Ordnance ML 3 inch Mortar

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Royal Malay Regiment infantry operating their 3 inch mortars during the Battle of Pasir Panjang.
Royal Malay Regiment infantry operating their 3 inch mortars during the Battle of Pasir Panjang.

The United Kingdom's Ordnance ML 3 inch mortar was the standard mortar used by the British army from the late 1920s to the late 1960s, superseding the Stokes Mortar.

Based on their experience in World War I, the British infantry asked some sort of artillery for close support. The initial plan was for special batteries of artillery, but the cost was prohibitive and the mortar was accepted instead.

Virtually every civilian reference publication states the 3-inch mortar had a caliber of 76mm (3 inches), however, the “3-inch” mortar had an actual bore of 3.189 inches (81mm). Few British or American manuals on the 3-inch provide its actual caliber for some unknown reason, even on diagrams of the mortar annotated with all other dimensions. During World War II the British modified the 3-inch mortar to allow it to fire captured Italian 81mm mortar ammunition in North Africa (the modification required a change to the firing pin design as the Italian ignition cartridge and propellant charge were different).

The ML mortar is a conventional Stokes-type mortar which is muzzle-loaded and drop-fired. Experience in World War II showed that it did not have sufficient range when compared to the German 81 mm s.Gw.34 mortar and so a new barrel was designed. This became the Mark 2 mortar which remained in service until replaced by the L16A1 81mm mortar.

[edit] Characteristics