M102 Howitzer Parts

End item NSN parts page 1 of 3
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
019-27 Expansion Plug
000541410
0203 Annular Ball Bearing
001567513
0910010 Expansion Plug
000541410
0910010-8 Expansion Plug
000541410
1015006990633 Artillery Cleaning Staff Section
006990633
10547916 Mounted Optical Instrument Prism
009909532
10549868 Fire Control Instrument Cover
000840280
10553988 Telescope Mount
000122968
10556144 Base Plate
010982233
105C3614-1 Annular Ball Bearing
001567513
105C3614-1A Annular Ball Bearing
001567513
10855 Plain Tapered Pin
001873218
112-5-22 Tapered Roller Bearing
001005993
117-1CLPC27 Annular Ball Bearing
001567513
117-1PC27 Annular Ball Bearing
001567513
117-1TPC27 Annular Ball Bearing
001567513
11729019 Fuze Setter
002013507
117AC Annular Ball Bearing
001567513
12000672-8 Jig Drill Bushing
011297044
12000683 Trunnion Align Adaption Kit Case
003044366
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Howitzer, M102

Picture of M102 Howitzer

The M102 was a light-towed 105 mm howitzer used by the United States Army in the Vietnam War, the First Gulf War, and the Iraq War.

The M102 105 mm howitzer is used in air mobile (helicopter), attack plane, and light infantry operations. The weapon carriage is lightweight welded aluminum, mounted on a variable recoil mechanism. The weapon is manually loaded and positioned, and can be towed by a 2-ton truck or High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV), can be transported by UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters, or can be dropped by parachute with airborne units. When emplaced, the howitzer's high volume of fire compensates in large measure for the lower explosive weight of the projectile compared to the Army's 155 mm and 8-inch howitzers. Since 1964, the Army acquired 1,150 M102 towed howitzers. The weapon is being replaced by the M119-series 105 mm howitzer.

Units were initially equipped with the M101A1 howitzer, virtually the same 105 mm howitzer that had been used to support U.S. forces since World War II. In 1966 a new 105 mm towed howitzer, the M102, was received in Vietnam. The first M102s were issued to the 1st Battalion, 21st Field Artillery, in March 1966. Replacement of the old howitzers continued steadily over the next four years.

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