FH70

FH70 Field Howitzer

FH-70 Howitzer in North Cornwall Tank Museum Collection.
Type Howitzer
Place of origin European Union UK, Germany, Italy
Service history
In service 1978–present
Used by Germany, Italy, United Kingdom, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Morocco, Estonia, Norway, Netherlands, Oman, Malaysia
Production history
Manufacturer VSEL, Rheinmetall, OTO Melara, Japan Steel Works (Licensed production)
Specifications
Weight 7,800 - 9,600 kg
(17,196 - 21,164 lbs)
Length Travel: 9.8 m (32 ft 2 in)
Barrel length 6 m (19 ft 8 in) L/39
Width Travel: 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in)
Height Travel: 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in)
Crew 8

Caliber 155 mm (6.10 in)
Carriage Split trail, sole plate, auxiliary power unit and hydraulics
Elevation -5° to +70° or -100 to +1,250 mils
Traverse 56°or 500 mils left and right
Rate of fire Burst: 3 rounds in 15 seconds
Sustained: 3-6 rpm
Muzzle velocity 827 m/s (2,713 ft/s)
Effective firing range 24 - 30 km (15 - 18 mi)
depending on ammo[1]

The FH70 (field howitzer for the 1970s) is a towed howitzer in use with several nations.

History

In 1963, NATO agreed a NATO Basic Military Requirement 39 for close support artillery, either towed or tracked. Subsequently, Germany and UK started discussions and design studies and in 1968 established agreed operational characteristics for a towed 155 mm close support gun. Italy became a party to the agreement in 1970.

Key requirements were:

The two national authorities had overall responsibility for R&D, and Vickers Ltd was the co-ordinating design authority. They were also the design authority for the carriage and Rheinmetall GmbH was the authority for the elevating mass, including the sights, and for the APU. There was a further breakdown at a more detailed level and production worksharing. The UK Royal Armament Research and Development Establishment (RARDE) was responsible for designing the HE projectile and the charge system. Germany was responsible for Smoke, Illuminating, Minelet and extended range HE, although development of the last two was not completed in the program.

The intention was for FH70 to replace the M114 155 mm howitzer and equip general support battalions in German divisional artillery regiments and to equip three (two Territorial Army (TA)) British general support medium regiments replacing the 5.5-inch gun. In the event, it actually equipped UK regular regiments in direct support of infantry brigades until after the end of the Cold War, and only replaced the L118 light gun in two TA regiments, 100th (Yeomanry) Regiment Royal Artillery and 101st (Northumbrian) Regiment Royal Artillery (Volunteers) from 1992 to 1999.

Design

FH70 had several interesting features, including:

The barrel was 39 calibres long, giving 827 m/s standard maximum MV. It had a muzzle brake giving 32% efficiency.

Other conventional features included a split trail and turntable sole plate. Initially, it had assisted loading, but became an early user of flick-ramming. In accordance with long-standing UK practice, it used one-man laying. All this meant that the gun could be operated by a minimum detachment of only 4 men (commander, layer and 2 loaders). The burst fire rate was 3 rounds in 15 seconds. It was also fitted with a direct fire telescope.

There were a number of design flaws that became apparent in service. The equipment entered full operational service in the UK in 1980. It became clear that there were significant difficulties with the tube feed system in anything but ideal conditions. 1st Regiment RHA, a unit that had conducted the Troop trials, developed their own procedures to solve these problems, related to dust contamination, and this process became established in official manuals in due course. More significantly, the trails of the gun proved to be weak at the point where maximum stress was incurred when the equipment was towed; this resulted in modification work on the UK guns in 1987. There were continual problems with the drive train on the flat-4 VW APU, and the hydraulic system was always vulnerable to the obvious problems posed by external, non-armoured housing, in combat conditions. In addition, the complex dial sight carrier was vulnerable to damage.

Ammunition

The new projectiles conformed to the Quadrilateral Ballistics Agreement between US, UK, Germany and Italy. In essence, this meant a shell with the same shape and dimensions as the US M549 rocket-assisted projectile. The standard HE shell (UK designation L15) is a thin wall design weighing 43.5 kg and containing 11.3 kg of HE. This remains the largest HE load for a standard 155mm shell.

The propellant system comprises three different bagged cartridges with triple-base propellant. Cartridge 1 gives charges 1 & 2, Cartridge 2 give charges 3–7 and Cartridge 3 is charge 8, which gives a maximum range under standard conditions of 24.7 km.

Each nation developed its own fuzes and ammunition packaging. In the UK's case, this led to the Unit Load Container carrying 17 complete rounds, including shells with fuzes fitted - a novelty for 155 mm.

Standard US pattern 155 mm ammunition can also be fired, although US primers proved problematic for the primer magazine and feed due to their variation in size.

Operators

Operators of the Mod 56 (current in blue - former in red)

Current operators

Former operators

References

RB Pengelley FH70 - Europe's first multi-national artillery program International Defense Review Vol 6, No 2 April 1973

  1. The Encyclopedia of World Military Weapons 1988. ISBN 0-517-65341-9
  2. 155mm榴弾砲 FH-70. Retrieved on May 6, 2008. (Japanese)

External links

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