Most modern trails are of the sectional built-up type. Some, however, are of tubular and telescopic. The most variable portion of the trail is the spade. It consists of two parts, the spade proper and the float. The former prevents recoil, the latter the burying of the trail. The spades proper are of three types: the fixed, as in the French 75-mm; semi-fixed, as in the 155-mm howitzer; and driven, as in the Deport and American 1916 75-mm. Each has advantages and disadvantages. The driven spade is considered essential for the split trail carriage, as the latter has no means of seating itself; and should one spade take, and not the other the carriage might be damaged when the gun is fired at an extreme traverse.
Split trails introduced a novelty in field gun carriages, in that a compensating device became necessary to adjust for the difference in ground level of the two spades.
CONCLUSION.
Guns are designed to function in a certain way. They are not temperamental. They follow absolutely and certainly fixed mechanical laws. If they fail there is a reason and it can be remedied. Certain parts are given certain shapes and forms, are machined to nice adjustments, and in taking down and assembling them, brains and dexterity are the tools to use rather than force and sledge-hammers. Learn from your text when and how to apply force and above all when not to use it. Treat these guns as you would a friend on whom you know you can depend. They will not fail you.
CHAPTER IV
MODERN ARMAMENT.
THE ARTILLERY OF A FIELD ARMY; ITS FUNCTIONS.
The artillery assigned to a field army should be of such mobility, power, variety and number as to insure the success of its purpose and to enable this success to be gained with the minimum of casualties. The latter point must receive careful consideration in studies of organization, for without adequate artillery preparation and support the successes of the most gallant infantry can in a series of actions become little more than pyrrhic victories. Many actions of our divisions in France resulted in casualties whose numbers decreased in proportion to the number of guns with which divisions were supported. The proportion of guns to the thousand gross strength of infantry, cavalry, and machine guns adopted by the armies of the first class powers before the opening of the present European War in 1914 was:
British, 6.8; French, 4.6; German, 6.4; American 3.2 (Greble Board).
During the war this proportion was constantly increased until at the close under conditions of position or entrenched warfare it was between 8 and 12 per thousand; this varied of course with the activity in different sectors. In quiet sectors and under conditions of maneuver, or open warfare, which necessitated leaving much artillery behind, it was about 6 per thousand.
A program of types of artillery weapons should be founded on the object and the means—that is, the destruction of the target and the projectile to accomplish this. In the study of an artillery program there are two methods of approaching the subject. First, by starting with a minimum weight of projectile and working up to a reasonable maximum, according to some law and taking the corresponding calibers, a theoretical series of guns and howitzers can be expressed. For instance, if the law be doubling the weight of the projectile the series of types could be: