75mm pack howitzer M1A1 Low-poly 3D model
Home Catalog 75mm pack howitzer M1A1 Low-poly 3D model

Publication date: 2025-05-20

75mm pack howitzer M1A1 Low-poly 3D model

$60

License: royalty_free

author:

OK3D

All content related to this 3D asset—including renders, descriptions, and metadata — is credited to its original author, «OK3D». CGhub does not claim copyright ownership over the content used.
  • Description

75mm pack howitzer M1A1

ZIP file contain Blendfile, Texture folder , FBX , Obj mtl

Centered (in right place) and Seperated parts

Blender 4.0.0

Textured with substance painter (Basecolor , AO , Metalness , Roughness , Normal )

1 Set of material and Texture set

5 Seperated Objects

4k Texture PNG

Pictures rendered in Cycles engine

Vertices:15,662

Faces:19,009

Tris: 30,186

Description:The 75mm pack howitzer M1 (redesignated the M116 in 1962) was a pack howitzer artillery piece used by the United States. Designed to be moved across difficult terrain, gun and carriage could be broken down into several pieces to be carried by pack animals.The gun saw combat in World War II with the United States Army (primarily used by airborne units), with the United States Marine Corps, and was also supplied to foreign forces.In addition to the pack / air portable configuration, the gun was mounted on a conventional carriage to serve as a field artillery piece. The M2 and M3 are derived vehicle-mounted howitzers used in the 75 mm HMC M8 and some LVT models. In addition, the M1 in its original version was mated to a number of other self-propelled carriages, though only one of those – 75 mm HMC T30 – reached mass production.The 75 mm pack howitzer was designed in the United States in the 1920s to meet a need for an artillery piece that could be moved across difficult terrain. Development began in 1920, and in August 1927, the weapon was standardized as howitzer, pack, 75mm M1 on carriage M1. Due to meager funding, production rates were very low; by 1933, only 32 guns had been manufactured, and by 1940, only 91 pieces. It was not until September 1940 that the howitzer was put into mass production. By then, the M1 had been succeeded by the slightly modified M1A1. Production continued until December 1944.

3D Model details

  • cgtrader Platform
  • Animated
  • Rigged
  • Ready for 3D Printing
  • VR / AR / Low-poly
  • PBR
  • Textures
  • Materials
  • UV Mapping
  • Unwrapped UVs: non_overlapping
  • Geometry: Polygon mesh
  • Polygons: 19009
  • Vertices: 15662
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