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M109 howitzer

The M109 is an American 155 mm turreted self-propelled howitzer, first introduced in the early 1960s to replace the M44. It has been upgraded a number of times, most recently to the M109A7. The M109 family is the most common Western indirect-fire support weapon of maneuver brigades of armored and mechanized infantry divisions.

M109
M109A6
TypeSelf-propelled artillery
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In serviceM109: 1963–present
M109A1: 1970–present
M109A2: 1979–present
M109A6: 1994–present
M109A7: 2015–present
WarsVietnam War
Cambodian Civil War
Yom Kippur War
Iran–Iraq War
1982 Lebanon war
Western Sahara War
Persian Gulf War
Iraq War
2014 Israel–Gaza conflict
War in Iraq (2013-2017)[1]
Yemeni Civil War (2015–present),
Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen
Syrian Civil War
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
Production history
Designed1952–1962
ManufacturerCadillac
General Motors
Chrysler
BMY Harsco (1974–1994)
United Defense (1994–2005)
BAE Systems Inc. (2005–present)
Samsung (1985–2015)
Hanwha (2015–present)
Specifications
Mass27.5 tons
M109A7: 84,000 lb (38.1 t)
Length30 ft (9.1 m)
Width10 ft 4 in (3.15 m)
Height10 ft 8 in (3.25 m)
Crew6 (commander, driver, gunner, 3 loaders)
M109A6–A7: 4 (commander, driver, gunner, loader)

Shellseparate loading, bagged charge
Breechinterrupted screw
Traverse360°
Rate of fireMaximum: 4 rpm/3 min.[2]
Sustained: 1 rpm[2]
Effective firing rangeM109A1–A4:
18.1 km (11.2 mi) (M107, HE)
23.5 km (14.6 mi) (M549A1, RAP/HE)
M109A5–A7:
HE: 21 km (13 mi)
RAP: 30 km (19 mi)
Excalibur: 40 km (25 mi)[3]

ArmorAluminum alloy
Main
armament
M109: M126 155 mm 23 caliber, 28 rounds
M109A1–A4: Watervliet Arsenal M185 155 mm 39 caliber, 28 rounds (A1) or 36 rounds (A2–A4)
M109A5–A7: M284 155 mm 39 caliber[4]
Secondary
armament
.50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2 machine gun
EngineM109: Detroit Diesel 8V71T 8-cylinder water-cooled supercharged diesel engine 345 hp @ 2.300 rpm, 14.5 hp/t
M109A1–A4: Detroit Diesel 8V71T 8-cylinder water-cooled supercharged diesel engine 405 hp @ 2.300 rpm, 16.9 hp/t
M109A5–A6: Detroit Diesel 8V71T 8-cylinder water-cooled supercharged diesel engine 440 hp
M109A7: V903 675 hp
TransmissionAllison Transmission XTG-411-2A, 4 forward, 2 reverse
M109A6: Allison Transmission XTG-411-4
M109A7: HMPT-800
Suspensiontorsion bar
Ground clearanceM109A7:
longitudinal slope: 60 %
lateral slope: 40 %
trench: 72 in (1.8 m)
fording: 42 in (1.07 m)
Operational
range
216 mi (350 km)
M109A7: 186 mi (300 km)
Maximum speed 35 mph (56 km/h)
M109A7: 38 mph (61 km/h)

The M109 has a crew of four: the section chief/commander, the driver, the gunner, and the ammunition handler/loader. The chief or gunner aims the cannon left or right (deflection) and up and down (quadrant).

The British Army replaced its M109s with the AS-90. Several European armed forces have or are currently replacing older M109s with the German PzH 2000. Upgrades to the M109 were introduced by the U.S. (see variants) and by Switzerland (KAWEST). With the cancellation of the U.S. Crusader and Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon, the M109A6 ("Paladin") will likely remain the principal self-propelled howitzer for the U.S. until the new M1299 enters service.

Operational history

 
A M109 A3 self-propelled howitzer

The M109 was the medium variant of a U.S. program to adopt a common chassis for its self-propelled artillery units. The light version, the M108 Howitzer, was phased out during the Vietnam War, but many were rebuilt as M109s.

The M109 saw its combat debut in Vietnam. Around 200 vehicles were deployed in 1966, but the entire fleet suffered a mechanical malfunction within a year of operation. The U.S. dispatched engineers and mechanics, but all M109s were recalled back to the U.S. in 1967 after failing to repair in the field. The howitzer underwent upgrades afterward, which resulted in the M109A1 variant that went into production in 1970.[5]

Israel used the M109 against Egypt in the 1973 Yom Kippur War and in the 1982 and 2006 Lebanon Wars. Iran used the M109 in the Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s. The M109 saw service with the British, Egyptian and Saudi Arabian Armies in the 1991 Gulf War. The M109 saw service with the U.S. Army in the Gulf War, as well as in the Iraq War from 2003 to 2011.

Upgrades to the cannon, ammunition, fire control, survivability, and other electronics systems over the design's lifespan have expanded the system's capabilities, including tactical nuclear projectiles, guided projectiles (Copperhead), Rocket Assisted Projectiles (RAP), FAmily of SCAtterable Mines (FASCAM), and cluster munitions (the Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munition, DPICM).

In August 2015, South Korean K55A1s fired rounds behind the Military Demarcation Line as a warning after several North Korean provocations.[6]

During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Ukraine used M109 howitzers which were donated by Western countries.[7]

Design

The M109 was developed by the Ground System Division of United Defense LP, now BAE Systems Land and Armaments.[4]

Armament

 
Open breech of a M109A5 howitzer

Hypervelocity Projectile (HVP)

In January 2016, the U.S. Army test-fired hypervelocity projectiles originally designed for use by U.S. Navy electromagnetic railguns. They found that they significantly increased the gun's range. The Army is looking into using the M109 Paladin firing the HVP for ballistic missile defense, as traditional missile interceptors are expensive, and gun-based missile defense used for point defense would use artillery at a much lower cost per round.[8][9]

The HVP is capable of being fired out to 50 nautical miles (58 mi; 93 km) from a conventional cannon. It weighs 68 lb (31 kg) with a 46 lb (21 kg) flight body containing its guidance and warhead—less powerful, but more agile to hit small, high-speed targets. Modifications will be needed for the Paladin to effectively shoot the HVP, possibly including different propellant to achieve higher velocities, automated reloading systems to fire quickly enough to defeat salvo launches, improved barrel life, and a new fire control and sensor system.[10] During a test of the Air Force's Advanced Battle Management System (ABMS) in September 2020, an HVP fired from an Army Paladin howitzer successfully intercepted a BQM-167 target drone simulating a cruise missile.[11][12]

Variants

M109

 
An M109 entering South Vietnam

First produced in 1963. It had a 23 caliber 155 mm M126 Cannon in an M127 Mount, and carried 28 rounds of 155 mm ammunition. It was also armed with a .50cal M2HB machine gun with 500 rounds of ammunition. Easily identified by its short barrel and a double baffle muzzle brake with a large fume extractor just behind it. Maximum range of 14,600 meters.

M109A1

Replaced the M126 Cannon with a 39 caliber M185 Cannon, featuring a longer barrel while increasing maximum range to 18,100 meters.

