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By May 1916 the British Army decided to standardise its mortars into three types: the 3-inch Stokes ("Light"), the 2-inch Medium and the 9.45-inch Heavy ("Flying Pig"). In 1917 the 2-inch Medium was replaced by the 6-inch Newton Mortar.
The 6-inch Newton was a pretty
simple mortar, mounted upon a wooden base held together by an angle iron frame.
It had no bipod but was supported by three adjustable guys, one for elevation,
the other two for traverse. It was dug in, with the bed often weighted with
sandbags and/or secured with pickets to ensure its steadiness when fired.
A combination clinometer
designed to cater for both elevation and line sighting was clamped around the
barrel, round which was engraved a direction scale in degrees marked LEFT and
RIGHT of a zero point. To lay for line the clinometer was turned on the barrel
until the index coincided with the direction required, i.e. right or left of the
zero line. The transverse bubble of the clinometer was then levelled by
manipulating the traversing guys. To lay for elevation the clinometer was set to
the amount required, and the bubble levelled by adjusting the elevation guy.
The Newton mortar here can be seen in the War Museum in Rovereto, Italy, one of the worlds finest WW1-museums:
How to model this Mortar
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