, mounted with 105 mm RCL gun which destroyed most of the tanks during the
1971 Indo-Pakistani war mounted in the nose of an
F5L flying boat, with a parallel
Lewis machine gun. Photo circa 1918. The earliest known example of a design for a gun based on recoilless principles was created by
Leonardo da Vinci in the 15th or early 16th century. This design was of a gun which fired projectiles in opposite directions, but there is no evidence any physical firearm based on the design was constructed at the time. In 1879, a French patent was filed by
Alfred Krupp for a recoilless gun. The first recoilless gun known to have been constructed was developed by Commander Cleland Davis of the
US Navy, just prior to
World War I. His design, named the
Davis gun, connected two guns back-to-back, with the backwards-facing gun loaded with lead balls and grease of the same weight as the shell in the other gun. His idea was used experimentally by the British as an anti-
Zeppelin and anti-
submarine weapon mounted on a
Handley Page O/100 bomber and intended to be installed on other aircraft. In the
Soviet Union, the development of recoilless weapons ("Dinamo-Reaktivnaya Pushka" (DRP), roughly "dynamic reaction cannon") began in 1923. In the 1930s, many different types of weapons were built and tested with configurations ranging from . Some of the smaller examples were tested in aircraft (
Grigorovich I-Z and
Tupolev I-12) and saw some limited production and service, but development was abandoned around 1938. The best-known of these early recoilless rifles was the
Model 1935 76 mm DRP designed by
Leonid Kurchevsky. A small number of these mounted on trucks saw combat in the
Winter War. Two were captured by the Finns and tested; one example was given to the Germans in 1940. The first recoilless gun to enter service in Germany was the
7.5 cm Leichtgeschütz 40 ("light gun" '40), a simple 75 mm smoothbore recoilless gun developed to give German
airborne troops artillery and anti-tank support that could be parachuted into battle. The 7.5 cm LG 40 was found to be so useful during the
invasion of Crete that
Krupp and
Rheinmetall set to work creating more powerful versions, respectively the
10.5 cm Leichtgeschütz 40 and
10.5 cm Leichtgeschütz 42. These weapons were loosely copied by the
US Army. The
Luftwaffe also showed great interest in aircraft-mounted recoilless weapons to allow their planes to attack tanks, fortified structures and ships. These included the unusual Düsenkanone 88, an 88 mm recoilless rifle fed by a 10-round rotary cylinder and with the exhaust vent angled upwards at 51 degrees to the barrel so it could pass through the host aircraft's fuselage rather than risking a rear-vented backblast damaging the tail, and the
Sondergerät SG104 "Münchhausen", a gargantuan 14-inch (355.6 mm) weapon designed to be mounted under the fuselage of a
Dornier Do 217. None of these systems proceeded beyond the prototype stage. The US did have a development program, and it is not clear to what extent the German designs were copied. These weapons remained fairly rare during the war, although the American M20 became increasingly common in 1945. Postwar saw a great deal of interest in recoilless systems, as they potentially offered an effective replacement for the obsolete
anti-tank rifle in infantry units (this was not the case for the US where no anti-tank rifle was adopted on a large scale). During World War II, the Swedish military developed a shoulder-fired 20 mm device, the
Pansarvärnsgevär m/42 (20 mm m/42); the British expressed their interest in it, but by that point the weapon, patterned after obsolete anti-tank rifles, was too weak to be effective against period tank armor. This system would form the basis of the much more successful
Carl Gustav recoilless rifle postwar. By the time of the
Korean War, recoilless rifles were found throughout the US forces. The earliest American infantry recoilless rifles were the shoulder-fired 57 mm
M18 and the tripod-mounted 75 mm
M20, later followed by the 105 mm M27: the latter proved unreliable, too heavy, and too hard to aim. Newer models replacing these were the 90 mm
M67 and 106 mm
M40 (which was actually 105 mm
caliber, but designated otherwise to prevent accidental issue of incompatible M27 ammunition). In addition, the
Davy Crockett, a muzzle-loaded recoilless launch system for tactical nuclear warheads intended to counteract Soviet tank units, was developed in the 1960s and deployed to American units in Germany. The Soviet Union adopted a series of crew-served smoothbore recoilless guns in the 1950s and 1960s, specifically the 73 mm
SPG-9, 82 mm
B-10 and 107 mm
B-11. All are found quite commonly around the world in the inventories of former Soviet client states, where they are usually used as anti-tank guns. M in the 1970s The British, whose efforts were led by
Charles Dennistoun Burney, inventor of the
Wallbuster HESH round, also developed recoilless designs. Burney demonstrated the technique with a recoilless 4-gauge
shotgun. His "Burney Gun" was developed to fire the Wallbuster shell against the
Atlantic Wall defences, but was not required in the D-Day landings of 1944. He went on to produce further designs, with two in particular created as anti-tank weapons. The
Ordnance, RCL, 3.45 in could be fired off a man's shoulder or from a light tripod, and fired an 11 lb (5 kg) wallbuster shell to 1,000 yards. The larger Ordnance RCL. 3.7in fired a 22.2 lb (10 kg) wallbuster to . Postwar work developed and deployed the BAT (Battalion, Anti Tank) series of recoilless rifles, culminating in the 120 mm
L6 WOMBAT. This was too large to be transported by infantry and was usually towed by jeep. The weapon was aimed via a spotting rifle, a modified
Bren Gun on the MOBAT and an American M8C spotting rifle on the WOMBAT: the latter fired a .50 BAT (12.7x77mm) point-detonating incendiary tracer round whose trajectory matched that of the main weapon. When tracer rounds hits were observed, the main gun was fired. During the late 1960s and early 1970s,
SACLOS wire-guided missiles began to supplant recoilless rifles in the anti-tank role. While recoilless rifles and their ammunition retain several advantages such as being cheaper and easier to produce and maintain, as well as being able to be employed at extremely close range, as a guided missile typically has a significant deadzone before it can arm and begin to seek its target, missile systems tend to be lighter and more accurate, and are better suited to deployment of hollow-charge warheads. The large crew-served recoilless rifle started to disappear from first-rate armed forces, except in areas such as the Arctic, where
thermal batteries used to provide after-launch power to wire-guided missiles like
M47 Dragon and
BGM-71 TOW would fail due to extremely low temperatures. The former
6th Light Infantry Division in Alaska used the M67 in its special weapons platoons, as did the Ranger Battalions and the US Army's Berlin Brigade. The last major use was the
M50 Ontos, which mounted six M40 rifles on a light () tracked chassis. They were largely used in an anti-personnel role firing "beehive"
flechette rounds. In 1970, the Ontos was removed from service and most were broken up. The M40, usually mounted on a jeep or
technical, is still very common in conflict zones throughout the world, where it is used as a hard-hitting strike weapon in support of infantry. Front-line recoilless weapons in the armies of modern industrialized nations are mostly man-portable devices such as the Carl Gustav, an 84 mm weapon. First introduced in 1948 and exported extensively since 1964, it is still in widespread use throughout the world today: a huge selection of special-purpose rounds are available for the system, and the current variant, known as the M4 or M3E1, is designed to be compatible with computerized optics and future "smart" ammunition. Many nations also use a weapon derived from the Carl Gustav, the one-shot
AT4, which was originally developed in 1984 to fulfil an urgent requirement for an effective replacement for the
M72 LAW after the failure of the
FGR-17 Viper program the previous year. The ubiquitous
RPG-7 is also technically a recoilless gun, since its rocket-powered projectile is launched using an explosive booster charge (even more so when firing the OG-7V anti-personnel round, which has no rocket motor), though it is usually not classified as one. ==Design==