M109A2

Incorporated 27 Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability (RAM) mid-life improvements. Most notably, the long barreled 155 mm M185 Cannon in the new M178 gun mount, ballistic protection for the panoramic telescope, counterbalanced travel lock, and the ability to mount the M140 bore sight alignment device. Stowage of 155mm rounds increased from 28 to 36 rounds; .50cal ammunition remained at 500 rounds. During M109A2 production, a slightly simplified version was also produced for export. This had minor internal changes and deleted the hull flotation feature. These were designated M109A1B.[13]

M109A3 and M109A3B

M109A1s and M109A1Bs rebuilt to M109A2 standard respectively. Some A3s feature three contact arm assemblies[further explanation needed], while all A2s have five.

M109A4

M109A2s and M109A3s improved with Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical / Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability (NBC/RAM) improvements, including air purifiers, heaters, and Mission Oriented Protective Posture (MOPP) (protective) gear.

The traversing mechanism's clutch was hydraulic, as compared to the electric mechanism on previous M109s, and featured a manual override. The M109A4 gained a second hydraulic filter, and also included an improvement to the engine starting equipment which greatly improved the ability to start in an emergency.

Ammunition stowage remained the same as in previous models.

M109A5

 
A M109A5 under repair

Replaces the 155 mm M185 Cannon in an M178 Mount with a 39-caliber 155 mm M284 Cannon in an M182 Mount, giving the A5 a maximum range of 22,000 meters with unassisted projectiles and 30,000 meters with Rocket Assisted Projectile (RAP) rounds.[14] The vehicle can carry 36 complete rounds of ammunition and has a 440 hp engine instead of the standard 405 hp engine.

M109A5+

Various manufacturers have upgraded the fire control and other components of the M109A5. BAE Systems in York PA recently delivered 12 M109A5+ vehicles to Chile and 40 M109A5+ vehicles for Brazil.

M109A6 "Paladin"

 
A M109A6 "Paladin" firing at night
 
An M109A6 firing a shell during combat operations in Fallujah, Iraq

The Paladin model has improvements in the areas of survivability, RAM, and armament. This includes increased armor, a redesigned internal arrangement for safer ammunition and equipment storage, engine and suspension upgrades, and improvement of the M284 Cannon and M182A1 Mount. The greatest difference is the integration of an inertial navigation system, sensors detecting the weapons' lay, automation, and an encrypted digital communication system, which utilizes computer controlled frequency-hopping to avoid enemy electronic warfare and allow the howitzer to send grid location and altitude to the battery Fire Direction Center (FDC).

The battery FDCs coordinates fires through a battalion or higher FDC. This allows the Paladin to halt from the move and fire within 30 seconds, with an accuracy equivalent to the previous models when properly emplaced, laid, and safed—a process that previously required several minutes under the best of circumstances. Tactically, this improves the system's survivability by allowing the battery to operate dispersed in pairs across the countryside, and allowing the howitzer to quickly move between salvos, or if attacked by indirect fire, aircraft, or ground forces.

Ammunition storage of 155 mm rounds was increased from 36 to 39.

The US Army received the first Paladin in 1994 and the last of 950 in 1999.[citation needed]

M109 "KAWEST"

 
A Swiss M109 KAWEST howitzer in 2009

This Swiss improved version produced by Ruag incorporates a new Swiss-designed L47 155 mm gun with an increased firing range of up to 36 km. It features an inertial navigation system coupled with a new gun-laying system, along with an ammunition storage increase of 40 rounds and 64 charges. The KAWEST (lit. Kampfwertsteigerung = upgrade of combat capabilities) requires only six crew members instead of eight. It is able to fire three-round bursts within 15 seconds, or maintain a constant firing rate of over one round per minute.[15][16]

Upgraded Swiss PzHb (Panzerhaubitze) 79 and 88 (M109A1) are known as respectively PzHb 79/95 and PzHb 88/95.[citation needed]

M109L52

Jointly developed by the Dutch firm RDM and the German firm Rheinmetall, the M109L52 was first revealed in 2002. The main improvement was replacing the M126 series gun with the longer 52-caliber cannon from the PzH 2000, thus the MTLS ammunition of the PzH 2000 can be used. Improvements to the loading system were also made, resulting in an increased rate of fire from 3 rds/min to 9–10 rds/min, able to be sustained for up to 2 minutes. A total of 35 rounds can be carried.

M109A3GNM

The latest version in service with the Norwegian Army's Artilleribataljonen. 126 M109Gs were acquired from West Germany between 1969 and 1971. They were then upgraded to the M109A3GN configuration during the latter half of the 1980s. In 2006, there were 56 M109A3GNs in the Army's inventory, meaning that at least 70 SPGs had been scrapped after the end of the Cold War. 14 of the M109A3GNs received upgrades in 2007, and were designated M109A3GNM.[17] The upgrade includes a new intercom and new navigation and positioning systems.

In 2020 the 14 units with A3GNM upgrades and those still with A3GN specs were placed in storage because all the new Korean K9 Thunder units had been delivered.[18] In May 2022, Norway donated 22 A3GN-spec M109s to Ukraine.[19] Two M109A3GN howitzers were destroyed and three damaged during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[20]

K55

K55 is a South Korean license produced variant of the M109A2. In the 1960s, the South Korean Army received M107 and M110 from the United States. However, the number of these self-propelled guns was insufficient to counter rapidly-growing North Korean artillery capabilities. In the 1970s, South Korea began mass-producing towed howitzers locally, but intelligence reports of North Korean 170 mm self-propelled artillery forced South Korea to look for a new self-propelled artillery system.[5]

In December 1983, the ministers of defense of the United States and South Korea signed a MOU to co-produce M109A2 in South Korea using American technical data. The United States delivered two completed M109A2s to South Korea for operational review, and the Agency for Defense Development began to translate the data package and created field and maintenance manuals for soldiers. South Korea wanted to produce every part of the vehicle domestically; however, due to the amendment bill by Rep. Samuel S. Stratton of New York, which established a limit for foreign military technology cooperation, the turret and the M185 cannon from Watervliet Arsenal were imported from the United States.[5]

Compared to the M109A2, besides 63 percent of parts being produced locally, K55 has a driver's night periscope and light exposure minimization device to enhance night-time operations as well as additional radio systems. The vehicle has an NBC protection system and halon fire extinguishers. A total of 1,180 K55s were produced between 1985 and 1996.[5][21] The vehicle's name was changed from KM109A2 to K55, originally a code name from the Samsung factory.

In November 1990, the United States and South Korea signed an agreement to allow South Korea to supply M109 parts to third parties.[22] In May 1997, during the Security Cooperation Committee held in Washington D.C., South Korea requested that the United States revise the MOU to export complete K55s, originally intended for domestic use only. South Korea was expecting to export 72 K55s and four ammunition support vehicles to Brazil for $160 million over Belgium's offer, but the United States Department of Defense declined the request to avoid an arms race in the region.[23][24]

In May 1998, the South Korean military began operating a K55 simulator to boost artillery operator training. The simulator took a year and a billion KRW budget to develop. It is expected to save 150 million KRW per year per device.[25]

K55A1

The K55A1 is a South Korean overhaul and modernization of the K55, augmenting the proven systems of the K9 Thunder and the K9 upgrade plan. The development took three years between 2007 and 2010. The upgrade started in 2010.[5] In November 2010, in the wake of the North Korean artillery attack, the South Korean government authorized a massive increase in military spending. South Korea allocated 11.5 billion KRW on K55A1 upgrades for FY2011, more than a 1500% increase from 700 million KRW for FY2010.[26] The upgrade was performed by Samsung Techwin, and the first vehicle was fielded by the South Korean Army in early 2011.[27]

