1916–1918 According to the contemporary French Army instruction manual, there were two main modes of use of the V-B grenades. "Attrition fire" and "saturation fire". In the first case, it was a question of aiming at either
communications trenches or junctions in the enemy's trench network. One of the examples cited proposed to aim at those communications trenches used by the enemy for lines of resupply, or even the location of the latrines if they could be located. In the second case, during an assault, it was necessary to saturate an area, in the manner of what the artillery could do. For example, to neutralize machine gun nests; Or, in the defensive, to fire on those communication trenches by which the enemy reinforcements may come. The US Army also adopted this weapon and implemented it from July 1917. Initially, with material supplied by France; in a second stage, producing their own dischargers and grenades and adapting them to their
M1917 Enfield and
M1903 Springfield rifles. The "message" grenade was not used by the Americans.
After the end of the First World War The V-B rifle continued to be part of the inventory of the French infantryman at the beginning of the Second World War. The US VB grenade was used at the
Battle of Guadalcanal. After the conflict, the cup discharger concept was gradually abandoned by the army as a means of launching grenades. But it was still in use with the
French Gendarmerie until the 1990s to launch tear gas grenades. ==See also==