That is a really nice color, Tim, but there sure are many more reasons to be impressed by the 7 Pdr. RML British Mountain Gun and the 10 Pdr. as well. Sometimes you simply needed a smaller, more mobile gun. Mike and I remember reading about a successful use of a screw gun in the WWI Galipole Campaign. Although this campaign was a disaster for the British over-all, there was an outstanding instance of having a perfect solution to a typical military problem and actually having the smarts to use it.
Landed at the wrong beach on the Turkish coast, the British amphibious assault stalled at the base of cliffs and very steeply sloped hills. The army commander needed to suppress Turkish fire from the plain above which was increasing continuously. A British gun crew tried mightily, but couldn't quite get their field gun up those nasty hills, so an Indian crewed Screw Gun was called forward. The crew hauled it up the cliff-side trail and dragged it by hand forward to a slight depression on the plain, undetected. Assembling the gun quickly and mounting it on it's carriage, they fired two quick rounds, accurately and turned the Turkish gun position into complete carnage!
Tracy & Mike