The K55A1 is fitted with the same electronics and fire control system as the K9. The self-propelled gun has significantly enhanced field operability and accuracy through the installation of Honeywell Aerospace's TALIN 5000 INS (inertial navigation system), a satellite navigation device (GPS), and a speed calibrator. As a result, the vehicle automatically lays the gun in the desired direction and delivers a first round within 45 seconds when stationary, or 75 seconds on the move after receiving the shooting specification, which required 2 minutes and 11 minutes, respectively, on the K55.[5][28][29][30][31]

With the help of a new semi-autoloader, while charges are still inserted manually, the howitzer can fire 4 rounds per minute, increased from 2 to 3 rounds per minute. The improved suspension, involving a strut-type hydropneumatic buffer from Mottrol Co, Ltd., along with an enhanced chamber, allowed the vehicle to shoot without laying spades at a maximum distance of 32 km using base bleed ammunition. An APU (auxiliary power unit) was installed to operate the howitzer without turning on the main engine.[5][28][32][33][34]

The Army Consolidated Maintenance Depot joined the K55A1 upgrade, releasing its first results in December 2013.[35] The upgrade cost 20% of the K9 Thunder, 800 million KRW, as of 2021.[28]

M109A7

The newest M109 version for U.S. service is the M109A7, formerly known as the M109A6 Paladin Integrated Management (PIM). The M109A7 shares common chassis components with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle (BFV) such as the engine, transmission, and tracks. This creates commonality with other systems and maximizes cost savings in production, parts inventory, and maintenance personnel. The M109A7's onboard power systems harness technologies originally developed for the Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon.[36]

The electric drive is faster than the previous hydraulic system, and the automatic rammer more consistently rams the round into the gun for consistent velocities and better accuracy. It features a 600-volt onboard power system to accommodate additional armor and future networking technologies as they become ready. The M109A7 can sustain a one-round per-minute rate of fire and a maximum rate of fire of four rounds per minute.[36] Weighing 78,000 lb (35,000 kg), the M109A7 is 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) heavier than its predecessor, and it has the capacity to grow to 110,000 lb (50,000 kg). Even with the weight increase, the M109A7 can travel faster than previous versions at 38 mph (61 km/h) and is more maneuverable than a BFV.[37]

Prototypes of the vehicle underwent government testing in preparation for a Low-Rate Initial Production (LRIP) decision. The testing included RAM, mission and ballistic hull and turret testing. The M109A7 was slated to begin LRIP by 2013. The U.S. Army planned on procuring a fleet of 580 sets of M109A7 howitzers and M992A3 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicles (FAASVs).[36]

In October 2013, the Defense Acquisition Board approved the decision to start M109A7 production. The FY 2014 budget called for $340.8 million in Paladin funding, which would be two dozen vehicle sets at $14.4 million per vehicle. The Army plans to buy 133 vehicles, in 66 one-half vehicle sets starting in 2014. One M109A7 howitzer and two supporting M992A3 ammunition carriers will be destroyed during tests. A Full-Rate Production (FRP) decision was planned for February 2017.[38][39]

In October 2013, BAE received a $668 million contract to begin LRIP of the M109A7.[40] The first M109A6 and M992A2 vehicles were rebuilt to M109A7 and M992A3 standards as part of LRIP beginning in summer 2014.[41] LRIP deliveries began in April 2015.[42] The contract for FRP was signed in December 2017, with 48 vehicles slated for construction.[43] The Army plans to upgrade 689 Paladins to A7-standard.[44]

 
A XM1113 extended range artillery round, shown here at a range demonstration, uses a rocket-assist motor

The Army is looking to increase the capabilities of the M109A7. By introducing the new XM1113 rocket-assisted projectile (RAP),[45] it can reach 40 km (25 mi) from the current 39-caliber barrel. A planned barrel extension to 58-caliber can increase its range to 70 km (43 mi). An additional XM1113 improvement over the legacy RAP round is the replacement of the high explosive, TNT, with an insensitive munition that is less volatile and less prone to unplanned detonation.[citation needed] The Army is working on an autoloader to increase the sustained rate of fire to 6–10 rounds per minute.[45]

Another part of the effort is the use of a new supercharged propellant to fire the shells, which required redesigning the howitzer to handle higher pressures.[46] These improvements are being developed under the Extended Range Cannon Artillery (ERCA) program, which upgraded the design so much it was re-designated the M1299. One battalion of vehicles is planned to begin a year-long operational assessment in 2023. The autoloader is planned to be ready in 2025.[47]

Derivatives

M992

 
A M992A3 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicle (M992A3 FAASV)

The M992 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicle (FAASV) is built on the chassis of the M109. It replaced the M548. Unlike the M548, it is armored. This ammunition vehicle has no turret, but has a taller superstructure to store 93 rounds and an equivalent number of powders and primers.

This vehicle is fitted with a Halon fire suppression system and a weapons mount similar to that on the M109 turret, usually mounting a Mk 19 grenade launcher for local defense against infantry and light armored vehicles.

The vehicle contains a 2-stroke diesel powered auxiliary power unit that can power all non-automotive energy requirements on the FAASV and on the M109.

K66

The K66 was a planned ammunition support vehicle for the K55. As a follow-up to the K55 program, Samsung Aerospace Industries prepared for licensing a local variant of the M992, featuring such modifications as NBC protection and an increase of ammunition storage capacity to 110 rounds, 116 packs of powders, and 132 primers.[48]

In 1987, Samsung Aerospace Industries competed against the Daewoo Heavy Industries' ammunition support vehicle based on the K200 APC. Daewoo Heavy Industries' vehicle was selected as the K66, but failed the test evaluation. The K66 project was cancelled in the mid-1990s, resulting in a lawsuit.[21]

K77 FDCV (Fire Direction Center Vehicle)

The K77 FDCV is a command & control post vehicle variant based on the K55 platform.[49]

K56 ARV (Ammunition Resupply Vehicle)

The K56 ARV is an ammunition resupply vehicle based on the K55 platform.[50] Unlike the K10 ARV, the K56 can resupply both the K55A1 and the K9 Thunder. It has a 45.7% (4,197 out of 9,191 total parts) compatibility with the K55A1.[51]

After 10 months of pilot experiment, the K56 program was authorized by the DAPPC (Defense Acquisition Program Promotion Committee) in February 2007.[52] In May 2007, the DAPPC allocated 16 billion KRW for research and development for 2008 to 2010, with plans to produce 520 vehicles between 2011 and 2020.[53] In June 2008, Samsung Techwin was selected as the main contractor for the project.[54] Later, the development completion schedule was delayed to 2011, while the total production amount was increased to 700 vehicles with a cost of 1.3 trillion KRW between 2012 and 2021.[55]

In September 2010, the Board of Audit and Inspection claimed that the Army was biased during evaluation, and demanded re-analysis of the project regarding inefficiency of the system. The Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) ignored the Board and continued with the project while the Army purposely delayed complying.[54] In June 2011, the Ministry of Defense again ordered a reexamination of the resupply vehicle.[56] DAPA instead requested a budget for the program, and the development was completed in October 2011.[57][51] In July 2013, the DAPA announced the 1st production batch of the K56 between 2013 and 2015 for 65 billion KRW.[58]

In December 2015, Hanwha Techwin signed a contract with the DAPA for a 2nd production batch. In January 2018, Hanwha Land Systems announced a 166.4 billion KRW contract with the DAPA for a 3rd production batch and related products.[59] In June 2020, Hanwha Defense announced 380.3 billion KRW contract with the DAPA for a 4th production batch.[60] South Korea plans a 5th production batch and to achieve full operational capability by 2025. All K56s were delivered to the western front.[61]

Training systems

The US Army uses the Fire Support Combined Arms Tactical Trainer (FSCATT) in two versions, for initial and sustainment training of the M109A6 and M109A5.[62] The system uses an actual surplus turret and a simulated ammunition system.

