The Type 1 47 mm anti-tank gun was accepted into service in 1942. The design originated as an improvement to the prototype “Experimental Type 97 (1937) 47 mm anti-tank gun” (
試製九七式四十七粍速射砲), which was tested between 1938 and 1939. The prototype weighed 567 kilograms and had a barrel length of 2,515 mm, a traverse range of ±50 degrees and an elevation range of between minus 10 and plus 20 degrees, and a muzzle velocity of 730 m/s. The prototype was not accepted into service because it was considered to not have sufficient performance. After the
Nomonhan Incident, the
Imperial Japanese Army started the development of a new anti-tank gun, considering that the
Type 94 37 mm anti-tank gun would likely be ineffective against the new
Soviet tanks. The design was the first completely indigenous anti-tank gun design completed in Japan, and production was assigned to the army's
Osaka Arsenal. In terms of performance, the design was still inferior to advanced contemporary designs in western nations, but was considered suitable by the
Imperial Japanese Army General Staff due to the anticipated lack of armor by the
National Revolutionary Army of the
Republic of China, and by the belief that Japan would face only
light tanks fielded by the
Allied nations in case of a more general war. Approximately 2,300 Type 1 47 mm AT guns were produced. ==Design==