Advanced Gun System

Advanced Gun System

Test firing of Advanced Gun System
Place of origin United States
Production history
Designer United Defense (now BAE Systems Land & Armaments)
Designed 1996
Manufacturer BAE Systems Land & Armaments
Specifications
Weight 104 tons

Caliber 155mm (6.1 inch)
Elevation +70 / -5 degrees
Rate of fire 10 rounds per minute (rpm)
Effective firing range 83 nautical miles with Long Range Land Attack Projectile (LRLAP)

The Advanced Gun System is a naval gun system under development by BAE Systems Armaments Systems (formerly United Defense) for the Zumwalt-class destroyer of the United States Navy. Production has started; the first magazine was delivered to the U.S. Navy on 25 May 2010.[1]

Originally designed for mounting as a vertical gun, this 155 mm (6.1") caliber gun has since been slated for mounting within a more conventional turret arrangement. The AGS is designed to offer a weapon system capable of delivering precision munitions at a high rate of fire and at over-the-horizon ranges. As a vertical gun system it would only have been capable of firing guided munitions; the turret mounting will allow the use of unguided munitions as well.

History

There has been research on extending the range of naval gunfire for many years. Gerald Bull and Naval Ordnance Station Indian Head tested an 11 inch sub-caliber saboted long-range round[2] in a stretched 16"/45 Mark 6 battleship gun in 1967.[3] The Advanced Gun Weapon System Technology Program (AGWSTP) evaluated a similar projectile with longer range in the 1980s.[2] After the battleships were decommissioned in 1992, the AGWSTP became a 5-inch gun with an intended range of 180 kilometres (110 mi), which then led to the Vertical Gun for Advanced Ships (VGAS). The original DD-21 was designed around this "vertical gun", but the project ran into serious technology/cost problems and was radically scaled back to a more conventional 6.1 inch Advanced Gun System (AGS). One advantage of this move was that the gun was no longer restricted to guided munitions.

Description

The AGS uses the same 155 mm caliber as most American field artillery forces, although it is unable to fire the same ammunition. Instead, a new range of ammunition is under development for this weapon. The gun barrel is 62 calibers long, and is able to fire the entire magazine (300+ rounds) with an average rate of fire of ten rounds per minute using a water cooled barrel. The AGS is to be mounted in a turret specifically designed for the Zumwalt class destroyer with fully automated ammunition supply and operation. The turret itself is designed to be stealthy, allowing for the entire length of the barrel to be enclosed within the turret housing when not firing.

A primary advantage of the AGS over the existing Mark 45 5" gun which equips most major surface combatants of the US Navy is its increased capability for supporting ground forces and striking land targets. With a 10 round per minute capacity, it offers the ability to deliver firepower close to that of a battery of six 155 mm howitzers. This will increase the utility of vessels equipped with the weapon, especially in areas in which the US Navy exercises absolute sea supremacy.

Ammunition

The development of new ammunition for the AGS under the name Long Range Land Attack Projectile (LRLAP) is one of the major advances offered by the AGS program. The munitions are to be highly accurate, with a circular error probable (CEP) of 50 m (160 ft) or less. Lockheed-Martin conducted a flight test of the munition in July 2005, reporting a flight distance of 59 nautical miles (109 km; 68 mi).

The LRLAP ammunition features separate projectile and propellant portions. Total weight is 225 pounds (102 kg), including a bursting charge of 24 pounds (11 kg). The maximum length of the combined munition is 88 inches (220 cm), amounting to about 14 calibers.

See also

Notes and references

  1. "BAE Systems Delivers First Piece of Production Hardware for U.S. Navy's Advanced Gun System". BAE Systems. 2010. Retrieved 2013-02-04.
  2. 1 2 Van Dam, L. Bruce (1999-06-04). "Does the Past Have a Place in the Future? The Utility of Battleships into the Twenty-First Century" (PDF). Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: US Army Command and General Staff College., citing a letter from Major Tracy Ralphs to Senator John Warner on 1999-02-25
  3. "United States of America 16"/50 (40.6 cm) Mark 7". Tony DiGiulian, navweaps.com. 2008-08-09.

External links

Video links
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