Type 4 40 cm Rocket Launcher

Type 4 40 cm Rocket Launcher

Type 4 40 cm Rocket
Type Rocket artillery
Place of origin  Empire of Japan
Service history
In service 1943-1945
Used by Imperial Japanese Army
Wars World War II
Specifications
Weight 220 kilograms (490 lb)
Barrel length 3.22 metres (10 ft 7 in)

Shell 508 kilograms (1,120 lb)
Caliber 400 mm (16 in)
Elevation 40° to +65°
Muzzle velocity 220 m/s (720 ft/s)
Maximum firing range 3,700 metres (4,000 yd)

The Type 4 40 cm Rocket Mortar (四式四〇糎噴進 Yonshiki yonjyu-senchi funshinho) was a 400 mm rocket mortar used by the Imperial Japanese Army in the final stages of World War II.

Development and design

The Type 4 rocket mortar was developed in the final stages of World War II by the Imperial Japanese Army Technical Bureau, as a relatively low-cost, easy to produce weapon, which had an advantage of greater accuracy over conventional mortars in that it fired a spin-stabilized projectile. The first units were deployed in 1943, and were used in limited numbers in combat during the Battle of Iwo Jima and Battle of Okinawa. Due to its ease of construction, it was produced in limited numbers and distributed to hidden arsenals for use as last-ditch weapons during the projected Allied invasion of the Japanese home islands.

Unlike the Type 4 20 cm Rocket, which could be launched from an ordinary pipe or culvert with sufficient diameter, wooden rails, or even directly from a slope in the ground,[1] the Type 4 40cm rocket required specially designed launch rails. [2]

References

Notes

  1. Taki's Imperial Japanese Army home page
  2. Taki's Imperial Japanese Army home page
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