fbpx
Wikipedia

GC-45 howitzer

The GC-45 (Gun, Canada, 45-calibre) is a 155 mm howitzer designed by Gerald Bull's Space Research Corporation (SRC) in the 1970s. Versions were produced by a number of companies during the 1980s, notably in Austria and South Africa.

GC-45 155 mm Howitzer
An ex-Iraqi GHN-45 at the U.S. Army Field Artillery Museum, Ft. Sill, Oklahoma in travel mode
TypeHowitzer
Place of originCanada
Service history
In service1970s-present
Used bySee users
WarsIran–Iraq War, Gulf War, Cambodian–Thai border stand-off
Production history
DesignerGerald Bull
Designed1970s
ManufacturerSpace Research Corporation, Noricum, NORINCO
Produced1980s-Present
VariantsGHN-45, PLL01
Specifications
Mass8,220 kg (18,120 lb)
Barrel length6.98 meters

Caliber155 mm (6.1 in.)
CarriageSplit trail
Elevation-89 to 1,280 mils
TraverseLeft 534 mils, Right 711 mils
Rate of firemaximum: 5 rpm sustained: 2 rpm
Muzzle velocity897 m/s (2,943 ft/sec)
Maximum firing range39.6 km (24.6 mi)
with Base bleed

The most publicized use of the design was in Iraq, where the GHN-45 variant used by some Iraqi artillery units had a longer range than any coalition cannon systems. This initially caused considerable worry on the part of the allied forces in the Persian Gulf War.[1]

Design history Edit

The GC-45's general design followed several decades of work by Bull with fin-stabilized artillery shells, starting at the Canadian Armament Research and Development Establishment (CARDE) and later at Project HARP. In these efforts accuracy was not a huge concern, the objective was muzzle velocity, and the test articles were finned darts representing missiles, a low-cost alternative to wind tunnels. Yet with the removal of the rifling and the soft-metal driving band on the shell itself, the shell could be designed purely for ballistics, as opposed to having the external constraint of the driving band. A system combining some sort of rifling for accuracy without a driving band would result in a longer-range weapon. However, such a design was never achieved.

After years of research at his Quebec firing range, Bull could never settle on to a solution. The resulting Extended Range, Full Bore (ERFB) ammunition was key to SRC's designs: a "pointy" looking shell with much lower drag at supersonic speeds. For longer range applications he added a base bleed system (invented in Sweden) that could be screwed onto the standard shell, as well as an even longer-ranged system with a rocket booster.

The gun designed to fire it had a 23,000 cm3 (1,400 cu in) chamber, a 45-calibre rifled barrel with 1/20 right hand twist fitted with a conventional muzzle brake.[2] Its breech was a conventional screw with interrupted thread.

Key performance data, from the Firing Table[1][3] are:

  • ERFB-BB shell, weight 48.0 kg (105.9 lb), M11 Zone 10 muzzle velocity 897 m/s (2,940 ft/s), QE 898 mils, time of flight 112 s, range 39.6 km (24.6 mi; 130,000 ft). Probable error in range 212 m (696 ft), in line 36 m (118 ft).
  • ERFB shell, weight 45.5 kg (100.4 lb), M11 Zone 10 muzzle velocity 897 m/s (2,940 ft/s), QE 881 mils, time of flight 99 s, range 29.9 km (18.6 mi; 98,000 ft). Probable error in range 189 metres (620 ft), in line 42 metres (138 ft).
  • HE M107 shell, weight 43 kg (95 lb), M119 Zone 8 muzzle velocity 675 m/s (2,210 ft/s), QE 764 mils, time of flight 65 s, range 17.8 km (11.1 mi; 58,000 ft). Probable error in range 59 m (194 ft), in line 12 m (39 ft).

