The sherman tank was constantly upgraded throughout it's service history. With several variants in service simultaneously. During WW2 Originally intended for infantry support it used a medium (relative to it's time) velocity 75mm. A low velocity 105mm howitzer. A high velocity 76mm anti tank gun. A high pressure flamethrower. A high velocity 17 pounder anti tank gun. After WW2 Israel upgraded shermans with high velocity 75mm and high velocity 105mm guns.
A cannon is a direct fire weapon as used on tanks. A machine gun is rapid fire weapon of a smaller caliber used by infantry or aircraft, and a howiitzer is artillery which uses a high angle of fire to project shells in a plunging manner on the target. In general, a cannon is 20mm or larger, a machine gun is 20mm or smaller and a howitzer is 75mm or larger.
PZ I a light tank armed with 2 MG-34's. PZ II a light tank armed with a MG-34 and a 2. cm gun. PZ III A medium tank armed with a 3.7cm gun later a 5. cm gun and finally a 7.5cm howitzer. PZ IV a medium tank armed with a 7.5cm howitzer and later a 7.5cm gun. PZ V Panther a heavy tank armed with a 7.5cm gun. PZ VI Tiger a heavy tank armed with a 8.8cm gun. PZ VII a heavy tank armed with a 12.0cm gun. Oh and a Chekoslovakian tank T/38 armed with a 4.7cm gun. In adition each tank was converted to a weopons carrier. PZ I. The PZ JagI mounted with a 4.7cm Chec gun used as a tank destroyer. PZ II. Marder armed with a 7.6cm Russian AT gun later a German gun. Wespe mounted with a 10.5cm gun. PZ III. STG III mounted with a 7.5cm howitzer than a 7.5cm AT gun and a 10.5 howitzer. PZ IV. PZ Jag IV mounted with a 7.5cm AT gun. PZ V. Jag Panther mounted with a 8.8cm AT gun. PZVI. Jag Tiger mounted with a 1.20cm AT gun. The Germans made good use of there vehicles.
During WW2, several weapons were designed for use by airborne troops, including by several different countries. The most common was to cut down the size of the personal weapon. I think Italy re-sized their Carcano rifle, the Model 1938TS (not the Cavalry carbine). The US cut down the Thompson sub-machine gun to make it shorter. The US designed a light, airborne tank in WW2 but it was never actually dropped from the air in combat. The artillery for the US Airborne troops was a 105mm Howitzer that was much smaller in size. The M3 Howitzer had a barrel that was shortned by 27 inches and it was mounted on the sleigh of the M1A2 recoil mechanism from the 75mm howitzer and fitted to the M2A1 carriage of the 75mm. Its charge had less powder and thus had a shorter range but some batteries in infantry division adopted it, also. Then there were new designs in knives, explosives, and other personal effects. The Germans had a pocket knife that the blade slide out (gravity activated not switch blade).
The most gun used during french revolution was the model 1783 from"Manufacture royale d'armes de Saint Etienne.
The sherman tank was constantly upgraded throughout it's service history. With several variants in service simultaneously. During WW2 Originally intended for infantry support it used a medium (relative to it's time) velocity 75mm. A low velocity 105mm howitzer. A high velocity 76mm anti tank gun. A high pressure flamethrower. A high velocity 17 pounder anti tank gun. After WW2 Israel upgraded shermans with high velocity 75mm and high velocity 105mm guns.
A cannon is a direct fire weapon as used on tanks. A machine gun is rapid fire weapon of a smaller caliber used by infantry or aircraft, and a howiitzer is artillery which uses a high angle of fire to project shells in a plunging manner on the target. In general, a cannon is 20mm or larger, a machine gun is 20mm or smaller and a howitzer is 75mm or larger.
PZ I a light tank armed with 2 MG-34's. PZ II a light tank armed with a MG-34 and a 2. cm gun. PZ III A medium tank armed with a 3.7cm gun later a 5. cm gun and finally a 7.5cm howitzer. PZ IV a medium tank armed with a 7.5cm howitzer and later a 7.5cm gun. PZ V Panther a heavy tank armed with a 7.5cm gun. PZ VI Tiger a heavy tank armed with a 8.8cm gun. PZ VII a heavy tank armed with a 12.0cm gun. Oh and a Chekoslovakian tank T/38 armed with a 4.7cm gun. In adition each tank was converted to a weopons carrier. PZ I. The PZ JagI mounted with a 4.7cm Chec gun used as a tank destroyer. PZ II. Marder armed with a 7.6cm Russian AT gun later a German gun. Wespe mounted with a 10.5cm gun. PZ III. STG III mounted with a 7.5cm howitzer than a 7.5cm AT gun and a 10.5 howitzer. PZ IV. PZ Jag IV mounted with a 7.5cm AT gun. PZ V. Jag Panther mounted with a 8.8cm AT gun. PZVI. Jag Tiger mounted with a 1.20cm AT gun. The Germans made good use of there vehicles.
On the top of the turret it had one browning m2 50. cal machine gun in the turret it had one 75mm tank gun and one browning 30. cal machine gun and in the body it had another browning 30. cal machine gun
For the US, since Vietnam, it's the 105mm howitzer.
Apparently it can be fired from a standard 155mm howitzer artillery gun
76mm Only a relative few Shermans, called "Fireflies," had the 76mm gun. The overwhelming majority had a lower-velocity and much less powerful 75mm.
howitzer is a class of gun with many different variants you need to be more specific. but the max range of a M777 howitzer is 30.1 km (rap assisted).
In general, no. Most howitzers had a short barrel and light powder charge, mainly to make them light and manoeverable, such as for "mountain guns". They certainly weren't designed as anti-tank weapons but a hit from a howitzer round might disable a tank. In today's modern militaries, all field guns are now howitzers (the primary definition of a "howitzer" vs a normal gun is that a howitzer is capable of elevation about 45 degrees from horizontal). While their primary mission is long-range indirect fire, they all have direct-fire capability. They also come with a wide variety of ammunition. While they don't have the APFSDS-style kinetic penetrator typical of direct-fire guns, they do have both a variety of HEAT and HESH rounds that can be very effective, plus they are capable of firing a number of different guided weapons. So, the answer is: YES, the modern howitzer definitely has a significant anti-tank capability, though that is not their primary mission. When used in the anti-tank role, it is almost always via indirect fire dropping a variety of specialty rounds on the tops of tanks a considerable distance away. Using a howitzer in a direct-fire anti-tank role is generally a sign that something has gone seriously wrong with the tactical situation.
A cannon or howitzer are names for large guns.
AnswerThe British 8-Inch Howitzer fired a round that was 8-in Caliber (or 203mm) and weighed 200-lb.The US Army used an 8-inch Gun and a 240mm Howitzer, which were similar and were actually considered Field Artillery. They had to be assembled to fire. The 240mm Howitzer fired a shell that weighed 360 lbs.Typo-- I don't think there was a British 18-inch Howitzer, except maybe on a navy battleship.
The American infantry used an anti-take weapon that was the 37-mm Anti-Tank gun. Later, they adopted a 57-mm AT gun. These were light weapons which could be pulled by infantrymen. Each Infantry Regiment of an Infantry Division had one Anti-Tank Company and one Cannon Company, which could be used for direct support. However, they were primarily used as a defense in case infantry had to fall back.Each Infantry Regiment had one Field Artillery Battalion for direct fire support which fired the 105mm Howitzer.