Designed with the acceptance that light, highly-mobile artillery is a requirement on the modern battlefield, the 3E1 "Pansi", better known among our troops as the
"Taflwr Toesen" was developed to provide direct and indirect artillery support on a company-level basis in a package that can go almost anywhere our troops go.
The weapon is a smoothbore 80mm low-velocity gun firing finned bombs, with a split trail, pneumatic tires for ease of towing, a hydro-pneumatic recoil mechanism, an optional automatic action, and loading via either three round clips of ammunition fed in from the left hand side of the weapon or single bombs loaded via dropping down the muzzle(a feature primarily intended for single specialty rounds prior to carpeting an area with high-explosive or shrapnel).
The bombs used in the weapon are (as earlier noted) finned. Unlike most artillery designs of this time, they are not quick-fire ammunition, but instead have their propellant(compressed black powder, as used in our last generation of smallarms ammunition) contained within rings or
'toesen' attached prior to loading. Several of these toesen may be attached to a single bomb to improve their range, with a maximum indirect fire range of some 4200m, a direct fire range of 1000m, and a maximum velocity at the muzzle of 255m/s.
Several types of bombs are developed for this weapon, from the standard 8M1 high-explosive round, through the 8M3 shrapnel round and 8M4 smoke round, to the 8M5 parachute flare. Fuses for the 8M1 are either simple timed devices set prior to firing or base-mounted contact fuzes, while the 8M3 uses only the timed fuze. There has been talk also of an 8M2 solid shot, deemed in the design phase to not be worthwhile at this time due to the low muzzle velocity of the weapon.