The Swiss Army uses a highly advanced KAWEST trainer from Van Halteren Metaal of the Netherlands.

The Dutch, Belgian, Thai, and Israeli Armies have various configurations of the Van Halteren Metaal M109 Howitzer Crew Trainer (HCT).

The US Army PEO STRI had a program called M109A7 Howitzer Crew Trainer (HCT). The plan was to procure 16 systems beginning in the 3rd Quarter of FY 20.[63]

Successors

The U.S. Army sought to replace the M109 with the XM2001 Crusader, initially part of the Armored Systems Modernization program. The program was canceled in 2002 amid criticism that the program was not in line with the Army's long-term plans for lighter armored brigades.[64] Funding was redirected to the Future Combat Systems Manned Ground Vehicles program, which produced the 18-ton XM1203 Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon as the program's lead effort. The Pentagon terminated the MGV program in 2009 due to concerns over its affordability.[65] The U.S. Army's M1299 howitzer was planned to be completed in 2021 and will undergo operational assessment in 2023.[66]

Operators

 

Current operators

M109

M109A1

M109A2/A3

M109A2/A5

M109A4

  •   Indonesia: 36 units M109A4-BE bought from Belgium
  •   Morocco: 4 M109A4
  •   Ukraine: 22 units, previously owned by Belgium, bought, refurbished and donated by the UK[79]

M109A5

 
A Moroccan M109A5 howitzer in 2012

M109A6 Paladin

 
A M109A6
  •   United States: ca. 514 in service + ca. 850 in storage in 2022[72]
  •   Saudi Arabia: 177 ordered in April 2018.[90]
  •   Republic of China (Taiwan) (Cancelled): >100 planned in 2019, 40 approved by U.S. State Department in August 2021.[91] However, the US has since cancelled the order, possibly in the wake of ramping up support for Ukraine, forcing Taiwan to consider alternative options.[92]
  •   Ukraine: 18 (pledged by the US)[93]

M109A7

K55/K55A1

Former operators

M109A2/A3

  •   Belgium: 167 A2, of which 64 were upgraded to the -A4BE standard, 31 sold to Brazil (1999–2001), 43 sold to Morocco (2008), the remainder being decommissioned
  •   Denmark: 2–6 (upgraded to M109 A3DK, used to be 76)[95]
  •   Germany: 570 A3GE A1/A2, phased out by 1 July 2007 and replaced by the PzH 2000
  •   Italy: 221 M109L (M109 modernized to A3 equivalent with Italian-made 155 mm/39 calibre barrels),[96] replaced by PzH 2000
  •   Kuwait: Unknown when entered service or when withdrawn
  •   Netherlands: 126 as of 1998, replaced by the PzH 2000, 5 sold to Austria (1997), 87 to United Arab Emirates (1997), 121 to Jordan (2011–2012))
  •   Norway: 33 in storage after donation of 22 to Ukraine in 2022.[19] 55 in storage in 2021.[97] Inventory of 14 M109A3GNM + 42 M109A3GN in 2019.
  •   Portugal: 6 A2 since 1981 (Portuguese Army). Currently retired from active service and replaced by 18 M109A5 in 2002.[98]
  •   United Kingdom: 140+ entered service in 1965, upgraded to -A1 and -A2 standards, 83 sold to Austria in 1994 (51 A2, 32 A3)

M109A4

  •   Belgium: 64 A4BE of which 36 A4BE sold to Indonesia (2017–2018) and unknown number (at least 20 units) bought by the UK for Ukraine
  •   Canada: 76 A4B+.[99] Used by the Canadian Forces from 1967 until 2005, when they were phased out. All the vehicles had been modernized to the M109A4B+ SPH standard in the 1980s. They were primarily used by the 4 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group in Germany.[100]

International equivalents

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Battle of Mosul 2016– French Artillery Fire on ISIS / M109 Paladins Fire Support". YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b Quitney, Jeff (14 March 2012). "M109 155mm Howitzer Self-Propelled from "Weapons of the Field Artillery" 1965 US Army" – via YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ "Excalibur Projectile". Raytheon missiles & defense.
  4. ^ a b "Paladin 155mm Self-Propelled Howitzer". Army Technology. from the original on 22 December 2010. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g [첨단국가의 초석, 방위산업] 자주포 개발사 - 전설의 시작 K-55, retrieved 6 August 2022
  6. ^ "복면지왕, 북한의 양면전술". h21.hani.co.kr (in Korean). Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  7. ^ "Norway supplies 22 M109 self-propelled howitzers to Ukraine". Army Technology. 9 June 2022. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  8. ^ These Are the New Weapons the Pentagon Chief Wants for Tomorrow’s Wars 3 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Defense one, 2 February 2016
  9. ^ 'Micro' Drones, 'Arsenal' Plane, Railguns Funded in New Defense Budget 2016-10-08 at the Wayback Machine, Military.com, 2 February 2016.
  10. ^ Robot Boats, Smart Guns & Super B-52s: Carter’s Strategic Capabilities Office 9 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Breaking defense, 5 February 2016
  11. ^ ABMS Demo Proves AI Chops For C2. Breaking Defense. 3 September 2020.
  12. ^ ‘Smart’ Bullet Downs Cruise Missile in 2nd ABMS Test. Air Force Magazine. 4 September 2020.
  13. ^ Lathrop, R. (5 February 2005). M109 155mm Self-Propelled Howitzer 1960–2005. Osprey Publishing. p. 15. ISBN 9781841766317.
  14. ^ "M109 155mm SP Howitzer". from the original on 7 May 2016. Retrieved 9 May 2016.
  15. ^ "M109". ruag.com. from the original on 9 July 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  16. ^ a b "Chile Requests a Mechanized Artillery Battalion". Defense Industry Daily. 6 October 2011. from the original on 9 May 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  17. ^ "Denne gjør Hæren sterkere". Forsvaret (in Norwegian). 4 September 2020. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  18. ^ "Denne gjør Hæren sterkere". Forsvaret (in Norwegian). 4 September 2020. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
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External links

  • Gary's Combat Vehicle Reference Guide
  • Fas.org
  • Globalsecurity.org
  • Israeli-weapons.com
  • M109 Technical Manuals M109 Technical Library & M109 Spare Parts

