akdavis wrote: ↑15 Oct 2021 01:38
Brady wrote: ↑13 Oct 2021 15:15
They have Just rifles No grenade launcher ?
Gary can correct me, but the original documents these tables are based on are, with a few exceptions, silent on the allocation of grenade launchers for rifles, i.e. no specific distinction is made between a Kar98k with a grenade launcher and one without (presumably because it is equipment that could be used on any rifle). The exceptions are when the "role" of the soldier as a grenadier is carved because of a structural distinction in the unit's org, e.g. the dedicated "Schützen für Gewehrgranatgerät" called for on paper in the Volksgrenadier platoon HQ, (but still their weapon in the TO&E tables is listed as a standard rifle).
Yes, grenade launchers are somewhat 'invisible' items on German KStN, and also on US T/Os. For German Army research you ideally need the KAN that accompanies the KStN, and shows all manner of interesting items, including signals equipment (both wireless and line), basic ammunition and munition allowances, and latterly rifle grenade launchers. There are a few Divisional summaries in the
www.sturmpanzer.net files that show grenade launchers for the Type44 and Type45 Divisions. These just give a total for the relevant KStN and don't give an allocation with the unit involved; for that you need the KAN, which will say along the lines of 'one per Gruppe and one for HQ' for example. There was a thread on KAN a while back (I think), but sadly there are not many left it seems. The Volks Grenadier Regiment KAN are on germandocsinrussia.
https://wwii.germandocsinrussia.org/de/ ... rid/zoom/1
Similar applies to the US Army and USMC. You can spot the users of rifles grenade launchers on the 1942 T/Os, because they are armed with M1903 rifles (and this is what gave rise to the idea of a 'sniper' with a Springfield in every US Rifle Squad). Once the M7 (for the M1 rifle) and the M8 (for the M1 carbine) appear, they are only shown under the Equipment portion of the Table of Organization and Equipment documentation. These were issued as two separate items initially before being combined during 1943 to create the now universally referred to TO&E

.
The Equipment pages also show the other good stuff, like radio and line equipment, but not ammunition. While the Organization section of a T/O & E might only run to four or five pages, the Equipment section can be a dozen more pages long, especially for an Ordnance or Signal unit that had a lot of special kit authorised. When you're ordering this stuff at $0.50 a page, plus research costs if you're dealing with an archive, that adds up, so it can cost a bit to find out how many M7 and M8 launchers an Ordnance Light Maintenance Company was allowed! As a result I only have a few TEs to go with the TOs that interested me.
The USMC is even more opaque, in that their TEs look to have been mostly destroyed after the war. The TE for the May 1945 Rifle Company gives figures for M7 and M8 launchers (19 and 25 respectively) but no suggested distribution, and these figures don't match with the personnel identified in the manual on the handling of the Marine Rifle Squad. Apparently there are additional allowances specified in "OSB No. B-21-1" for the M7 and "OSB No. B-28-1" for the M8. I can't remember what OSB meant now, but I'm pretty sure that the relevant file isn't handy anywhere...
Gary