Sergeant
D. Wilson, Private J.
Brunelle, Private A. Munro,
all of Highland Light
Infantry battalion, on
Piat training, during
landing and advancing
inland exercise in England,
13 April 1944.
|
| Photo
by Donald I. Grant. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-132894. |
|
The PIAT was a simple, short-range
infantry anti-tank weapon made possible
by the development of hollow- or shaped-charge
projectiles. The PIAT round was
propelled by a huge spring and spigot
which ignited a cartridge within the
tail of the projectile. Heavy and
awkward to handle, it was difficult
to load and kicked violently when
fired. It was, nonetheless, very effective
given the right circumstances. On
21 October 1944, for example, Canadian
Private E.A. Smith of the Seaforth
Highlanders won the Victoria Cross
at the Savio River in Italy for an
action in which he used a PIAT to
destroy a Panther tank at a range
of 30 feet before fending off numerous
German infantry with a submachine
gun.
| Projector,
Infantry, Anti-Tank (PIAT) |
| Length |
99
cm |
| Weight |
14.5
kg |
| Muzzle
velocity |
100
m/sec |
| Penetration |
approximately
75 mm |
| Projectile |
1.3
kg, hollow charge, with stabilizer
fins |
| Range |
about
90 m |
|