The dispersion of the EFRB shell is more than three times that of the FH-70 field howitzer at its maximum range of only 5 km less, and is twice as great as FH-70s at 20 km (66,000 ft; 12 mi). Its maximum range with the M107 projectile is the same as any 39 calibre 155-mm gun and its dispersion about the same. (The "dispersion" figure means that 50% of shells will fall up to the stated distance either side of the mean point of impact, but 100% will fall within 4 times the probable error either side.) Dispersion of this magnitude significantly reduces the tactical value of the equipment.

In 1977, Bull's work put him in touch with (what is today) the Denel SOC Ltd company of South Africa. Denel designed a new mobile mounting that was able to handle the increased recoil. It used a sole-plate to lift the carriage to take the four wheels off the ground. The chassis had the option of being powered by a small diesel engine acting as an auxiliary power unit, driving hydraulics that could set up the gun in two minutes, and move it short distances.[4] This feature had previously been included in the 1960s design FH-70 carriage by Vickers. Bull, meanwhile, started production of $30 million worth of rounds, shipping them via Spain to avoid the international arms embargo against South Africa.

At first, the U.S. chose to overlook Bull's actions and, according to him, the Central Intelligence Agency actively mediated the deal between Space Research and the South Africans.[5] However, when the Carter administration joined the international efforts to sanction South Africa's apartheid government, Bull was arrested by U.S. Customs agents in 1980. The investigation did not go far, and active work on the case was ended by direct intervention of the White House.[5] Bull pleaded guilty and was sentenced to a year in prison, serving six months. Having expected some sort of "slap on the wrist", he was embittered and made statements to different newspapers that he would never set foot in North America again. He left Canada and moved to Brussels where he continued his work.

Production Edit

Armscor continued work on their version of the gun, and these were put into service in South Africa in 1982 as the G5. They started replacing a variety of older guns, such as locally-built World War II-era Ordnance QF 25 pounders. The G5s saw service against Cuban and People's Armed Forces for the Liberation of Angola forces in the Angolan conflict, where they were used very effectively.

Noricum, the arms division of the Austrian steel company Voest-Alpine, purchased the design rights to the GC-45 after SRC moved to Europe. They made a number of detail changes to improve mass production, resulting in the GHN-45 (Gun, Howitzer, Noricum), which was offered in a variety of options like the APU and fire control systems. The first foreign sale was an order for eighteen guns with ammunition to the Royal Thai Navy for use by their Marine Corps. Other "aboveboard" customers included China, Singapore and Israel. All of these companies worked on local production under a variety of names, the Soltam 845P in Israel, ODE FH-88 from Singapore, and PLL01/WA021 in China.[6][7]

Once out of prison, Bull was soon contacted by China.[8] The Chinese People's Liberation Army also used the Noricum version, producing it as the PLL01, which entered service in 1987.[7] They also mounted it on a locally designed tracked chassis to produce the PLZ-45 (also known as the Type 88), along with an ammo-carrier based on the same chassis.The PLZ-45 did not enter service with the PLA primarily because their existing artillery was all based on Soviet-standard 152 mm ammunition. However, two major batches of PLZ-45s were sold to the Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.

Also Bull was contacted by Iraq, which was constantly being attacked by Iranian artillery during the Iran–Iraq War. Iraq placed a US$300 million contract for 110 guns from Noricum in Austria and 41,000 rounds subcontracted by SRC to PRB in Belgium. Deliveries were made in 1984 and 1985. The number of guns was eventually raised to 200.[9] Iran and Iraq were under arms embargo at the time, so the guns were shipped to Jordan, and from there to Iraq. These sales led to the "Noricum affair" in 1990, when eighteen of Noricum's managers were placed on trial for illegal arms sales.[10] A further 100 guns were manufactured in South Africa.[9]

In Iraq the guns had a similar effect on the ongoing Iran–Iraq War as the G5 had in Angola, stopping any push by the Iranians deeper into Iraq. They became desperate to get more of these guns into the field as soon as possible, and requested that Bull improve deliveries any way he could. Bull then arranged a deal to deliver the G5, which fired the same ammunition as the GHN-45, from South Africa. By the time of the Gulf War, about 124 of these weapons had been added to the Iraqi long-range artillery, supplanting their older 130 mm M-46s and chaotic mix of other weapons.[11] Bull and Saddam Hussein became partners in a number of future ventures. These ventures are generally believed to be the cause of Bull's assassination, for which the Israeli Mossad or Iranian agencies are the prime suspects.

