By the early 1930s the
Red Army (RKKA) started to look for a replacement for the 152-mm howitzer M1909 and the
152-mm howitzer M1910. Those pieces, developed before
World War I, had unsprung fixed trail carriages and short
barrels, which meant poor mobility, insufficient elevation and traverse angles and short range. Although both pieces were eventually modernized, resulting in the
152-mm howitzer M1909/30 and the
152-mm howitzer M1910/37 respectively, these were relatively minor upgrades which brought only limited improvement in some areas and didn't address others. It was clear that a completely new design was needed. At that time, the Soviets had little experience in developing modern artillery pieces. An initial attempt was made to overcome that issue through a collaboration with Germany. Constrained by the limitations of the
Treaty of Versailles, Germany was looking for ways to proceed with weapons development and joint projects gave them such an opportunity. Among other weapons supplied by Germans was a heavy
howitzer, designated
152-mm howitzer M1931 (NG) in the USSR. Soon the
Motovilikha Mechanical Plant (MMZ) was tasked with the production of this gun. After only eight pieces had been completed in 1932–1934, production was stopped, as the design had proven to be too complicated for the Soviet industry of the early 1930s, similar to other designs like
122-mm howitzer M1934 or 20-mm and 37-mm
autocannons. Also it was considered somewhat heavy at 5,445 kg in travelling configuration. But these early failures gave Soviet developers some valuable experience. artillery museum, Finland. In 1937,
F. F. Petrov and his design team at the
Plant No.172 (another name for Motovilikha Plant) started work on a new design, the M-10. Technical papers were submitted to the Artillery Directorate on 1 August 1937 and on 2 November the first prototype was completed. Ground trials (19–25 October 1938) featured two pieces: No. 302 (L/25 barrel with constant
rifling) and No. 303 (L/20 barrel with progressive rifling). The No. 303 was found to be superior. The trials also revealed numerous defects in the gun construction: the howitzer suffered from insufficient upper carriage strength, leaks in the
recoil buffer, unreliable suspension etc. For army tests early in 1939, an improved design with a longer barrel was presented. Another series of army tests followed from 22 December 1939 to 10 January 1940, but even before it started—on 29 September 1939—the gun was adopted as
152 mm divisional howitzer model 1938. Later, the word
divisional was removed from the designation. ==Production history==