The Type 92 10 cm cannon was developed from 1923–1924, as a long-range alternative to the Imperial Japanese Army's existing 75 mm field artillery. Production was delayed due to technical issues, notably a desire by the army to reduce the weight of the weapon to a minimal level, and additional requirements issued by the army in 1927 to increase the range of the yet-to-be-completed weapon to . The French defense company Schneider aided with the design based on 1927 contracts with the Imperial Japanese Army. A suitable prototype was finally completed in 1932, and, after extensive testing, went into production and combat service in 1934. A total of between 180 and 202 units were produced. The Type 92 10 cm cannon appears to have almost completely replaced the
Type 14 10 cm cannon. It has all the standard features of the 1930–1936 period of Japanese gun design. In traveling position the tube is retracted by means of a winch and locked to the cradle. The most remarkable fact about the Type 92, aside from its appearance, is the great range that it attains with a 35-pound shell in proportion to its unusually low weight. It has been reported in US documentation that the weapon was rarely fired at extreme ranges, which required the use of a supercharge, because of malfunctions in the recoil system caused thereby. Weaknesses in the sealing of the recoil system were largely fixed during the period of 1939 to 1940. The Type 92 10 cm cannon also had problems with weak trails when the cannon was fired near the limits of its traverse, leading to a number of broken trails during the Battle of Nomonhan. Broken trails were also reported in 1942 during the Battle of Guadalcanal. Late production models fixed this problem. ==Design==