During the Gulf War, however, the GHN-45s proved less effective than anticipated by either side. Air strikes had disrupted the Iraqi command and control facilities, and because most of their gun tractors had been withdrawn to serve with logistics units in an attempt to re-supply the front line troops, they were unable to withdraw when under fire.[citation needed] Immobile and unsupported, the majority of the guns were destroyed at their positions either by air strikes or Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS) counter-battery fire.[citation needed]

Subsequent development Edit

Bull continued work on the GC-45, producing a much more practical version known as the FGH-155. In addition to a number of detail changes and deeper rifling, the FGH-155 allowed standard M107 ammunition to be fired using a plastic adaptor ring.[6] Bull also felt that the FGH-155's carriage was suitable for a larger gun, and worked on the FGH-203, an 8" (203 mm) gun adapted from U.S. standards in a fashion similar to the original GC-45 work. The increase in projectile weight gave the new weapon a range of over 50,000 meters with normal ERFB-BB ammunition, making it one of the longest-range artillery pieces in the world. The gun was also purchased by the Iraqis, who mounted it in a self-propelled form to create the Al-Fao.

The Denel G5 version has also seen continued development. The gun has been placed on an OMC 6x6 chassis as the G6 howitzer, and won major export sales to the United Arab Emirates and Oman. In response to an Indian requirement, the G5 was mounted on a 4x4 truck, resulting in the T5,[citation needed] though as of 2012 none had been ordered. It is also fitted into a turret that can fit on any suitable vehicle. The turret is marketed as the T6 which has already been fitted on the T-72. Denel also used the basic ERFB ammunition concept to develop a 105 mm gun, the G7 howitzer, which allows artillery to be downsized to improve mobility.

Bharat Forge, an Indian firm of Kalyani Group, has recently purchased Noricum and brought the entire manufacturing workshop to India. It has made Bharat-52, a 52 caliber variant of the 155mm howitzer to meet the Indian Army's long delayed field artillery requirement.

Operators Edit

 
Map with GC-45 operators in blue

Current operators Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "G5 155mm 45-calibre, towed gun howitzer". GlobalSecurity.org. from the original on 2012-08-29. Retrieved 2013-08-15.
  2. ^ TM99-27028-10/1 & 2, 1982
  3. ^ FT-155-SCFR-1 Cannon 155-mm Gun Howitzer GHN45 on Howitzer, Towed 155-mm GHN45
  4. ^ "Denel Online, Towed Guns - G5". from the original on 2008-02-11. Retrieved 2008-01-27.
  5. ^ a b The Supergun 2008-04-14 at the Wayback Machine, CBC Fifth Estate, November 6, 2002
  6. ^ a b A general survey of recent artillery developments 2011-05-20 at the Wayback Machine, Armada International, 1989
  7. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  8. ^ William Scott Malon (February 10, 1991). "The Guns of Saddam". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
  9. ^ a b Stephen Hughes (2002). The Iraqi Threat and Saddam Hussein's Weapons of Mass Destruction. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 1-4122-4563-X. Retrieved 2008-03-02.
  10. ^ Austrian Arms Executives Stand Trial on Sales to Iran 2012-10-15 at the Wayback Machine, Michael Wise, The Washington Post, April 5, 1990
  11. ^ https://fas.org/irp/gulf/intel/971030/971030_061997QA_001.html 2012-10-23 at the Wayback Machine, "How many 155 mm arty pieces were in Iraq before the war?"
  12. ^ ARG. "GC-45 155 mm Towed Gun-Howitzer | Military-Today.com". www.military-today.com. from the original on 2018-07-30. Retrieved 2018-07-18.

