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AT4

The AT4[a] is a Swedish 84 mm (3.31 in) unguided, man-portable, disposable, shoulder-fired recoilless anti-tank weapon built by Saab Bofors Dynamics (previously Bofors Anti-Armour Systems and before that FFV Ordance).[5][unreliable source?] The AT4 is not considered a rocket launcher as the explosive warhead is not propelled by a rocket motor; similarly, it is not exactly a recoilless rifle, but rather a recoilless gun, as the launcher is smoothbore and not rifled.[6] Saab has had considerable sales success with the AT4, making it one of the most common light anti-tank weapons in the world.[citation needed] The M136 AT4 is a variant used by the United States Army.

AT4
A US Marine aiming a M136E1 AT4 in 2014
TypeDisposable anti-tank launcher
Place of originSweden
Service history
In service1987–present
Used bySee Operators
WarsSee Wars
Production history
DesignerFörenade Fabriksverken
ManufacturerSaab Bofors Dynamics
Unit costUS$1,480[1]
No. built600,000+[2]
VariantsSee Variants
Specifications
Mass6.7 kg (14.8 lb) (AT4)[3]
8 kg (18 lb) (AT4-CS)
Length102 cm (40 in)[3]

Caliber84 mm
Muzzle velocity290 m/s (950 ft/s; 1,000 km/h), 220 m/s (720 ft/s; 790 km/h) (CS)[4]
Effective firing range300 m (point target)[3]
Maximum firing range500 m (area target)
2,100 m (maximum)
SightsIron sights, optional AN/PVS-4 night vision unit
FillingOctol
Filling weight440 g HEAT (High Explosive Anti-Tank round)
External images
Prototype AT4 Sweden tested 1981/82
Early AT4 with Swedish Soldier
Early AT4 launcher and projectile

The name AT4 is a word play on the 84 mm caliber of the weapon, (84) 'eighty four' being a homophone of 'A-T-4'.[7] The name also doubles as an alpha-phonetic word play on the weapon's role due to "AT" being a common military abbreviation for "Anti-Tank".[8] The name was created for export purposes as the nickname "eighty-four" already was a common English nickname for the Carl Gustaf 8.4cm recoilless rifle after its caliber.[7]

The AT4 is intended to give infantry units a means to destroy or disable armoured vehicles and fortifications, although it is generally ineffective against current modern main battle tanks (MBTs), especially those with reactive armour, unless weaker sections of the tank's armour are exploited. The launcher and projectile are manufactured prepacked and issued as a single unit of ammunition, with the launcher discarded after a single use.

Development

The AT4 is a development of the 74-mm Pansarskott m/68[9] (Miniman), adopted by the Swedish Army in the late 1960s. Like the m/68, the AT4 was designed by Förenade Fabriksverken (FFV) and manufactured at their facility at Zakrisdal, Karlstad, Sweden.[5] FFV began research in a replacement for the m/68 in 1976, deliberately designing an individual anti-armour weapon that would not be able to defeat the heavy armour protection of MBTs (main battle tanks) in frontal engagements, believing that to be counterproductive. The AT4 was designed as a weapon to engage medium to light armoured vehicles from any direction, MBTs from the sides or rear, and as an assault weapon against buildings and fortifications. FFV also had the design goal of a weapon that was simple to use, rugged, and far more accurate than previous individual antiarmour weapons against moving targets. Another key requirement was that the AT4 not only be able to penetrate armour, but also have a devastating beyond-armour effect after penetration. FFV and the Swedish Army began the first evaluation firings of the prototype AT4s in the spring of 1981 with 100 tested by early 1982.[10]

Even before the AT4 had been adopted by Sweden, it was entered into a US Army competition for a new anti-tank weapon mandated by Congress in 1982 when the FGR-17 Viper failed as a replacement for the M72 LAW. Six weapons were tested in 1983 by the US Army: the British LAW 80, the German Armbrust, the French APILAS, the Norwegian M72E4 (an upgraded M72 LAW), the US Viper (for baseline comparison purposes) and the Swedish AT4. The US Army reported to Congress in November 1983 that the FFV AT4 came the closest to meeting all the major requirements established to replace the M72 LAW,[11] with the Armbrust coming in second.[12]

Though very impressed with the simplicity and durability of the tested version of the AT4, the US Army saw some room for improvement, specifically the addition of rear and front bumpers on the launch tube and changes to the sights and slings. After these changes, the AT4 was adopted by the US Army as the Lightweight Multipurpose Weapon M136.[13] The Swedish Army also recognized these improvements and subsequently adopted the Americanized version of the AT4 as the Pansarskott m/86 (Pskott m/86), with the addition of a forward folding hand grip to help steady the AT4 when being aimed and fired. The forward folding grip is the only difference between the AT4 adopted by Sweden and the US Army version.

