M19 mortar

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US M19 60 mm Mortar
Type Infantry mortar
Place of origin United States
Service history
Used by See Users
Wars Korean War
Vietnam War
Specifications
Weight 23.4 kilograms (52 lb) (M5 mount)[1]
9.3 kilograms (21 lb) (M1 mount)
Length 81.9 cm (32.2 in)

Caliber 60 millimetres (2.4 in)
Elevation +40° to +85° on M5 mount
free on M1 mount
Traverse 14° on M5 mount
free on M1 mount
Muzzle velocity 168 m/s (550 ft/s)
Effective firing range 1,790 m (5,870 ft)
Feed system manual

The M19 Mortar is a light, smoothbore, muzzle-loading, high-angle-of-fire weapon for light infantry support developed and produced in the United States.

It has been made obsolete and supplanted by the more modern 60 mm M224 Mortar, which has a much longer range and improved ammunition.

Description

The original M19 just had a simple spade-like M1 baseplate, leaving the elevation and traverse free for the firer. This of course was found to be too inaccurate, and the infantry initially refused the M19. A new mount, the M5, was developed, which used a conventional baseplate and bipod with elevation and traverse adjustment. This gave the M19 better accuracy, but made it heavier than the M2 Mortar with less range.

The M19 fired the same ammunition used in the M2 mortar, which it would replace. The 60 mm mortar is used by the infantry to lob high-explosive and white phosphorus smoke shells at well-protected hostile locations. The weapon can also fire illumination rounds to light up the battlefield at night. The primary difference between the M2 and M19 was that the M2 was drop-fire only while the M19 could be drop-fired or a round loaded and then fired by a lever-like trigger at the base of the tube.

History

M19 development began in 1942 as the T18E6 to replace the M2 Mortar. It was a very simple and light weapon, but was too inaccurate without a mounting. The conventional M5 mount for the M2 mortar was fitted to it. It began to be fielded during the Korean War to replace the M2 and saw limited use in the Vietnam War. Many M19s were scrapped or exported to other countries.

Operators

References

Notes

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Bibliography

  • Hogg, Ian (2000). Twentieth-Century Artillery. Friedman/Fairfax Publishers. ISBN 1-58663-299-X

External links

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