Thanas wrote:The soviets also used a larger mortar than other nations - apparently for allowing it to use captured ammo, but not vice versa.
Yeah 82mm instead of 81mm. For a while in the early part of the Cold War it was suggested the US Army should convert to 82mm too; this was within reason because we had already fired off most of our existing 81mm stockpile in Korea and yet could not use lots of captured communist ammo we picked up in the conflict. Didn't happen because the US Army had no funding for anything that was not nuclear in the 1950s.
Could German 77mm fire 76.2 and 75mm ammo or did this only apply to mortars?
With smooth bore mortars firing bagged charge ammo you could get away with firing 81mm out of 82mm. Rifled artillery firing with metal cartridge casings is not so forgiving. It might be possible to fit a larger driving band on a 76.2mm or 75mm shell to allow it to fire from a crimped 77mm shell casing out of a 77mm gun, but it would be more trouble then it was worth. Instead what the Germans would do is fire off the captured 76.2mm or 75mm ammo until it was gone, then send the gun to a factory to be bored out to the larger caliber so it could use German 77mm ammo. This was damn useful since gun barrels are expensive and might only last 5,000 rounds or so. You could use up that lifespan in WW1 in a few months of fighting; though 77mm was first adapted back in the late 1870s IIRC when modern artillery really started taking shape.
Back in the days of blackpowder smoothbore cannons though it was very common to fire ammunition that didn't fit right, you would just wrap more layers of cloth around the cannon ball until it was snug in the barrel. Of course they would also just ram stones and anything else they had on hand down the barrel if ammo supplies ran low.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956