L6 Wombat | |
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A Wombat at Imperial War Museum Duxford |
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Type | Recoilless antitank weapon |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Service history | |
Used by | Great Britain Australia |
Wars | Vietnam War |
Production history | |
Designed | 1950s |
Specifications | |
Weight | 308 kg (680 lb) |
Length | 3.86 m (12 ft 8 in) |
Barrel length | 33.33 calibres |
Height | 1.09 m (3 ft 7 in) |
Crew | 3 (DC) Detachment Commander (No.1) Spotter+main armement Unloader+ mainained the spotting Rifle, (No.2) Driver main armament loader and rear security+back blast observer |
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Shell | 12.8 kg (28 lb 4 oz) HESH |
Calibre | 120 mm (4.7 in) |
Elevation | -8 to +17° |
Traverse | 360° |
Rate of fire | 4 rounds per minute |
Muzzle velocity | 463 m/s (1,520 ft/s)[1] |
Effective range | 1,000 m (1,100 yd) |
Maximum range | 1,610 m (1,760 yd) |
Sights | Optical with spotting rifle |
The L6 Wombat, (Weapon Of Magnesium, Battalion, Anti-Tank) was a 120 mm calibre recoilless anti-tank rifle used by the British Army. They were used until anti-tank guided missiles such as Vigilant and MILAN took their place.
The Wombat replaced the earlier BAT and MoBAT weapons, themselves developments of the wartime designed "Ordnance, RCL, 3.45 in" recoilless rifle, and was in turn replaced by anti-tank guided missiles. The L6 Wombat itself comprised the L12A3 BAT gun, but mounted on a new lightweight carriage.[2] The vertically sliding breech of the BAT and MoBAT was replaced by a lighter horizontally hinged breech. The Wombat was mounted on a small two wheeled carriage which was removable in order to be moved over obstacles and then locked to the carriage again, the weapon was normally carried in the rear of a specially adapted Land Rover (Portee). The Wombat could also be mounted on the FV432/40 armoured personnel carrier.
The usual round for Wombat was a HESH which it could fire out to around 1,800 m. The HESH round could defeat 400 mm (16 in) of armour.[3] Other ammunition types include the canister and modified canister rounds. The latter releasing flechettes or small darts, in a "shotgun" effect. These rounds could be used against infantry in the open. The base of the BAT cartridge case was frangible, the reaction gases venting directly backwards through a single large venturi. This was in contrast to the US recoilless designs which used a frangible sidewall to the cartridge case and multiple venturis.
During the Cold War era, NATO and British Royal Marine forces used the Swedish made Snow Trac as a carrier for the L6 Wombat in the snow covered mountains of Norway.
External images | |
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BAT guns | |
BAT gun | |
MoBAT gun | |
ConBAT gun |