Due to the urban combat conditions that US military forces faced regularly during the Iraq War, the US Army Close Combat Systems manager in charge of purchases of the AT4 suspended orders for the standard version of the AT4 and US military forces are now only ordering the AT4 CS (Confined Space) version.[14]

Operation

 
Seconds after firing an AT4 in combat in Iraq

The AT4 may be considered a disposable, low-cost alternative to a Carl Gustaf 8.4cm recoilless rifle. The AT4 took many of its design features from the Carl Gustaf, which operates on the principle of a recoilless weapon, where the forward inertia of the projectile is balanced by the inertia of propellant gases ejecting from the rear of the barrel. But unlike the Carl Gustaf, which uses a heavier and more expensive steel tube with rifling,[15] the disposable AT4 design greatly reduces manufacturing costs by using a reinforced smoothbore fiberglass outer tube. Being a disposable gun also allows for lighter and cheaper construction. In a single-use disposable gun, the barrel only needs to be able to contain a single pressure spike when firing, when it can be disposed of, even if it is ruined, burnt-out and strained, unlike traditional guns which are required to survive many pressure spikes without failure and thus need to be strongly overbuilt and made of heat-proof materials. Pressures are also kept quite low compared to many traditional guns. This lightweight and thin barrel and low pressure, combined with the almost complete lack of recoil, means that relatively large projectiles (comparable to those found in mortars and artillery systems) can be utilised, which would otherwise be impossible in a man-portable weapon.

In the system originally developed by FFV for the Carl Gustaf, a plastic blowout plug is placed at the centre rear of the shell casing containing the projectile and propellant, which itself is enclosed in the AT4 outer tube. When the gases build up to the correct pressure level, the blowout plug disintegrates, allowing the proper amount of gases to be vented to the rear, balancing the propellant gases pushing the projectile forward.

The AT4 uses a unique method developed earlier by FFV and adopted for the AT4: the spring-loaded firing rod is located down the side of the outer tube, with the firing pin at the rear of the tube. When released, the firing pin strikes a primer located in the side of the casing's rim.

 
Firing the AT4-CS (2020)
 
Firing the M136 AT4 (2007)

The disadvantage of the recoilless design is that it creates a large back blast area behind the weapon, which can cause severe burns and overpressure injuries to friendly personnel in the vicinity of the user and sometimes even to the users themselves, especially in confined spaces. The back blast may also reveal the user's position to the enemy. The problem of back blast was solved with the AT4-CS (Confined Space) version, specially designed for urban warfare. This version uses a saltwater countermass in the rear of the launcher to absorb the back blast; the resulting spray captures and dramatically slows down the pressure wave, allowing troops to fire from enclosed areas. The AT4-CS version also reduced its muzzle velocity from the original 290 m/s to 220 m/s as part of its effort to be user-safe in a confined space, making the AT4-CS version more difficult to use as the drop is more pronounced. The effectiveness of the HEAT warhead is not dependent on speed.[citation needed]

To fire, the gunner first removes the safety pin located at the rear of the tube, which unblocks the firing rod. He then takes a firing position ensuring that no one is present in the back blast area. If firing from the prone position, he must also place his legs well to the side to avoid burning himself. Then the gunner moves back the front and rear sight covers, allowing the sights to pop up into their firing positions. The AT4 has iron sights that were originally developed for the cancelled Viper, and are similar in concept and use to those on assault rifles.[16] He then removes the first of two safeties by moving the firing rod cocking lever (located on the left side) forward and then over the top to the right side. The gunner takes aim, while at the same time holding down the red safety lever located in front of the cocking lever, and then fires by pressing forward the red firing button with his right thumb. Both the red safety lever and the firing button must be pressed down at the same time to fire the AT4. The red firing button has a similar resistance to the trigger pull of a rifle, so the gunner does not have to jab at the firing button, which could throw his aim off.

 
The AT4 is man-portable, as demonstrated by this French soldier carrying a FAMAS and an AT4.

After firing, the AT4 is discarded. Unlike the heavier Carl Gustaf, the AT4 outer tube is built to take the stress of just one firing; it is not reusable and cannot be reloaded.

The AT4 can mount an optical night sight on a removable fixture. In US military use, the launcher can be fitted with the AN/PAQ-4C, AN/PEQ-2, or the AN/PAS-13 night sights.

The AT4 requires little training and is quite simple to use, making it suitable for general issue. However, as the cost of each launcher makes regular live-fire training very expensive, practice versions exist that are identical in operation but fire reloadable 9×19mm or 20mm tracer ammunition. Both practice cartridges are unique to their respective weapons, with their trajectory matched to that of the live round. The 20mm version also has a recoilless weapon effect with the same high noise and back blast as the AT4 firing and is favoured by the Swedish army because of the added realism of the back blast as compared to the "plonk" sound of the 9mm round (similar to the sound of a finger tapping on an empty can).

External images
AT4 version adopted by US as M136
  AT4 launcher shown with ammunition and HEAT projectile
  AT4 cutaway illustration showing ammunition installed
  AT4 front sight extended
  AT4 rear sight extended
  AT4 cock safety, press finger safety, and thumb firing button

Specifications

Projectiles

There are several different projectiles for the AT4. Note that because the AT4 is a one-shot weapon, projectiles are preloaded into the launcher tubes.[5]

 
AT4 launcher and projectile.
HEAT (High Explosive Anti-Tank)
The HEAT projectile can penetrate up to 450 mm (17.5 inches) of RHA with beyond-armour effect.[17]
HEDP 502 (High Explosive Dual Purpose)[5][18]
For use against bunkers, buildings, enemy personnel in the open and light armour. The projectile can be set to detonate on impact or with a slightly delayed detonation. The heavier nose cap allows for the HEDP projectile to either penetrate light walls or windows and then explode, or be "skipped" off the ground for an airburst. For use against light armour, there is a smaller cone HEAT warhead with 150 mm (5.9 inches) of penetration against RHA.
HP (High Penetration)
Extra high penetration ability (up to 420 mm to 600 mm (19.7 inches to 23.6 inches) of RHA.)[19]
AST (Anti Structure Tandem-warheads)
Designed for urban warfare where a projectile heavier than the HEDP AT4 is needed. This projectile combines a HEAT warhead with a shallow cone, which results in low penetration but produces a wide hole, with a follow-through high-blast warhead. It has two settings: one for destroying bunkers and one for mouse-holing a building wall for combat entry.[20]
 
Complete AT4 HEAT antitank round (which is preloaded in AT4) and AT8 bunker-busting warhead.
 