m109, howitzer, m109, redirects, here, other, uses, m109, disambiguation, m109, american, turreted, self, propelled, howitzer, first, introduced, early, 1960s, replace, been, upgraded, number, times, most, recently, m109a7, m109, family, most, common, western,. M109 redirects here For other uses see M109 disambiguation The M109 is an American 155 mm turreted self propelled howitzer first introduced in the early 1960s to replace the M44 It has been upgraded a number of times most recently to the M109A7 The M109 family is the most common Western indirect fire support weapon of maneuver brigades of armored and mechanized infantry divisions M109M109A6TypeSelf propelled artilleryPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn serviceM109 1963 presentM109A1 1970 presentM109A2 1979 presentM109A6 1994 presentM109A7 2015 presentWarsVietnam War Cambodian Civil War Yom Kippur War Iran Iraq War 1982 Lebanon war Western Sahara War Persian Gulf War Iraq War 2014 Israel Gaza conflict War in Iraq 2013 2017 1 Yemeni Civil War 2015 present Saudi Arabian led intervention in Yemen Syrian Civil War 2022 Russian invasion of UkraineProduction historyDesigned1952 1962ManufacturerCadillacGeneral MotorsChryslerBMY Harsco 1974 1994 United Defense 1994 2005 BAE Systems Inc 2005 present Samsung 1985 2015 Hanwha 2015 present SpecificationsMass27 5 tonsM109A7 84 000 lb 38 1 t Length30 ft 9 1 m Width10 ft 4 in 3 15 m Height10 ft 8 in 3 25 m Crew6 commander driver gunner 3 loaders M109A6 A7 4 commander driver gunner loader Shellseparate loading bagged chargeBreechinterrupted screwTraverse360 Rate of fireMaximum 4 rpm 3 min 2 Sustained 1 rpm 2 Effective firing rangeM109A1 A4 18 1 km 11 2 mi M107 HE 23 5 km 14 6 mi M549A1 RAP HE M109A5 A7 HE 21 km 13 mi RAP 30 km 19 mi Excalibur 40 km 25 mi 3 ArmorAluminum alloyMainarmamentM109 M126 155 mm 23 caliber 28 roundsM109A1 A4 Watervliet Arsenal M185 155 mm 39 caliber 28 rounds A1 or 36 rounds A2 A4 M109A5 A7 M284 155 mm 39 caliber 4 Secondaryarmament 50 caliber 12 7 mm M2 machine gunEngineM109 Detroit Diesel 8V71T 8 cylinder water cooled supercharged diesel engine 345 hp 2 300 rpm 14 5 hp tM109A1 A4 Detroit Diesel 8V71T 8 cylinder water cooled supercharged diesel engine 405 hp 2 300 rpm 16 9 hp tM109A5 A6 Detroit Diesel 8V71T 8 cylinder water cooled supercharged diesel engine 440 hpM109A7 V903 675 hpTransmissionAllison Transmission XTG 411 2A 4 forward 2 reverseM109A6 Allison Transmission XTG 411 4M109A7 HMPT 800Suspensiontorsion barGround clearanceM109A7 longitudinal slope 60 lateral slope 40 trench 72 in 1 8 m fording 42 in 1 07 m Operationalrange216 mi 350 km M109A7 186 mi 300 km Maximum speed35 mph 56 km h M109A7 38 mph 61 km h The M109 has a crew of four the section chief commander the driver the gunner and the ammunition handler loader The chief or gunner aims the cannon left or right deflection and up and down quadrant The British Army replaced its M109s with the AS 90 Several European armed forces have or are currently replacing older M109s with the German PzH 2000 Upgrades to the M109 were introduced by the U S see variants and by Switzerland KAWEST With the cancellation of the U S Crusader and Non Line of Sight Cannon the M109A6 Paladin will likely remain the principal self propelled howitzer for the U S until the new M1299 enters service Contents 1 Operational history 2 Design 2 1 Armament 2 1 1 Hypervelocity Projectile HVP 3 Variants 3 1 M109 3 2 M109A1 3 3 M109A2 3 4 M109A3 and M109A3B 3 5 M109A4 3 6 M109A5 3 7 M109A5 3 8 M109A6 Paladin 3 9 M109 KAWEST 3 10 M109L52 3 11 M109A3GNM 3 12 K55 3 13 K55A1 3 14 M109A7 4 Derivatives 4 1 M992 4 2 K66 4 3 K77 FDCV Fire Direction Center Vehicle 4 4 K56 ARV Ammunition Resupply Vehicle 4 5 Training systems 5 Successors 6 Operators 6 1 Current operators 6 1 1 M109 6 1 2 M109A1 6 1 3 M109A2 A3 6 1 4 M109A2 A5 6 1 5 M109A4 6 1 6 M109A5 6 1 7 M109A6 Paladin 6 1 8 M109A7 6 1 9 K55 K55A1 6 2 Former operators 6 2 1 M109A2 A3 6 2 2 M109A4 7 International equivalents 8 See also 9 Notes 10 External linksOperational history Edit A M109 A3 self propelled howitzer The M109 was the medium variant of a U S program to adopt a common chassis for its self propelled artillery units The light version the M108 Howitzer was phased out during the Vietnam War but many were rebuilt as M109s The M109 saw its combat debut in Vietnam Around 200 vehicles were deployed in 1966 but the entire fleet suffered a mechanical malfunction within a year of operation The U S dispatched engineers and mechanics but all M109s were recalled back to the U S in 1967 after failing to repair in the field The howitzer underwent upgrades afterward which resulted in the M109A1 variant that went into production in 1970 5 Israel used the M109 against Egypt in the 1973 Yom Kippur War and in the 1982 and 2006 Lebanon Wars Iran used the M109 in the Iran Iraq War in the 1980s The M109 saw service with the British Egyptian and Saudi Arabian Armies in the 1991 Gulf War The M109 saw service with the U S Army in the Gulf War as well as in the Iraq War from 2003 to 2011 Upgrades to the cannon ammunition fire control survivability and other electronics systems over the design s lifespan have expanded the system s capabilities including tactical nuclear projectiles guided projectiles Copperhead Rocket Assisted Projectiles RAP FAmily of SCAtterable Mines FASCAM and cluster munitions the Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munition DPICM In August 2015 South Korean K55A1s fired rounds behind the Military Demarcation Line as a warning after several North Korean provocations 6 During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Ukraine used M109 howitzers which were donated by Western countries 7 Design EditThe M109 was developed by the Ground System Division of United Defense LP now BAE Systems Land and Armaments 4 Armament Edit Open breech of a M109A5 howitzer Primary by Watervliet Arsenal M126 Cannon or M126A1 155 mm Howitzer M109 M185 Cannon 155 mm Howitzer A1 A2 A3 A4 or M284 Cannon 155 mm Howitzer A5 A6 Secondary 50 caliber 12 7 mm M2 machine gun Mk 19 Mod 3 40 mm Automatic Grenade Launcher 7 62 mm M60 M240 machine gun or L4 machine gunHypervelocity Projectile HVP Edit In January 2016 the U S Army test fired hypervelocity projectiles originally designed for use by U S Navy electromagnetic railguns They found that they significantly increased the gun s range The Army is looking into using the M109 Paladin firing the HVP for ballistic missile defense as traditional missile interceptors are expensive and gun based missile defense used for point defense would use artillery at a much lower cost per round 8 9 The HVP is capable of being fired out to 50 nautical miles 58 mi 93 km from a conventional cannon It weighs 68 lb 31 kg with a 46 lb 21 kg flight body containing its guidance and warhead less powerful but more agile to hit small high speed targets Modifications will be needed for the Paladin to effectively shoot the HVP possibly including different propellant to achieve higher velocities automated reloading systems to fire quickly enough to defeat salvo launches improved barrel life and a new fire control and sensor system 10 During a test of the Air Force s Advanced Battle Management System ABMS in September 2020 an HVP fired from an Army Paladin howitzer successfully intercepted a BQM 167 target drone simulating a cruise missile 11 12 Variants EditM109 Edit An M109 entering South Vietnam First produced in 1963 It had a 23 caliber 155 mm M126 Cannon in an M127 Mount and carried 28 rounds of 155 mm ammunition It was also armed with a 50cal M2HB machine gun with 500 rounds of ammunition Easily identified by its short barrel and a double baffle muzzle brake with a large fume extractor just behind it Maximum range of 14 600 meters M109A1 Edit Replaced the M126 Cannon with a 39 caliber M185 Cannon featuring a longer barrel while increasing maximum range to 18 100 meters M109A2 Edit Incorporated 27 Reliability Availability and