Ammunition The cannon used specially developed 30×90RB mm ammunition—30 mm calibre, 90 mm case length,
rebated/reduced rim. Unlike most other weapon rounds, which used traditional brass for the case, the MK 108's ammunition used steel cases. Several types of ammunition were developed, including
practice,
armor-piercing,
high-explosive and
incendiary. In operation, however, two major ammunition types were used:
mine shell and
high-explosive incendiary. The mine shell was made by drawn steel (the same way brass cartridge-cases are made) instead of being forged and machined as was the usual practice for cannon shells. This resulted in a shell with a thin but strong wall, which hence had a much larger cavity in which to pack a much larger explosive or incendiary charge than was otherwise possible.
Construction The cannon proved to be relatively light, effective, reliable, compact and easy to manufacture due to its simple construction—80% of the weapon was made from stamped parts, and the number of moving parts was kept to a minimum by using
advanced primer ignition blowback (APIB) operation. The simplicity of construction allowed inexperienced workers to make the parts (mostly women). Also a cartridge case with a
rebated rim is used, so that the extractor claw can hook over the rim and still fit within the chamber. Primer ignition is timed so that the bolt is still moving forward when the propellant is ignited. The expanding gases from the fired round stop the forward motion of the bolt, then reverse its motion. The key characteristic of the APIB system is that, because the resistance due to the weight of the bolt and the mainspring are supplemented by the bolt's considerable forward momentum, the propellant gases are contained in the barrel for critical microseconds, and the projectile will have had time to leave the muzzle, allowing the gas to escape forward and reducing the chamber pressure to a safe level before the bolt and cartridge case emerge from the opposite end. compared to the approx. 720-790m/s but a fire rate of 600-850 rounds per minute depending on variant. Another significant feature is that, in the APIB system
the cycle starts with the bolt open, which prevents an
autocannon using the APIB principle from being accurately
synchronized with an aircraft's propeller. File:MK108 bolt cycle AB.png File:MK108 bolt cycle CD.png File:MK108 feed cycle AB.png File:MK108 feed cycle CD.png ==Operational usage==