HEDP 502 projectile for the LMAW.
ER (Extended Range)
Anti-armor version with HEAT warhead that extends range from 300 m to 600 m, while also increasing penetration up to 460mm of RHA. These major improvement only adds around 2 kilograms of weight, while being CS models.[21][19]
HE (High Explosive)
High explosive anti-personnel weapon that can be set for impact or airburst detonation, with an effective range of up to 1,000 m.[21]

Variants

M136 AT4
American version with modified launch tube bumpers, sights and slings.[22]
AT8 (Bunker-Busting)
A version of the AT4 where the standard HEAT projectile is replaced with the bunker-busting warhead developed for the SMAW. No orders were ever placed.[23]
AT12-T
In the early 1990s, there were tests of a tandem charge 120-mm version (Bofors AT 12-T). The 14kg weapon had a claimed penetration of 900mm RHA,[24] and in 1994 was demonstrated to defeat two NATO Single Heavy targets inclined at 68 degrees from vertical with ERA,[25] for a line-of-sight penetration of 600mm. However, the project was cancelled due to the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the subsequent cuts in Western defence budgets.[citation needed]

Operators

 
AT4 84 mm

Wars

See also

References and notes

Explanatory footnotes

  1. ^ Sometimes also spelled AT-4 or AT 4.

Citations

  1. ^ M136 AT4, FAS, from the original on 3 April 2007, retrieved 3 April 2007
  2. ^ a b c Kemp, Ian (April–May 2006), "The law gets tougher: the shoulder-launched light anti-armour weapon has evolved to become a multipurpose assault weapon much in demand for asymmetric warfare", Armada International, ISSN 0252-9793
  3. ^ a b c McManners, Hugh (2003). Ultimate Special Forces. DK Publishing. ISBN 0-7894-9973-8.
  4. ^ Owen, William F. (2007). (PDF). Asian Military Review. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "AT4 Light Anti-Armour Weapon". Army Technology. 30 April 2018. from the original on 7 May 2016.
  6. ^ . Collective Awareness to UXO. Archived from the original on 3 August 2022. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
  7. ^ a b Åkerström, Linda (2018). Den svenska vapenexporten. Sweden: Leopard Förlag. p. 72. ISBN 9789173438384.
  8. ^ Hewish, Mark, "FFV's Lightweight AT4, first of a new family of Swedish anti-armour weapons" International Defense Review, May 1980, p. 70.
  9. ^ Pansarskott is a Swedish term that roughly translates to "Armour Shot."
  10. ^ International Defense Review, May 1980, p. 71.
  11. ^ The French APILAS was the only tested weapon that had the maximum penetration to defeat the frontal armour of the new Russian T-72 MBT, but it was rejected due to its weight and size.
  12. ^ The Armbrust, while an impressive weapon with its almost total lack of launch signature, which enabled it to be fired from enclosed spaces, was rejected due to higher cost and lack of effective range against moving targets.
  13. ^ The U.S. Army had so much grief in the early 1980s from various committee members of the U.S. Congress over the M72 LAW being officially referred to in manuals as a Light Antitank Weapon that they named the AT4 to make sure no member of Congress could question that again.
  14. ^ John Antal. "Packing a Punch: America's Man-Portable Antitank Weapons". page 90. Military Technology. March 2010. ISSN 0722-3226.
  15. ^ Until the 1980s the Carl Gustaf was constructed of high-alloy steel, but later versions used a thin steel liner containing the rifling, strengthened by a carbon fibre outer sleeve.
  16. ^ FFV and the Swedish Army were so impressed by these sights that they adopted them for their AT4s; while adequate during the day, the original plastic sights were difficult to see at night or under low light conditions.
  17. ^ http://www.bits.de/NRANEU/others/amd-us-archive/FM90-10-1C1%2895%29.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  18. ^ the complete disposable launcher and HEDP projectile is referred to by the manufacture in brochures as the LMAW – i.e., light multipurpose-assault weapon – see external links for link on early photos and press releases for further information on brochure
  19. ^ a b "AT4 Family | Saab".
  20. ^ "2008 SAAB video on AT4 versions including new multipurpose warhead for urban combat". YouTube. from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  21. ^ a b Saab to integrate new projectile variants for disposable shoulder-launched rocket system 24 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine - Janes.com, 11 June 2014
  22. ^ "AT4 Light Anti-Armour Weapon - Army Technology". from the original on 31 July 2018.
  23. ^ Jane's Infantry Weapons 1995–96-page 220. The reference refers to Allaint Techsystems as the manufacture, but they soon after were acquired by Honeywell. The SMAW-D offered by Talley was chosen for the U.S. Army program that the AT4 entered. See external images at the SMAW-D link for an arms brochure on the FFV AT8