External links Edit

  • Jane's Defence info on GC-45
  • A general survey of recent artillery developments

howitzer, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 2007, l. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources GC 45 howitzer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message The GC 45 Gun Canada 45 calibre is a 155 mm howitzer designed by Gerald Bull s Space Research Corporation SRC in the 1970s Versions were produced by a number of companies during the 1980s notably in Austria and South Africa GC 45 155 mm HowitzerAn ex Iraqi GHN 45 at the U S Army Field Artillery Museum Ft Sill Oklahoma in travel modeTypeHowitzerPlace of originCanadaService historyIn service1970s presentUsed bySee usersWarsIran Iraq War Gulf War Cambodian Thai border stand offProduction historyDesignerGerald BullDesigned1970sManufacturerSpace Research Corporation Noricum NORINCOProduced1980s PresentVariantsGHN 45 PLL01SpecificationsMass8 220 kg 18 120 lb Barrel length6 98 metersCaliber155 mm 6 1 in CarriageSplit trailElevation 89 to 1 280 milsTraverseLeft 534 mils Right 711 milsRate of firemaximum 5 rpm sustained 2 rpmMuzzle velocity897 m s 2 943 ft sec Maximum firing range39 6 km 24 6 mi with Base bleedThe most publicized use of the design was in Iraq where the GHN 45 variant used by some Iraqi artillery units had a longer range than any coalition cannon systems This initially caused considerable worry on the part of the allied forces in the Persian Gulf War 1 Contents 1 Design history 2 Production 3 Subsequent development 4 Operators 4 1 Current operators 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDesign history EditThe GC 45 s general design followed several decades of work by Bull with fin stabilized artillery shells starting at the Canadian Armament Research and Development Establishment CARDE and later at Project HARP In these efforts accuracy was not a huge concern the objective was muzzle velocity and the test articles were finned darts representing missiles a low cost alternative to wind tunnels Yet with the removal of the rifling and the soft metal driving band on the shell itself the shell could be designed purely for ballistics as opposed to having the external constraint of the driving band A system combining some sort of rifling for accuracy without a driving band would result in a longer range weapon However such a design was never achieved After years of research at his Quebec firing range Bull could never settle on to a solution The resulting Extended Range Full Bore ERFB ammunition was key to SRC s designs a pointy looking shell with much lower drag at supersonic speeds For longer range applications he added a base bleed system invented in Sweden that could be screwed onto the standard shell as well as an even longer ranged system with a rocket booster The gun designed to fire it had a 23 000 cm3 1 400 cu in chamber a 45 calibre rifled barrel with 1 20 right hand twist fitted with a conventional muzzle brake 2 Its breech was a conventional screw with interrupted thread Key performance data from the Firing Table 1 3 are ERFB BB shell weight 48 0 kg 105 9 lb M11 Zone 10 muzzle velocity 897 m s 2 940 ft s QE 898 mils time of flight 112 s range 39 6 km 24 6 mi 130 000 ft Probable error in range 212 m 696 ft in line 36 m 118 ft ERFB shell weight 45 5 kg 100 4 lb M11 Zone 10 muzzle velocity 897 m s 2 940 ft s QE 881 mils time of flight 99 s range 29 9 km 18 6 mi 98 000 ft Probable error in range 189 metres 620 ft in line 42 metres 138 ft HE M107 shell weight 43 kg 95 lb M119 Zone 8 muzzle velocity 675 m s 2 210 ft s QE 764 mils time of flight 65 s range 17 8 km 11 1 mi 58 000 ft Probable error in range 59 m 194 ft in line 12 m 39 ft The dispersion of the EFRB shell is more than three times that of the FH 70 field howitzer at its maximum range of only 5 km less and is twice as great as FH 70s at 20 km 66 000 ft 12 mi Its maximum range with the M107 projectile is the same as any 39 calibre 155 mm gun and its dispersion about the same The dispersion figure means that 50 of shells will fall up to the stated distance either side of the mean point of impact but 100 will fall within 4 times the probable error either side Dispersion of this magnitude significantly reduces the tactical value of the equipment In 1977 Bull s work put