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20 mm Polsten
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The Polsten was a Polish development of the 20 mm Oerlikon gun. The Polsten was designed to be simpler and much cheaper to build than the Oerlikon, without reducing effectiveness.
Key Information
Development
[edit]When Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939, the Polish design team evacuated to the UK and resumed work together with British designers. The need for the Polsten was apparently mooted in June 1941. It went into service in March 1944 alongside the Oerlikon. Both the Oerlikon and the Polsten used similar 60 round drum magazines, although the Polsten could also use a simpler box magazine with 30 rounds. It remained in service into the 1950s.
Use
[edit]Compared to the Oerlikon's 250 parts, the Polsten had only 119, but it matched the Oerlikon's effectiveness and reliability. The simpler design of the Polsten cannon made its production much cheaper. The cost of one Oerlikon cannon was about £350, while the cost of the Polsten was between £60 and £70. In January 1944, the 21st Army Group decided that only 20 mm Polsten guns would be used as a standard light anti-aircraft gun in place of the Oerlikon to simplify supply. It was used by the anti-aircraft platoons of some British infantry battalions during the Western European campaign of 1944-45. It equipped airborne units in the anti-aircraft role, and was employed in Operation Market Garden. The gun was placed on a wheeled mounting that could be towed behind a jeep.
The Polsten gun was used on armoured vehicles equipped with anti-aircraft guns that were based on the Cromwell/Centaur tank and for the Skink anti-aircraft tank.
The Polsten was also mounted on British LVTs and on early models of the Centurion tank, not coaxially with the main gun but in an independent mount on the left hand side of the turret. Various double, triple and quadruple mounts were developed. John Inglis Limited of Toronto, Ontario, in Canada produced many thousands of guns and some 500 quadruple mountings that saw limited service at the end of the war. These multiple mounts were both trailered and truck-mounted. Polsten Guns, magazines and ammunition boxes were also made in Australia by Holden's Woodville and Beverley plants during World War II. They were used by the Australian Army onshore and on small boats. Several prototype gun mountings were also developed but did not see service.
Users
[edit]
Israel − 180 in 1973[1]
United Kingdom[2]
See also
[edit]- List of autocannon
- List of API blowback firearms
- Becker Type M2 20 mm cannon
- Polski Sten, the actual Polish derivate of the Sten gun
- Type 99 cannon
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Kreis 1988, p. 333.
- ^ Axelrod 2007, p. 59.
Bibliography
[edit]- Axelrod, Alan (2007). "Antiaircraft weapons". In Kingston, Jack A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of World War II. Vol. 1. New York, NY: Facts on File, Inc. pp. 57−60. ISBN 978-0-8160-6022-1 – via Google Books.
- Kreis, John F. (1988). Air warfare and air base air defense, 1914−1973. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Publishing Office. ISBN 0-912799-55-2. Retrieved 30 October 2025.
- Postan, M. M.; Hay, D.; Scott, J. D. (1964). Hancock, K. (ed.). Design and Development of Weapons: Studies in Government and Industrial Organisation. History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Civil Series. London: HMSO & Longmans, Green & Co. ISBN 978-0-11630-089-8.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
External links
[edit]20 mm Polsten
View on GrokipediaDesign and development
Origins in Poland
The development of the 20 mm Polsten anti-aircraft gun originated in Poland in the late 1930s, where a team of Polish engineers began work on a simplified version of the Oerlikon 20 mm cannon to address the need for a low-cost, easily producible weapon amid rising tensions in Europe.[6] The design effort started in 1939, drawing inspiration from the Oerlikon as a baseline while incorporating elements of earlier Becker-type mechanisms for its blowback operation.[5] Pre-war testing in Poland focused on validating these mechanisms to ensure reliability under mass-production conditions.[6] Key innovations during this initial phase included a drastic reduction in component count from the Oerlikon's approximately 250 parts to just 119, achieved by eliminating intricate recoil systems and employing stamped metal fabrication for greater simplicity and speed in manufacturing.[2] This approach prioritized conceptual efficiency over the Oerlikon's more elaborate engineering, allowing for potential clandestine production even under constrained resources.[5] The prototype was completed in 1939 shortly before the German invasion, and the designs were smuggled out by the Polish engineers who evacuated to the United Kingdom. These early efforts laid the foundational blueprint for the weapon, which was later refined abroad.[6][5]Refinement in the United Kingdom
Following the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, the Polish design team responsible for the initial Polsten concept evacuated to the United Kingdom, where they continued development in collaboration with British engineers.[5] By 1940-1941, this exiled team had partnered with the Royal Ordnance Factory at Enfield to prototype the weapon, focusing on adapting it for British production needs. The name "Polsten" is a portmanteau of "Pol" (Poland), "Sten" (after designers Shepard and Turpin), and "En" (Enfield).[5] The refinements emphasized simplification of the Oerlikon-inspired design, incorporating an advanced blowback operation with a fixed barrel and lighter recoil springs to enhance reliability and ease of manufacture.[5] These changes reduced the number of components from approximately 250 in the Oerlikon to 119, while maintaining compatibility with the 20×110 mm ammunition.[5] Trials conducted between 1942 and 1943 at British testing grounds demonstrated the Polsten's superior reliability under field conditions compared to its predecessor.[5] The first full prototypes were tested in March 1943, confirming the design's viability for anti-aircraft roles.[5] A cost analysis at the time revealed the Polsten could be produced for £60-£70 per unit, a fraction of the Oerlikon's £350, making it attractive for mass adoption.[2] In January 1944, the 21st Army Group standardized the Polsten as the primary 20 mm anti-aircraft gun, mandating its replacement of Oerlikon models to streamline logistics and reduce supply chain complexities across Allied forces.[2] This decision marked the culmination of the Polish-British engineering efforts, transitioning the weapon from prototype to operational standard.[2]Production and manufacturing
The 20 mm Polsten gun entered production in the United Kingdom in late 1943, with initial output reaching 240 units by the end of that year, primarily through simplified construction methods that reduced the number of components from 250 in the Oerlikon design to 119, enabling fewer machining operations and the use of cheaper materials.[3][2] This design refinement allowed for rapid mass production without requiring specialized tooling, cutting costs to approximately £60–£70 per gun compared to £320–£350 for the Oerlikon.[3][2] In 1944, British production scaled significantly to 13,588 guns, alongside 1,169 universal mountings and 1,187 traveling platforms, with additional contributions from the Eastern Group totaling 470 guns.[7] Concurrently, primary manufacturing began in Canada under John Inglis Limited of Toronto, Ontario, starting in 1943 with one prototype gun and 243 universal mountings, expanding to 7,051 guns and 9,497 mountings by the end of 1944, yielding over 7,000 units overall from this facility by war's end.[7][1] Secondary production occurred in Australia from 1944 at General Motors-Holden's Woodville and Beverley plants, which assembled 988 guns along with magazines and ammunition boxes to support local Commonwealth forces.[7][2] The first deliveries of completed Polsten guns to British forces occurred in March 1944, facilitating their integration into anti-aircraft defenses across multiple theaters.[5] Overall wartime output across the UK, Canada, and Australia is estimated at 21,000–22,000 units, including variants and mountings, though exact totals vary by source due to classified records.[7]| Year | UK Guns | Canadian Guns | Australian Guns | Total Guns |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1943 | 240 | 1 | - | 241 |
| 1944 | 13,588 | 7,051 | 988 | 21,627 |
| Total | 13,828 | 7,052 | 988 | 21,868 |