Maintainability RAM mid life improvements Most notably the long barreled 155 mm M185 Cannon in the new M178 gun mount ballistic protection for the panoramic telescope counterbalanced travel lock and the ability to mount the M140 bore sight alignment device Stowage of 155mm rounds increased from 28 to 36 rounds 50cal ammunition remained at 500 rounds During M109A2 production a slightly simplified version was also produced for export This had minor internal changes and deleted the hull flotation feature These were designated M109A1B 13 M109A3 and M109A3B Edit M109A1s and M109A1Bs rebuilt to M109A2 standard respectively Some A3s feature three contact arm assemblies further explanation needed while all A2s have five M109A4 Edit M109A2s and M109A3s improved with Nuclear Biological and Chemical Reliability Availability and Maintainability NBC RAM improvements including air purifiers heaters and Mission Oriented Protective Posture MOPP protective gear The traversing mechanism s clutch was hydraulic as compared to the electric mechanism on previous M109s and featured a manual override The M109A4 gained a second hydraulic filter and also included an improvement to the engine starting equipment which greatly improved the ability to start in an emergency Ammunition stowage remained the same as in previous models M109A5 Edit A M109A5 under repair Replaces the 155 mm M185 Cannon in an M178 Mount with a 39 caliber 155 mm M284 Cannon in an M182 Mount giving the A5 a maximum range of 22 000 meters with unassisted projectiles and 30 000 meters with Rocket Assisted Projectile RAP rounds 14 The vehicle can carry 36 complete rounds of ammunition and has a 440 hp engine instead of the standard 405 hp engine M109A5 Edit Various manufacturers have upgraded the fire control and other components of the M109A5 BAE Systems in York PA recently delivered 12 M109A5 vehicles to Chile and 40 M109A5 vehicles for Brazil M109A6 Paladin Edit A M109A6 Paladin firing at night An M109A6 firing a shell during combat operations in Fallujah Iraq The Paladin model has improvements in the areas of survivability RAM and armament This includes increased armor a redesigned internal arrangement for safer ammunition and equipment storage engine and suspension upgrades and improvement of the M284 Cannon and M182A1 Mount The greatest difference is the integration of an inertial navigation system sensors detecting the weapons lay automation and an encrypted digital communication system which utilizes computer controlled frequency hopping to avoid enemy electronic warfare and allow the howitzer to send grid location and altitude to the battery Fire Direction Center FDC The battery FDCs coordinates fires through a battalion or higher FDC This allows the Paladin to halt from the move and fire within 30 seconds with an accuracy equivalent to the previous models when properly emplaced laid and safed a process that previously required several minutes under the best of circumstances Tactically this improves the system s survivability by allowing the battery to operate dispersed in pairs across the countryside and allowing the howitzer to quickly move between salvos or if attacked by indirect fire aircraft or ground forces Ammunition storage of 155 mm rounds was increased from 36 to 39 The US Army received the first Paladin in 1994 and the last of 950 in 1999 citation needed M109 KAWEST Edit A Swiss M109 KAWEST howitzer in 2009 This Swiss improved version produced by Ruag incorporates a new Swiss designed L47 155 mm gun with an increased firing range of up to 36 km It features an inertial navigation system coupled with a new gun laying system along with an ammunition storage increase of 40 rounds and 64 charges The KAWEST lit Kampfwertsteigerung upgrade of combat capabilities requires only six crew members instead of eight It is able to fire three round bursts within 15 seconds or maintain a constant firing rate of over one round per minute 15 16 Upgraded Swiss PzHb Panzerhaubitze 79 and 88 M109A1 are known as respectively PzHb 79 95 and PzHb 88 95 citation needed M109L52 Edit Jointly developed by the Dutch firm RDM and the German firm Rheinmetall the M109L52 was first revealed in 2002 The main improvement was replacing the M126 series gun with the longer 52 caliber cannon from the PzH 2000 thus the MTLS ammunition of the PzH 2000 can be used Improvements to the loading system were also made resulting in an increased rate of fire from 3 rds min to 9 10 rds min able to be sustained for up to 2 minutes A total of 35 rounds can be carried M109A3GNM Edit The latest version in service with the Norwegian Army s Artilleribataljonen 126 M109Gs were acquired from West Germany between 1969 and 1971 They were then upgraded to the M109A3GN configuration during the latter half of the 1980s In 2006 there were 56 M109A3GNs in the Army s inventory meaning that at least 70 SPGs had been scrapped after the end of the Cold War 14 of the M109A3GNs received upgrades in 2007 and were designated M109A3GNM 17 The upgrade includes a new intercom and new navigation and positioning systems In 2020 the 14 units with A3GNM upgrades and those still with A3GN specs were placed in storage because all the new Korean K9 Thunder units had been delivered 18 In May 2022 Norway donated 22 A3GN spec M109s to Ukraine 19 Two M109A3GN howitzers were destroyed and three damaged during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 20 K55 Edit K55 is a South Korean license produced variant of the M109A2 In the 1960s the South Korean Army received M107 and M110 from the United States However the number of these self propelled guns was insufficient to counter rapidly growing North Korean artillery capabilities In the 1970s South Korea began mass producing towed howitzers locally but intelligence reports of North Korean 170 mm self propelled artillery forced South Korea to look for a new self propelled artillery system 5 In December 1983 the ministers of defense of the United States and South Korea signed a MOU to co produce M109A2 in South Korea using American technical data The United States delivered two completed M109A2s to South Korea for operational review and the Agency for Defense Development began to translate the data package and created field and maintenance manuals for soldiers South Korea wanted to produce every part of the vehicle domestically however due to the amendment bill by Rep Samuel S Stratton of New York which established a limit for foreign military technology cooperation the turret and the M185 cannon from Watervliet Arsenal were imported from the United States 5 Compared to the M109A2 besides 63 percent of parts being produced locally K55 has a driver s night periscope and light exposure minimization device to enhance night time operations as well as additional radio systems The vehicle has an NBC protection system and halon fire extinguishers A total of 1 180 K55s were produced between 1985 and 1996 5 21 The vehicle s name was changed from KM109A2 to K55 originally a code name from the Samsung factory In November 1990 the United States and South Korea signed an agreement to allow South Korea to supply M109 parts to third parties 22 In May 1997 during the Security Cooperation Committee held in Washington D C South Korea requested that the United States revise the MOU to export complete K55s originally intended for domestic use only South Korea was expecting to export 72 K55s and four ammunition support vehicles to Brazil for 160 million over Belgium s offer but the United States Department of Defense declined the request to avoid an arms race in the region 23 24 In May 1998 the South Korean military began operating a K55 simulator to boost artillery operator training The simulator took a year and a billion KRW budget to develop It is expected to save 150 million KRW per year per device 25 K55A1 Edit The K55A1 is a South Korean overhaul and modernization of the K55 augmenting the proven systems of the K9 Thunder and the K9 upgrade plan The