M1915 Diskushandgranate
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M1915 Diskushandgranate
M1915 may refer to: * 305 mm howitzer M1915, Russian artillery piece * 37 mm trench gun M1915, Russian artillery piece * Standschütze Hellriegel M1915, Austro-Hungarian submachine gun * Ruby M1915, a self-loading pistol used as a French World War I sidearm * Beretta Model 1915 The Beretta Model 1915 or Beretta M1915 is a semi-automatic pistol manufactured by Beretta, designed by Tullio Marengoni who was the chief engineer in the company, to replace the Glisenti Model 1910 which had a complex and weak firing mechanism. ..., an Italian semi-automatic pistol in World War I See also * M1916 (other) {{Letter-NumberCombDisambig ...
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305 Mm Howitzer M1915
Type 1915 305 mm howitzer (russian: 305-мм гаубица образца 1915 года) was a Russian heavy howitzer that saw service during World War I and II. Originally intended for Naval use, it was later purchased by the Army at a cost of 271,500 Rubles per piece, with the first order of 8 being sent on 13 August 1915. See also *List of siege artillery Weapons of comparable role, performance and era *BL 12 inch Howitzer British equivalent *Skoda 305 mm Model 1911 The Škoda 30.5 cm Mörser M.11 was a siege howitzer produced by Škoda Works and used by the Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I and by Nazi Germany in World War II. Development Development began in 1906, when a development contract w ... Austro-Hungarian equivalent World War I artillery of Russia World War I howitzers 305 mm artillery Siege artillery Weapons and ammunition introduced in 1915 {{artillery-stub ...
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37 Mm Trench Gun M1915
37-mm trench gun M1915 (russian: Траншейная 37-мм пушка обр. 1915 года) was a Russian battalion gun employed in World War I. With World War I switching into a trench warfare phase late in 1914, a need for a highly mobile artillery system to be used against enemy machine gun emplacements and other strongpoints became apparent. In 1915 colonel M. F. Rosenberg, a member of the Artillery Committee, developed such a weapon. The gun was compact enough to fit into machine gun emplacements. It weighed only about 180 kg and could be dismantled into three pieces - barrel (about 74 kg), carriage (82 kg) and wheels (25 kg), making it easy to move around. To protect the crew from enemy fire, the gun was equipped with a shield 6 or 8 mm thick. The weapon was sufficiently accurate at ranges of up to roughly 1 mile or about 1.6 km—this was earlier set out as 1,000-1,200 paces, and a pace is normally the height of the person walking, so this ...
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Standschütze Hellriegel M1915
Standschütze Hellriegel 1915 (German: ''Maschinengewehr des Standschützen Hellriegel'', "Machine gun of ''Standschützen, Standschütze'' Hellriegel") was an Austria-Hungary, Austro-Hungarian Water cooling, water-cooled submachine gun produced during World War I in very limited prototype numbers. History Little is known about the Standschütze Hellriegel Model 1915. The only source of information about the Hellriegel is several photographs stored in the photo archive of the Austrian National Library under the name “Maschinengewehr des Standschützen Hellriegel” (literally "Machine gun from reservist Hellriegel"). The photographs are dated October 1915 and they show the weapon being tested at a firing range. Its name and magazine size indicate that it was an automatic firearm, and its designer was someone named Hellriegel from the Austrian militia unit ''Standschützen'', tasked with the defence of Tyrol and Vorarlberg regions of western Austria, the former bordered "neutral" I ...
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Ruby M1915
The Ruby pistol was a semi-automatic pistol of .32 ACP calibre made by Gabilondo y Urresti and other Spanish companies. It saw use in both World Wars as the service weapon of the French Army under the name ''Pistolet Automatique de 7 millim.65 genre "Ruby"''. The pistol was closely modeled after John Browning's 1903 Pocket Hammerless design produced by Colt. The French Army decommissioned it in 1958. Gabilondo and the Ruby In 1914, just before the start of the First World War, Gabilondo started manufacture of a sturdy self-loading pistol based on the Browning Model 1903 and chambered for the 7.65mm Browning/.32 ACP cartridge. Unusual for the time, the magazine capacity was nine shots instead of the usual six or seven. The pistol was intended for export to the Americas, and despite the small calibre it was designed with military and police sales in mind. Other Spanish manufacturers had copied the Browning since around 1905. The Ruby, apart from the extended magazine appears ...
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Beretta Model 1915
The Beretta Model 1915 or Beretta M1915 is a semi-automatic pistol manufactured by Beretta, designed by Tullio Marengoni who was the chief engineer in the company, to replace the Glisenti Model 1910 which had a complex and weak firing mechanism. It is the first semi-automatic pistol which was manufactured by the company, and issued as a service pistol in Royal Italian Army during World War I. The total production of the Beretta M1915 is estimated about 15,670 during 1915-1918, and about 56,000 of Beretta M1915/1917. Some of the pistols were also used in World War II until 1945. The design of the pistol is similar to modern Beretta pistols such as Beretta M1923, Beretta M1934, Beretta M1935, Beretta M1951, Beretta 70, Beretta 92, Beretta Cheetah, and Beretta M9. History The Glisenti Model 1910 used a bottlenecked 7.65 mm round which was similar to the 7.65×21mm Parabellum. Later, having the Italian Army judged the 7.65 round to be too light for military use, and having launched ...
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