  24. ^ "Small Arms Archive Detail Page for S00437".
  25. ^ "Bofors demo 92 2-4". YouTube.
  26. ^ "Carl Gustaf, AT-4CS y fusiles Steyr HS.50 M1 para el Ejército Argentino". 27 October 2017. from the original on 29 October 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 November 2010. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
  28. ^ a b c d e Jones, Richard D (27 January 2009), Infantry Weapons 2009/2010 (35 ed.), Jane's Information, ISBN 978-0-7106-2869-5
  29. ^ a b "The World Defence Almanac", World Defence Almanac: The Balance of Military Power, 2000, ISSN 0722-3226
  30. ^ Replaced the APILAS: AT 4 CS – L'arme anti blindé lourd AT 4 CS – The anti-heavy armor weapon, France: Ministry of Defense, from the original on 8 January 2014, retrieved 29 June 2013
  31. ^ "Saab Awarded Indian Contract for AT4 Support Weapon". Saab. from the original on 20 January 2022. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  32. ^ "AT-4 Senjata Andalan Unit Infanteri". Radarmiliter.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 16 May 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  33. ^ "Swedish weapons in the Iraqi military?", Radio Sweden, 18 November 2010, from the original on 19 February 2011, retrieved 18 November 2010
  34. ^ Vining, Miles (19 June 2018). "ISOF Arms & Equipment Part 4 – Grenade Launchers & Anti-Armour Weapons". armamentresearch.com. from the original on 28 July 2018. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  35. ^ . pbs.twimg.com. Archived from the original on 8 November 2019. Retrieved 11 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  36. ^ "Northern Iraq PKK-Weapon Caches of Operation 'Claw Tiger'". Silah Report. 27 August 2020. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  37. ^ sabah, daily (16 August 2017). "2 Swedish-made antitank missiles found in PKK hideout in Turkey's southeast". Daily Sabah. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  38. ^ "The World Defence Almanac", World Defence Almanac: The Balance of Military Power: 172, 2010, ISSN 0722-3226
  39. ^ Kahwaji, Riad (13 November 2007). "Lebanon: Foreign Arms Vital to Hizbollah Fight" (JPEG). Defense News. from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 25 January 2009.
  40. ^ "Lietuvos kariuomenė :: Ginkluotė ir karinė technika » Granatsvaidžiai ir prieštankiniai ginklai » Prieštankinis granatsvaidis AT-4". from the original on 9 October 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  41. ^ "The World Defence Almanac", World Defence Almanac: The Balance of Military Power: 105, 2005, ISSN 0722-3226
  42. ^ . Polish Ministry of Defence. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  43. ^ "Mer svenska vapen till Ukraina". Sydsvenskan (in Swedish). 23 March 2022. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  44. ^ Nyheter, S. V. T.; Nilsson, Maja (2 June 2022). "Sverige bistår Ukraina med sjömålsroboten Robot 17". SVT Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  45. ^ Collins, Kaitlan; Liptak, Kevin; Mattingly, Phil; LeBlanc, Paul; Vazquez, Maegan (17 March 2022). "Biden announces hundreds of millions in new security aid for Ukraine following Zelensky's speech". CNN. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  46. ^ "Modernizing and Equiping the Army". Department of the Army Historical Summary, FY. United States Army Center of Military History. 1987. p. 43. CMH Pub 101-19. from the original on 21 September 2010. Retrieved 13 August 2010.
  47. ^ a b c d Vapenexport (PDF), SE: Svenskafreds[permanent dead link]
  48. ^ a b "Global Security - News and Defence Headlines - IHS Jane's 360". IHS Jane's 360. from the original on 10 March 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  49. ^ . www.eluniversal.com. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  50. ^ "Colombia and Venezuela face off". GlobalPost. from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  51. ^ Richard, Christophe (2014). (PDF). Fantassins. No. 32. p. 28. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 December 2018. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
  52. ^ Capdeville, Thibault (Spring 2014). (PDF). Fantassins. No. 32. pp. 55–58. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 December 2018. Retrieved 13 December 2018.

External links

  • Official site for the AT4, covering the different versions of AT4
  • Saab AT4 PDF 19 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • AT4 – Saab Bofors Dynamics video of various AT4 versions
  • Swedish article on AT4 translated to English
  • M136 AT4 – Global Security
  • Brazilian newspaper recorded a AT-4 at Rocinha slum (translated to English)