development took three years between 2007 and 2010 The upgrade started in 2010 5 In November 2010 in the wake of the North Korean artillery attack the South Korean government authorized a massive increase in military spending South Korea allocated 11 5 billion KRW on K55A1 upgrades for FY2011 more than a 1500 increase from 700 million KRW for FY2010 26 The upgrade was performed by Samsung Techwin and the first vehicle was fielded by the South Korean Army in early 2011 27 The K55A1 is fitted with the same electronics and fire control system as the K9 The self propelled gun has significantly enhanced field operability and accuracy through the installation of Honeywell Aerospace s TALIN 5000 INS inertial navigation system a satellite navigation device GPS and a speed calibrator As a result the vehicle automatically lays the gun in the desired direction and delivers a first round within 45 seconds when stationary or 75 seconds on the move after receiving the shooting specification which required 2 minutes and 11 minutes respectively on the K55 5 28 29 30 31 With the help of a new semi autoloader while charges are still inserted manually the howitzer can fire 4 rounds per minute increased from 2 to 3 rounds per minute The improved suspension involving a strut type hydropneumatic buffer from Mottrol Co Ltd along with an enhanced chamber allowed the vehicle to shoot without laying spades at a maximum distance of 32 km using base bleed ammunition An APU auxiliary power unit was installed to operate the howitzer without turning on the main engine 5 28 32 33 34 The Army Consolidated Maintenance Depot joined the K55A1 upgrade releasing its first results in December 2013 35 The upgrade cost 20 of the K9 Thunder 800 million KRW as of 2021 28 M109A7 Edit A prototype M109A7 A M109A7 155mm SPH being tested at Yuma Proving Ground ArizonaThe newest M109 version for U S service is the M109A7 formerly known as the M109A6 Paladin Integrated Management PIM The M109A7 shares common chassis components with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle BFV such as the engine transmission and tracks This creates commonality with other systems and maximizes cost savings in production parts inventory and maintenance personnel The M109A7 s onboard power systems harness technologies originally developed for the Non Line of Sight Cannon 36 The electric drive is faster than the previous hydraulic system and the automatic rammer more consistently rams the round into the gun for consistent velocities and better accuracy It features a 600 volt onboard power system to accommodate additional armor and future networking technologies as they become ready The M109A7 can sustain a one round per minute rate of fire and a maximum rate of fire of four rounds per minute 36 Weighing 78 000 lb 35 000 kg the M109A7 is 10 000 lb 4 500 kg heavier than its predecessor and it has the capacity to grow to 110 000 lb 50 000 kg Even with the weight increase the M109A7 can travel faster than previous versions at 38 mph 61 km h and is more maneuverable than a BFV 37 Prototypes of the vehicle underwent government testing in preparation for a Low Rate Initial Production LRIP decision The testing included RAM mission and ballistic hull and turret testing The M109A7 was slated to begin LRIP by 2013 The U S Army planned on procuring a fleet of 580 sets of M109A7 howitzers and M992A3 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicles FAASVs 36 In October 2013 the Defense Acquisition Board approved the decision to start M109A7 production The FY 2014 budget called for 340 8 million in Paladin funding which would be two dozen vehicle sets at 14 4 million per vehicle The Army plans to buy 133 vehicles in 66 one half vehicle sets starting in 2014 One M109A7 howitzer and two supporting M992A3 ammunition carriers will be destroyed during tests A Full Rate Production FRP decision was planned for February 2017 38 39 In October 2013 BAE received a 668 million contract to begin LRIP of the M109A7 40 The first M109A6 and M992A2 vehicles were rebuilt to M109A7 and M992A3 standards as part of LRIP beginning in summer 2014 41 LRIP deliveries began in April 2015 42 The contract for FRP was signed in December 2017 with 48 vehicles slated for construction 43 The Army plans to upgrade 689 Paladins to A7 standard 44 A XM1113 extended range artillery round shown here at a range demonstration uses a rocket assist motor The Army is looking to increase the capabilities of the M109A7 By introducing the new XM1113 rocket assisted projectile RAP 45 it can reach 40 km 25 mi from the current 39 caliber barrel A planned barrel extension to 58 caliber can increase its range to 70 km 43 mi An additional XM1113 improvement over the legacy RAP round is the replacement of the high explosive TNT with an insensitive munition that is less volatile and less prone to unplanned detonation citation needed The Army is working on an autoloader to increase the sustained rate of fire to 6 10 rounds per minute 45 Another part of the effort is the use of a new supercharged propellant to fire the shells which required redesigning the howitzer to handle higher pressures 46 These improvements are being developed under the Extended Range Cannon Artillery ERCA program which upgraded the design so much it was re designated the M1299 One battalion of vehicles is planned to begin a year long operational assessment in 2023 The autoloader is planned to be ready in 2025 47 Derivatives EditM992 Edit Main article M992 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicle A M992A3 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicle M992A3 FAASV The M992 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicle FAASV is built on the chassis of the M109 It replaced the M548 Unlike the M548 it is armored This ammunition vehicle has no turret but has a taller superstructure to store 93 rounds and an equivalent number of powders and primers This vehicle is fitted with a Halon fire suppression system and a weapons mount similar to that on the M109 turret usually mounting a Mk 19 grenade launcher for local defense against infantry and light armored vehicles The vehicle contains a 2 stroke diesel powered auxiliary power unit that can power all non automotive energy requirements on the FAASV and on the M109 K66 Edit The K66 was a planned ammunition support vehicle for the K55 As a follow up to the K55 program Samsung Aerospace Industries prepared for licensing a local variant of the M992 featuring such modifications as NBC protection and an increase of ammunition storage capacity to 110 rounds 116 packs of powders and 132 primers 48 In 1987 Samsung Aerospace Industries competed against the Daewoo Heavy Industries ammunition support vehicle based on the K200 APC Daewoo Heavy Industries vehicle was selected as the K66 but failed the test evaluation The K66 project was cancelled in the mid 1990s resulting in a lawsuit 21 K77 FDCV Fire Direction Center Vehicle Edit The K77 FDCV is a command amp control post vehicle variant based on the K55 platform 49 K56 ARV Ammunition Resupply Vehicle Edit The K56 ARV is an ammunition resupply vehicle based on the K55 platform 50 Unlike the K10 ARV the K56 can resupply both the K55A1 and the K9 Thunder It has a 45 7 4 197 out of 9 191 total parts compatibility with the K55A1 51 After 10 months of pilot experiment the K56 program was authorized by the DAPPC Defense Acquisition Program Promotion Committee in February 2007 52 In May 2007 the DAPPC allocated 16 billion KRW for research and development for 2008 to 2010 with plans to produce 520 vehicles between 2011 and 2020 53 In June 2008 Samsung Techwin was selected as the main contractor for the project 54 Later the development completion schedule was delayed to 2011 while the total production amount was increased to 700 vehicles with a cost of 1 3 trillion KRW between 2012 and 2021 55 In September 2010 the Board of Audit and Inspection claimed that the Army was biased during evaluation