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This,
the 24 cm Mörser M.98, can be seen as the big little sister of all the famous
Skoda Howitzers, the first in a line of very impressive and deadly pieces of
artillery. It can be seen as a sort of "missing link" in the
development of the heavy austro-hungarian artillery: it can be seen either as
the last of the older Siege Mortar (indeed, its original designation was Belagerungsmörser
M.1898) or as the first of the big Skoda Howitzers.

The
M.98 weighed some 9.3 tons in firing position. It was always transported in a
disassembled state. When moved, it was broken down into four packs, that each
was pulled either by horse or motor vehicles. (Some of the units that used
motorized transport was the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Heavy Field Artillery Regiments - Schwere
Feld Artillerie Regiment.)

The deployment of the gun was "comparatively
fast", to quote a contemporary Austrian source. The length of the barrel was 2180mm, it could be elevated
between +44 and +65 degrees. It had a traverse of 16 degrees. The Mörser could
shoot a 133kg heavy HE shell some 6.500 meters. The muzzle velocity was 278m/sec.
It needed a crew of 6 men, and could also be equipped with a shield for the crew.

At
the start of the Great War in August 1914, the Austro-Hungarian Army had 12 24cm
Mörser Batteries in Service (each Battery consisting of 4 guns), all in all
some 96 guns. (As was the case with the Austro-Hungarian Artillery in general,
there was problems regarding the supply of ammunition: only some 400 shells per
gun was available.) This number decreased as the war progressed. In January 1917
only some 30 M.98:s were in use, and a year later it had decreased even further,
to only 2 batteries (8 guns) were still active.
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