this, article, about, unguided, anti, tank, weapon, sweden, guided, anti, tank, missile, soviet, union, russia, spigot, m136, redirects, here, other, uses, m136, disambiguation, swedish, unguided, portable, disposable, shoulder, fired, recoilless, anti, tank, . This article is about the unguided anti tank weapon of Sweden For the guided anti tank missile of the Soviet Union Russia see AT 4 Spigot M136 redirects here For other uses see M136 disambiguation The AT4 a is a Swedish 84 mm 3 31 in unguided man portable disposable shoulder fired recoilless anti tank weapon built by Saab Bofors Dynamics previously Bofors Anti Armour Systems and before that FFV Ordance 5 unreliable source The AT4 is not considered a rocket launcher as the explosive warhead is not propelled by a rocket motor similarly it is not exactly a recoilless rifle but rather a recoilless gun as the launcher is smoothbore and not rifled 6 Saab has had considerable sales success with the AT4 making it one of the most common light anti tank weapons in the world citation needed The M136 AT4 is a variant used by the United States Army AT4A US Marine aiming a M136E1 AT4 in 2014TypeDisposable anti tank launcherPlace of originSwedenService historyIn service1987 presentUsed bySee OperatorsWarsSee WarsProduction historyDesignerForenade FabriksverkenManufacturerSaab Bofors DynamicsUnit costUS 1 480 1 No built600 000 2 VariantsSee VariantsSpecificationsMass6 7 kg 14 8 lb AT4 3 8 kg 18 lb AT4 CS Length102 cm 40 in 3 Caliber84 mmMuzzle velocity290 m s 950 ft s 1 000 km h 220 m s 720 ft s 790 km h CS 4 Effective firing range300 m point target 3 Maximum firing range500 m area target 2 100 m maximum SightsIron sights optional AN PVS 4 night vision unitFillingOctolFilling weight440 g HEAT High Explosive Anti Tank round External imagesPrototype AT4 Sweden tested 1981 82Early AT4 with Swedish SoldierEarly AT4 launcher and projectileThe name AT4 is a word play on the 84 mm caliber of the weapon 84 eighty four being a homophone of A T 4 7 The name also doubles as an alpha phonetic word play on the weapon s role due to AT being a common military abbreviation for Anti Tank 8 The name was created for export purposes as the nickname eighty four already was a common English nickname for the Carl Gustaf 8 4cm recoilless rifle after its caliber 7 The AT4 is intended to give infantry units a means to destroy or disable armoured vehicles and fortifications although it is generally ineffective against current modern main battle tanks MBTs especially those with reactive armour unless weaker sections of the tank s armour are exploited The launcher and projectile are manufactured prepacked and issued as a single unit of ammunition with the launcher discarded after a single use Contents 1 Development 2 Operation 3 Specifications 4 Projectiles 5 Variants 6 Operators 7 Wars 8 See also 9 References and notes 9 1 Explanatory footnotes 9 2 Citations 10 External linksDevelopment EditThe AT4 is a development of the 74 mm Pansarskott m 68 9 Miniman adopted by the Swedish Army in the late 1960s Like the m 68 the AT4 was designed by Forenade Fabriksverken FFV and manufactured at their facility at Zakrisdal Karlstad Sweden 5 FFV began research in a replacement for the m 68 in 1976 deliberately designing an individual anti armour weapon that would not be able to defeat the heavy armour protection of MBTs main battle tanks in frontal engagements believing that to be counterproductive The AT4 was designed as a weapon to engage medium to light armoured vehicles from any direction MBTs from the sides or rear and as an assault weapon against buildings and fortifications FFV also had the design goal of a weapon that was simple to use rugged and far more accurate than previous individual antiarmour weapons against moving targets Another key requirement was that the AT4 not only be able to penetrate armour but also have a devastating beyond armour effect after penetration FFV and the Swedish Army began the first evaluation firings of the prototype AT4s in the spring of 1981 with 100 tested by early 1982 10 Even before the AT4 had been adopted by Sweden it was entered into a US Army competition for a new anti tank weapon mandated by Congress in 1982 when the FGR 17 Viper failed as a replacement for the M72 LAW Six weapons were tested in 1983 by the US Army the British LAW 80 the German Armbrust the French APILAS the Norwegian M72E4 an upgraded M72 LAW the US Viper for baseline comparison purposes and the Swedish AT4 The US Army reported to Congress in November 1983 that the FFV AT4 came the closest to meeting all the major requirements established to replace the M72 LAW 11 with the Armbrust coming in second 12 Though very impressed with the simplicity and durability of the tested version of the AT4 the US Army saw some room for improvement specifically the addition of rear and front bumpers on the launch tube and changes to the sights and slings After these changes the AT4 was adopted by the US Army as the Lightweight Multipurpose Weapon M136 13 The Swedish Army also recognized these improvements and subsequently adopted the Americanized version of the AT4 as the Pansarskott m 86 Pskott m 86 with the addition of a forward folding hand grip to help steady the AT4 when being aimed and fired The forward folding grip is the only difference between the AT4 adopted by Sweden and the US Army version Due to the urban combat conditions that US military forces faced regularly during the Iraq War the US Army Close Combat Systems manager in charge of purchases of the AT4 suspended orders for the standard version of the AT4 and US military forces are now only ordering the AT4 CS Confined Space version 14 Operation EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Seconds after firing an AT4 in combat in Iraq The AT4 may be considered a disposable low cost alternative to a Carl Gustaf 8 4cm recoilless rifle The AT4 took many of its design features from the Carl Gustaf which operates on the principle of a recoilless weapon where the forward inertia of the projectile is balanced by the inertia of propellant gases ejecting from the rear of the barrel But unlike the