him in touch with what is today the Denel SOC Ltd company of South Africa Denel designed a new mobile mounting that was able to handle the increased recoil It used a sole plate to lift the carriage to take the four wheels off the ground The chassis had the option of being powered by a small diesel engine acting as an auxiliary power unit driving hydraulics that could set up the gun in two minutes and move it short distances 4 This feature had previously been included in the 1960s design FH 70 carriage by Vickers Bull meanwhile started production of 30 million worth of rounds shipping them via Spain to avoid the international arms embargo against South Africa At first the U S chose to overlook Bull s actions and according to him the Central Intelligence Agency actively mediated the deal between Space Research and the South Africans 5 However when the Carter administration joined the international efforts to sanction South Africa s apartheid government Bull was arrested by U S Customs agents in 1980 The investigation did not go far and active work on the case was ended by direct intervention of the White House 5 Bull pleaded guilty and was sentenced to a year in prison serving six months Having expected some sort of slap on the wrist he was embittered and made statements to different newspapers that he would never set foot in North America again He left Canada and moved to Brussels where he continued his work Production EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources GC 45 howitzer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Armscor continued work on their version of the gun and these were put into service in South Africa in 1982 as the G5 They started replacing a variety of older guns such as locally built World War II era Ordnance QF 25 pounders The G5s saw service against Cuban and People s Armed Forces for the Liberation of Angola forces in the Angolan conflict where they were used very effectively Noricum the arms division of the Austrian steel company Voest Alpine purchased the design rights to the GC 45 after SRC moved to Europe They made a number of detail changes to improve mass production resulting in the GHN 45 Gun Howitzer Noricum which was offered in a variety of options like the APU and fire control systems The first foreign sale was an order for eighteen guns with ammunition to the Royal Thai Navy for use by their Marine Corps Other aboveboard customers included China Singapore and Israel All of these companies worked on local production under a variety of names the Soltam 845P in Israel ODE FH 88 from Singapore and PLL01 WA021 in China 6 7 Once out of prison Bull was soon contacted by China 8 The Chinese People s Liberation Army also used the Noricum version producing it as the PLL01 which entered service in 1987 7 They also mounted it on a locally designed tracked chassis to produce the PLZ 45 also known as the Type 88 along with an ammo carrier based on the same chassis The PLZ 45 did not enter service with the PLA primarily because their existing artillery was all based on Soviet standard 152 mm ammunition However two major batches of PLZ 45s were sold to the Kuwait and Saudi Arabia Also Bull was contacted by Iraq which was constantly being attacked by Iranian artillery during the Iran Iraq War Iraq placed a US 300 million contract for 110 guns from Noricum in Austria and 41 000 rounds subcontracted by SRC to PRB in Belgium Deliveries were made in 1984 and 1985 The number of guns was eventually raised to 200 9 Iran and Iraq were under arms embargo at the time so the guns were shipped to Jordan and from there to Iraq These sales led to the Noricum affair in 1990 when eighteen of Noricum s managers were placed on trial for illegal arms sales 10 A further 100 guns were manufactured in South Africa 9 In Iraq the guns had a similar effect on the ongoing Iran Iraq War as the G5 had in Angola stopping any push by the Iranians deeper into Iraq They became desperate to get more of these guns into the field as soon as possible and requested that Bull improve deliveries any way he could Bull then arranged a deal to deliver the G5 which fired the same ammunition as the GHN 45 from South Africa By the time of the Gulf War about 124 of these weapons had been added to the Iraqi long range artillery supplanting their older 130 mm M 