.
Summary
The 106.25mm Howitzer provides the Army of Gondara with a practical and mobile brigade-level artillery system. It bridges the gap between battalion light artillery and heavier divisional guns, giving Mobile Infantry brigades the firepower needed to stabilize breaches, disrupt counterattacks, and maintain defensive control during 96-hour consolidation operations.