Carl Gustaf which uses a heavier and more expensive steel tube with rifling 15 the disposable AT4 design greatly reduces manufacturing costs by using a reinforced smoothbore fiberglass outer tube Being a disposable gun also allows for lighter and cheaper construction In a single use disposable gun the barrel only needs to be able to contain a single pressure spike when firing when it can be disposed of even if it is ruined burnt out and strained unlike traditional guns which are required to survive many pressure spikes without failure and thus need to be strongly overbuilt and made of heat proof materials Pressures are also kept quite low compared to many traditional guns This lightweight and thin barrel and low pressure combined with the almost complete lack of recoil means that relatively large projectiles comparable to those found in mortars and artillery systems can be utilised which would otherwise be impossible in a man portable weapon In the system originally developed by FFV for the Carl Gustaf a plastic blowout plug is placed at the centre rear of the shell casing containing the projectile and propellant which itself is enclosed in the AT4 outer tube When the gases build up to the correct pressure level the blowout plug disintegrates allowing the proper amount of gases to be vented to the rear balancing the propellant gases pushing the projectile forward The AT4 uses a unique method developed earlier by FFV and adopted for the AT4 the spring loaded firing rod is located down the side of the outer tube with the firing pin at the rear of the tube When released the firing pin strikes a primer located in the side of the casing s rim Firing the AT4 CS 2020 Firing the M136 AT4 2007 The disadvantage of the recoilless design is that it creates a large back blast area behind the weapon which can cause severe burns and overpressure injuries to friendly personnel in the vicinity of the user and sometimes even to the users themselves especially in confined spaces The back blast may also reveal the user s position to the enemy The problem of back blast was solved with the AT4 CS Confined Space version specially designed for urban warfare This version uses a saltwater countermass in the rear of the launcher to absorb the back blast the resulting spray captures and dramatically slows down the pressure wave allowing troops to fire from enclosed areas The AT4 CS version also reduced its muzzle velocity from the original 290 m s to 220 m s as part of its effort to be user safe in a confined space making the AT4 CS version more difficult to use as the drop is more pronounced The effectiveness of the HEAT warhead is not dependent on speed citation needed To fire the gunner first removes the safety pin located at the rear of the tube which unblocks the firing rod He then takes a firing position ensuring that no one is present in the back blast area If firing from the prone position he must also place his legs well to the side to avoid burning himself Then the gunner moves back the front and rear sight covers allowing the sights to pop up into their firing positions The AT4 has iron sights that were originally developed for the cancelled Viper and are similar in concept and use to those on assault rifles 16 He then removes the first of two safeties by moving the firing rod cocking lever located on the left side forward and then over the top to the right side The gunner takes aim while at the same time holding down the red safety lever located in front of the cocking lever and then fires by pressing forward the red firing button with his right thumb Both the red safety lever and the firing button must be pressed down at the same time to fire the AT4 The red firing button has a similar resistance to the trigger pull of a rifle so the gunner does not have to jab at the firing button which could throw his aim off The AT4 is man portable as demonstrated by this French soldier carrying a FAMAS and an AT4 After firing the AT4 is discarded Unlike the heavier Carl Gustaf the AT4 outer tube is built to take the stress of just one firing it is not reusable and cannot be reloaded The AT4 can mount an optical night sight on a removable fixture In US military use the launcher can be fitted with the AN PAQ 4C AN PEQ 2 or the AN PAS 13 night sights The AT4 requires little training and is quite simple to use making it suitable for general issue However as the cost of each launcher makes regular live fire training very expensive practice versions exist that are identical in operation but fire reloadable 9 19mm or 20mm tracer ammunition Both practice cartridges are unique to their respective weapons with their trajectory matched to that of the live round The 20mm version also has a recoilless weapon effect with the same high noise and back blast as the AT4 firing and is favoured by the Swedish army because of the added realism of the back blast as compared to the plonk sound of the 9mm round similar to the sound of a finger tapping on an empty can External imagesAT4 version adopted by US as M136 AT4 launcher shown with ammunition and HEAT projectile AT4 cutaway illustration showing ammunition installed AT4 front sight extended AT4 rear sight extended AT4 cock safety press finger safety and thumb firing buttonSpecifications EditTime of flight to 250 metres or 273 yards less than 1 second citation needed Operating temperature 40 to 60 C 40 to 140 F citation needed Ammunition fin stabilized projectile with HEAT warhead citation needed Projectiles EditThere are several different projectiles for the AT4 Note that because the AT4 is a one shot weapon projectiles are preloaded into the launcher tubes 5 AT4 launcher and projectile HEAT High Explosive Anti Tank The HEAT projectile can penetrate up to 450 mm 17 5 inches of RHA with beyond armour effect 17 HEDP 502 High Explosive Dual Purpose 5 18 For use against bunkers buildings enemy personnel in the open and light armour The projectile can be set to detonate on impact or with a slightly delayed detonation The heavier nose cap allows for the HEDP projectile to either penetrate light walls or windows and then explode or be skipped off the ground for