46s and chaotic mix of other weapons 11 Bull and Saddam Hussein became partners in a number of future ventures These ventures are generally believed to be the cause of Bull s assassination for which the Israeli Mossad or Iranian agencies are the prime suspects During the Gulf War however the GHN 45s proved less effective than anticipated by either side Air strikes had disrupted the Iraqi command and control facilities and because most of their gun tractors had been withdrawn to serve with logistics units in an attempt to re supply the front line troops they were unable to withdraw when under fire citation needed Immobile and unsupported the majority of the guns were destroyed at their positions either by air strikes or Multiple Launch Rocket Systems MLRS counter battery fire citation needed Subsequent development EditBull continued work on the GC 45 producing a much more practical version known as the FGH 155 In addition to a number of detail changes and deeper rifling the FGH 155 allowed standard M107 ammunition to be fired using a plastic adaptor ring 6 Bull also felt that the FGH 155 s carriage was suitable for a larger gun and worked on the FGH 203 an 8 203 mm gun adapted from U S standards in a fashion similar to the original GC 45 work The increase in projectile weight gave the new weapon a range of over 50 000 meters with normal ERFB BB ammunition making it one of the longest range artillery pieces in the world The gun was also purchased by the Iraqis who mounted it in a self propelled form to create the Al Fao The Denel G5 version has also seen continued development The gun has been placed on an OMC 6x6 chassis as the G6 howitzer and won major export sales to the United Arab Emirates and Oman In response to an Indian requirement the G5 was mounted on a 4x4 truck resulting in the T5 citation needed though as of 2012 update none had been ordered It is also fitted into a turret that can fit on any suitable vehicle The turret is marketed as the T6 which has already been fitted on the T 72 Denel also used the basic ERFB ammunition concept to develop a 105 mm gun the G7 howitzer which allows artillery to be downsized to improve mobility Bharat Forge an Indian firm of Kalyani Group has recently purchased Noricum and brought the entire manufacturing workshop to India It has made Bharat 52 a 52 caliber variant of the 155mm howitzer to meet the Indian Army s long delayed field artillery requirement Operators Edit nbsp Map with GC 45 operators in blueCurrent operators Edit nbsp China nbsp Iran nbsp Iraq nbsp Israel nbsp Jordan nbsp Kuwait nbsp Myanmar nbsp Oman nbsp Pakistan nbsp Saudi Arabia nbsp Singapore nbsp South Africa nbsp Thailand nbsp Indonesia nbsp UAE 12 See also EditList of artillery G5 howitzerReferences Edit a b G5 155mm 45 calibre towed gun howitzer GlobalSecurity org Archived from the original on 2012 08 29 Retrieved 2013 08 15 TM99 27028 10 1 amp 2 1982 FT 155 SCFR 1 Cannon 155 mm Gun Howitzer GHN45 on Howitzer Towed 155 mm GHN45 Denel Online Towed Guns G5 Archived from the original on 2008 02 11 Retrieved 2008 01 27 a b The Supergun Archived 2008 04 14 at the Wayback Machine CBC Fifth Estate November 6 2002 a b A general survey of recent artillery developments Archived 2011 05 20 at the Wayback Machine Armada International 1989 a b PLL01 155mm Gun Howitzer Archived from the original on 9 August 2011 Retrieved 11 March 2013 William Scott Malon February 10 1991 The Guns of Saddam The Washington Post Retrieved 2020 01 10 a b Stephen Hughes 2002 The Iraqi Threat and Saddam Hussein s Weapons of Mass Destruction Trafford Publishing ISBN 1 4122 4563 X Retrieved 2008 03 02 Austrian Arms Executives Stand Trial on Sales to Iran Archived 2012 10 15 at the Wayback Machine Michael Wise The Washington Post April 5 1990 https fas org irp gulf intel 971030 971030 061997QA 001 html Archived 2012 10 23 at the Wayback Machine How many 155 mm arty pieces were in Iraq before the war ARG GC 45 155 mm Towed Gun Howitzer Military Today com www military today com Archived from the original on 2018 07 30 Retrieved 2018 07 18 External links EditJane s Defence info on GC 45 A general survey of recent artillery developments Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title GC 45 howitzer amp oldid 1174413642, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.