New artillery article - Austro-Hungarian 15cm Haubitze M94/4 & M99/4. Not very successful howitzer using a Bronze barrel in an era when Steel barrels were the norm.
It was all the K.u.K had at the start of WW1 and was used until it was replaced by more modern Skoda howitzers.
New artillery article - 203mm M1887 Mortar. Derived from the massive M1877 Coastal Mortar this was lightened (the barrel was less than a third of the weight
of the old mortar) and used as a Siege and Fortress Gun. It had the same carriage as the 203mm M1892 Siege Gun.
New artillery article - Austro-Hungarian 10cm Feldhaubitze M.99. The Austrians tried to follow other armies using light howitzers alongside field guns to
give better ground coverage. But the limitations of Austrian industry produced a howitzer which was obsolete on delivery. Without any alternative the
M.99 howitzers were used early in WW1 although they were outranged by the equivalent Russian howitzers. Eventually they were replaced by the 10cm Skoda M14 light howitzer.
New article on the German halftrack the Marienwagen II.
Found some Russian articles on the Marienwagen and since we didn't have an article on the Marienwagen II fixed that deficiency and it gave me a break from artillery
The story has a few twists but it really was too late in the war to have any impact.
New artillery article on the Russian 107mm (42-line) M1877 Fortress & Siege Gun. This was an 1880 Krupp design built by the Russians, some 2700 were made.
The Germans captured many of these in 1915 and equiped 22 batteries of the Landswehr with these guns.