an airburst For use against light armour there is a smaller cone HEAT warhead with 150 mm 5 9 inches of penetration against RHA HP High Penetration Extra high penetration ability up to 420 mm to 600 mm 19 7 inches to 23 6 inches of RHA 19 AST Anti Structure Tandem warheads Designed for urban warfare where a projectile heavier than the HEDP AT4 is needed This projectile combines a HEAT warhead with a shallow cone which results in low penetration but produces a wide hole with a follow through high blast warhead It has two settings one for destroying bunkers and one for mouse holing a building wall for combat entry 20 Complete AT4 HEAT antitank round which is preloaded in AT4 and AT8 bunker busting warhead HEDP 502 projectile for the LMAW ER Extended Range Anti armor version with HEAT warhead that extends range from 300 m to 600 m while also increasing penetration up to 460mm of RHA These major improvement only adds around 2 kilograms of weight while being CS models 21 19 HE High Explosive High explosive anti personnel weapon that can be set for impact or airburst detonation with an effective range of up to 1 000 m 21 Variants EditM136 AT4 American version with modified launch tube bumpers sights and slings 22 AT8 Bunker Busting A version of the AT4 where the standard HEAT projectile is replaced with the bunker busting warhead developed for the SMAW No orders were ever placed 23 AT12 T In the early 1990s there were tests of a tandem charge 120 mm version Bofors AT 12 T The 14kg weapon had a claimed penetration of 900mm RHA 24 and in 1994 was demonstrated to defeat two NATO Single Heavy targets inclined at 68 degrees from vertical with ERA 25 for a line of sight penetration of 600mm However the project was cancelled due to the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the subsequent cuts in Western defence budgets citation needed Operators Edit AT4 84 mm Argentina Argentine Army 26 and Argentine Marines 27 Bosnia and Herzegovina 5 Brazil 28 Canada JTF2 5 Chile Chilean Marine Corps Chilean Army 5 Colombia 5 Croatia 28 Denmark Designated PVV M 95 Panservaernsvaben Model 1995 29 93 Dominican Republic France Designated ABL Anti Blinde Lourd by the French Army 30 Georgia 28 Greece Used by Hellenic Navy Seals 5 India 31 Indonesia 32 Iraq The Iraqi Army was supplied with the AT4 33 34 Ireland Called the SRAAW Short Range Anti Armour Weapon by the Irish Defence Forces 29 139 Jaysh al Islam Captured from the Syrian Democratic Forces 35 Kurdistan Workers Party 36 37 Latvia 38 Lebanon Roughly 1 000 pieces purchased 39 Lithuania Lithuanian Armed Forces 40 Malaysia In Service with the Grup Gerak Khas 5 Netherlands 41 Replaced by Pzf 3 Poland limited use in Special Operations Forces and Air Mobile Forces 42 Sweden Designated Pansarskott m 86 28 Syrian Democratic Forces Taiwan Republic of China 5 United Kingdom Small quantities of AT4 and HP projectiles purchased 2 5 Ukraine 15 000 supplied by Sweden 43 44 6 000 supplied by the United States 45 both in 2022 United States Designated M136 AT4 in USMC and United States Army service beginning in early 1987 46 The AT4 was used in the US invasion of Panama the War in Afghanistan the Persian Gulf War and the Iraq War 47 Over 300 000 have been built locally under license by ATK 2 5 Venezuela The AT4 has been in the Venezuelan arsenal since the 1980s 28 48 In 2009 it was reported that AT4s sold to Venezuela had been captured from FARC insurgents in Colombia leading Colombia to accuse Venezuela of selling the weapons to the insurgents and Venezuela reporting that they were stolen by a rebel attack on a Venezuelan position in 1995 49 thus heightening tensions between the two countries 48 50 Wars EditUS invasion of Panama 47 Kurdish Turkish conflict 1978 present Soviet Afghan War Gulf War Afghanistan War 47 Iraq War 47 Second Ivorian Civil War 51 Northern Mali conflict 52 2013 Lahad Datu standoff War in Iraq 2013 2017 Syrian Civil War 2022 Russian invasion of UkraineSee also EditALAC Arma Leve Anticarro Alcotan 100 APILAS B 300 DZJ 08 LAW 80 MARA anti tank weapon MATADOR NLAW Panzerfaust 3 RPG 76 Komar RPG 75 Urban Assault Weapon M141 Bunker Defeat Munition KestrelReferences and notes EditExplanatory footnotes Edit Sometimes also spelled AT 4 or AT 4 Citations Edit M136 AT4 FAS archived from the original on 3 April 2007 retrieved 3 April 2007 a b c Kemp Ian April May 2006 The law gets tougher the shoulder launched light anti armour weapon has evolved to become a multipurpose assault weapon much in demand for asymmetric warfare Armada International ISSN 0252 9793 a b c McManners Hugh 2003 Ultimate Special Forces DK Publishing ISBN 0 7894 9973 8 Owen William F 2007 Light Anti Armour Weapons Anti Everything PDF Asian Military Review Archived from the original PDF on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m AT4 Light Anti Armour Weapon Army Technology 30 April 2018 Archived from the original on 7 May 2016 84mm M136 AT 4 Projected Grenade Collective Awareness to UXO Archived from the original on 3 August 2022 Retrieved 3 August 2022 a b Akerstrom Linda 2018 Den svenska vapenexporten Sweden Leopard Forlag p 72 ISBN 9789173438384 Hewish Mark FFV s Lightweight AT4 first of a new family of Swedish anti armour weapons International Defense Review May 1980 p 70 Pansarskott is a Swedish term that roughly translates to Armour Shot International Defense Review May 1980 p 71 The French APILAS was the only tested weapon that had the maximum penetration to defeat the frontal armour of the new Russian T 72 MBT but it was rejected due to its weight and size The Armbrust while an impressive weapon with its almost total lack of launch signature which enabled it to be fired from enclosed spaces was rejected due to higher cost and lack of effective range against moving targets The U S Army had so much grief in the early 1980s from various committee members of the U S Congress over the M72 LAW being officially referred to in manuals as a Light Antitank Weapon that they named the AT4 to make sure no member of Congress could question that again John Antal Packing a Punch America s Man Portable Antitank Weapons page 90 Military Technology March 