fallsfromtrees wrote:USMA74 wrote:As requested.
Ammunition Basic Load for Infantry Division (from the 1959 edition of the U.S. Army FM 101-10, Staff Officer's Field Manual)
Figures reflect the U.S. Army's WWII and Korea experiences.
M1911A1 Pistol 31 rds (21 on Soldier, 7 on vehicle, 3 bulk load)
M-1 Rifle 200 rds (72 on Soldier, 96 on vehicle, 32 bulk load)
105mm Howitzer 200 rds (60 on vehicle, 140 bulk load)
155mm Howitzer 150 rds (24 on vehicle, 126 bulk load)
Estimated Ammunition Expenditures
Pistol, auto, cal .45 Defense (Day 1, 2 rds--then 1 rd/day) Attack (Day 1, 2 rds--then 1 rd/day)
Rifle, cal .30 Defense (Day 1, 25 rds--then 15 rds/day) Attack (Day 1, 20 rds--then 15 rds/day)
105mm Howitzer Defense (Day 1, 180 rds--Succeeding days, 110 rds) Attack (Permanent Fortifications) (Day 1, 150 rds--Succeeding days, 90 rds)
155mm Howitzer Defense (Day 1, 140 rds--Succeeding days, 85 rds) Attack (Permanent Fortifications) (Day 1, 120 rds--Succeeding days, 70 rds)
These expenditure rates reflect an average across the entire force to include echelon headquarters and sustainment units. Obviously the useage in front line infantry companies would be far higher.
Hope this is useful.
Magnificent
Yeah, great post and just the sort of thing Howsmyn would need to know how much ammo he needs to produce.
Don