2010 ISSN 0722 3226 Until the 1980s the Carl Gustaf was constructed of high alloy steel but later versions used a thin steel liner containing the rifling strengthened by a carbon fibre outer sleeve FFV and the Swedish Army were so impressed by these sights that they adopted them for their AT4s while adequate during the day the original plastic sights were difficult to see at night or under low light conditions http www bits de NRANEU others amd us archive FM90 10 1C1 2895 29 pdf bare URL PDF the complete disposable launcher and HEDP projectile is referred to by the manufacture in brochures as the LMAW i e light multipurpose assault weapon see external links for link on early photos and press releases for further information on brochure a b AT4 Family Saab 2008 SAAB video on AT4 versions including new multipurpose warhead for urban combat YouTube Archived from the original on 18 October 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2014 a b Saab to integrate new projectile variants for disposable shoulder launched rocket system Archived 24 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine Janes com 11 June 2014 AT4 Light Anti Armour Weapon Army Technology Archived from the original on 31 July 2018 Jane s Infantry Weapons 1995 96 page 220 The reference refers to Allaint Techsystems as the manufacture but they soon after were acquired by Honeywell The SMAW D offered by Talley was chosen for the U S Army program that the AT4 entered See external images at the SMAW D link for an arms brochure on the FFV AT8 Small Arms Archive Detail Page for S00437 Bofors demo 92 2 4 YouTube Carl Gustaf AT 4CS y fusiles Steyr HS 50 M1 para el Ejercito Argentino 27 October 2017 Archived from the original on 29 October 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 La Infanteria de Marina adquirio armamento antitanque descartable Archived from the original on 2 November 2010 Retrieved 25 October 2010 a b c d e Jones Richard D 27 January 2009 Infantry Weapons 2009 2010 35 ed Jane s Information ISBN 978 0 7106 2869 5 a b The World Defence Almanac World Defence Almanac The Balance of Military Power 2000 ISSN 0722 3226 Replaced the APILAS AT 4 CS L arme anti blinde lourd AT 4 CS The anti heavy armor weapon France Ministry of Defense archived from the original on 8 January 2014 retrieved 29 June 2013 Saab Awarded Indian Contract for AT4 Support Weapon Saab Archived from the original on 20 January 2022 Retrieved 27 January 2022 AT 4 Senjata Andalan Unit Infanteri Radarmiliter com in Indonesian Retrieved 16 May 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Swedish weapons in the Iraqi military Radio Sweden 18 November 2010 archived from the original on 19 February 2011 retrieved 18 November 2010 Vining Miles 19 June 2018 ISOF Arms amp Equipment Part 4 Grenade Launchers amp Anti Armour Weapons armamentresearch com Archived from the original on 28 July 2018 Retrieved 31 July 2018 Archived copy pbs twimg com Archived from the original on 8 November 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Northern Iraq PKK Weapon Caches of Operation Claw Tiger Silah Report 27 August 2020 Retrieved 27 May 2021 sabah daily 16 August 2017 2 Swedish made antitank missiles found in PKK hideout in Turkey s southeast Daily Sabah Retrieved 27 May 2021 The World Defence Almanac World Defence Almanac The Balance of Military Power 172 2010 ISSN 0722 3226 Kahwaji Riad 13 November 2007 Lebanon Foreign Arms Vital to Hizbollah Fight JPEG Defense News Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 25 January 2009 Lietuvos kariuomene Ginkluote ir karine technika Granatsvaidziai ir priestankiniai ginklai Priestankinis granatsvaidis AT 4 Archived from the original on 9 October 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2014 The World Defence Almanac World Defence Almanac The Balance of Military Power 105 2005 ISSN 0722 3226 Polish Army Photogallery Polish Ministry of Defence Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2010 Mer svenska vapen till Ukraina Sydsvenskan in Swedish 23 March 2022 Retrieved 23 March 2022 Nyheter S V T Nilsson Maja 2 June 2022 Sverige bistar Ukraina med sjomalsroboten Robot 17 SVT Nyheter in Swedish Retrieved 2 June 2022 Collins Kaitlan Liptak Kevin Mattingly Phil LeBlanc Paul Vazquez Maegan 17 March 2022 Biden announces hundreds of millions in new security aid for Ukraine following Zelensky s speech CNN Retrieved 25 April 2022 Modernizing and Equiping the Army Department of the Army Historical Summary FY United States Army Center of Military History 1987 p 43 CMH Pub 101 19 Archived from the original on 21 September 2010 Retrieved 13 August 2010 a b c d Vapenexport PDF SE Svenskafreds permanent dead link a b Global Security News and Defence Headlines IHS Jane s 360 IHS Jane s 360 Archived from the original on 10 March 2011 Retrieved 11 October 2014 Presentan video del ELN con armas de Cararabo Internacional EL UNIVERSAL www eluniversal com Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 29 November 2015 Colombia and Venezuela face off GlobalPost Archived from the original on 18 October 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2014 Richard Christophe 2014 Battle of Abidjan accurate and timely fires PDF Fantassins No 32 p 28 Archived from the original PDF on 15 December 2018 Retrieved 13 December 2018 Capdeville Thibault Spring 2014 Infantry units fires during OP Serval PDF Fantassins No 32 pp 55 58 Archived from the original PDF on 15 December 2018 Retrieved 13 December 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to AT 4 category Official site for the AT4 covering the different versions of AT4 Saab AT4 PDF Archived 19 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine AT4 Saab Bofors Dynamics video of various AT4 versions AT4 Information Page Modern Firearms Swedish article on AT4 translated to English M136 AT4 Global Security U S Army field manual 3 23 25 Brazilian newspaper recorded a AT 4 at Rocinha slum translated to English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AT4 amp oldid 1126367522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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