and demanded re analysis of the project regarding inefficiency of the system The Defense Acquisition Program Administration DAPA ignored the Board and continued with the project while the Army purposely delayed complying 54 In June 2011 the Ministry of Defense again ordered a reexamination of the resupply vehicle 56 DAPA instead requested a budget for the program and the development was completed in October 2011 57 51 In July 2013 the DAPA announced the 1st production batch of the K56 between 2013 and 2015 for 65 billion KRW 58 In December 2015 Hanwha Techwin signed a contract with the DAPA for a 2nd production batch In January 2018 Hanwha Land Systems announced a 166 4 billion KRW contract with the DAPA for a 3rd production batch and related products 59 In June 2020 Hanwha Defense announced 380 3 billion KRW contract with the DAPA for a 4th production batch 60 South Korea plans a 5th production batch and to achieve full operational capability by 2025 All K56s were delivered to the western front 61 Training systems Edit The US Army uses the Fire Support Combined Arms Tactical Trainer FSCATT in two versions for initial and sustainment training of the M109A6 and M109A5 62 The system uses an actual surplus turret and a simulated ammunition system The Swiss Army uses a highly advanced KAWEST trainer from Van Halteren Metaal of the Netherlands The Dutch Belgian Thai and Israeli Armies have various configurations of the Van Halteren Metaal M109 Howitzer Crew Trainer HCT The US Army PEO STRI had a program called M109A7 Howitzer Crew Trainer HCT The plan was to procure 16 systems beginning in the 3rd Quarter of FY 20 63 Successors EditThe U S Army sought to replace the M109 with the XM2001 Crusader initially part of the Armored Systems Modernization program The program was canceled in 2002 amid criticism that the program was not in line with the Army s long term plans for lighter armored brigades 64 Funding was redirected to the Future Combat Systems Manned Ground Vehicles program which produced the 18 ton XM1203 Non Line of Sight Cannon as the program s lead effort The Pentagon terminated the MGV program in 2009 due to concerns over its affordability 65 The U S Army s M1299 howitzer was planned to be completed in 2021 and will undergo operational assessment in 2023 66 Operators 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 Find sources M109 howitzer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A M109 of the Egyptian Army during Operation Bright Star Current operators Edit M109 Edit Libya citation needed M109A1 Edit Djibouti 10 Ethiopia 17 Greece 51 A1B Iran 440 Morocco 44 M109A1B Oman 15 A0 Peru 12 Switzerland 224 upgraded to M109 KAWEST 67 United Arab Emirates 40 from Switzerland 68 M109A2 A3 Edit A Spanish Navy Marines M109A2 Brazil 40 A3 former Belgian Greece 84 A2 50 A3GEA1 223 A3GEA2 69 Egypt 400 A2 Jordan 356 A2 A2 90 121 M109A2 90 purchased from Netherlands Lebanon 12 A3 Morocco 78 M109A2 22 M109A3 and 40 M 109L47 Pakistan 785 A2 in service with the Pakistan Army Being upgraded to M109A5 standard 70 71 Portugal 6 A2 in 2022 72 Saudi Arabia 60 A2s are currently being upgraded to A5s 2010 Spain 6 Spanish Marines 73 Tunisia 19 20 A2 former Belgian Ukraine 22 A3GN donated by Norway 74 M109A2 A5 Edit Austria 33 A2 A5O citation needed Latvia 59 A5O 75 76 77 Republic of China Taiwan 197 Ukraine 6 units previously owned by Latvia 78 M109A4 Edit Indonesia 36 units M109A4 BE bought from Belgium Morocco 4 M109A4 Ukraine 22 units previously owned by Belgium bought refurbished and donated by the UK 79 M109A5 Edit A Moroccan M109A5 howitzer in 2012 Brazil 96 A5 A5 80 81 More 56 surplus U S Army to be upgraded to M109A5 contract awarded to BAE Systems 82 83 84 Chile 48 24 from Switzerland upgraded to M 109 KAWEST 68 16 12 A3 and 12 A5 Upgrade to similar Paladin configuration 85 Egypt 201 Saudi Arabia 36 Iraq 90 86 Israel 600 Pakistan ca 115 in 2022 Portugal 18 since 2002 Portuguese Army 6 of these vehicles were M109A2 A3 upgraded to A5 variant This variant replaced the previous 6 M109A2 operated by the Portuguese Army 87 Thailand 20 Greece 12 Spain 96 Spanish Army 88 Morocco 70 89 Lebanon 74 TBD citation needed Republic of China Taiwan 28 citation needed M109A6 Paladin Edit A M109A6 United States ca 514 in service ca 850 in storage in 2022 72 Saudi Arabia 177 ordered in April 2018 90 Republic of China Taiwan Cancelled gt 100 planned in 2019 40 approved by U S State Department in August 2021 91 However the US has since cancelled the order possibly in the wake of ramping up support for Ukraine forcing Taiwan to consider alternative options 92 Ukraine 18 pledged by the US 93 M109A7 Edit United States 48 with a further 180 contracted options 94 K55 K55A1 Edit South Korea 1 180 K55s were produced by Samsung Aerospace Industries between 1985 and 1996 All vehicles are undergoing upgrade to K55A1 since 2010 Operated by the Army and the Marine Corps Former operators Edit M109A2 A3 Edit Belgium 167 A2 of which 64 were upgraded to the A4BE standard 31 sold to Brazil 1999 2001 43 sold to Morocco 2008 the remainder being decommissioned Denmark 2 6 upgraded to M109 A3DK used to be 76 95 Germany 570 A3GE A1 A2 phased out by 1 July 2007 and replaced by the PzH 2000 Italy 221 M109L M109 modernized to A3 equivalent with Italian made 155 mm 39 calibre barrels 96 replaced by PzH 2000 Kuwait Unknown when entered service or when withdrawn Netherlands 126 as of 1998 replaced by the PzH 2000 5 sold to Austria 1997 87 to United Arab Emirates 1997 121 to Jordan 2011 2012 Norway 33 in storage after donation of 22 to Ukraine in 2022 19 55 in storage in 2021 97 Inventory of 14 M109A3GNM 42 M109A3GN in 2019 Portugal 6 A2 since 1981 Portuguese Army Currently retired from active service and replaced by 18 M109A5 in 2002 98 United Kingdom 140 entered service in 1965 upgraded to A1 and A2 standards 83 sold to Austria in 1994 51 A2 32 A3 M109A4 Edit Belgium 64 A4BE of which 36 A4BE sold to Indonesia 2017 2018 and unknown number at least 20 units bought by the UK for Ukraine Canada 76 A4B 99 Used by the Canadian Forces from 1967 until 2005 when they were phased out All the vehicles had been modernized to the M109A4B SPH standard in the 1980s They were primarily used by the 4 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group in Germany 100 International equivalents Edit2S3 Akatsiya Soviet Russian equivalent 2S19 Msta Soviet Russian equivalent 2S35 Koalitsiya SV Russian equivalent AHS Krab Polish equivalent PzH 2000 German equivalent GCT 155mm French equivalent AS 90 British equivalent K9 Thunder South Korean howitzer developed by Samsung Techwin 152mm SpGH DANA Army of the Slovak Republic Type 75 Type 99 Japanese equivalent Palmaria Italian equivalent built for export PLZ 05 Chinese equivalent Sholef Israeli equivalent prototype Bandkanon 1 armored self propelled L 50 155 mm gun for the Swedish Army from 1967 to 2003See also EditList of artillery List of land vehicles of the U S Armed Forces M107 standard 155mm High Explosive HE projectile M549 HE Rocket Assisted HERA projectile M864 Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munition DPICM M795 a more lethal longer range version of the M107 HE projectileNotes Edit Battle of Mosul 2016 French Artillery Fire on ISIS M109 Paladins Fire Support YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 a b Quitney Jeff 14 March 2012 M109 155mm Howitzer Self Propelled from Weapons of the Field Artillery 1965 US Army via YouTube a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Excalibur Projectile Raytheon missiles amp defense a b Paladin 155mm Self Propelled Howitzer Army Technology Archived from the original on 22 December 2010 Retrieved 23 December 2010 a b c d e f g 첨단국가의 초석 방위산업 자주포 개발사 전설의 시작 K 55 retrieved 6 August 2022 복면지왕 북한의 양면전술 h21 hani co kr in Korean Retrieved 17 February 2022 Norway supplies 22 M109 self propelled howitzers to Ukraine Army Technology 9 June 2022 Retrieved 5 November 2022 These Are the New Weapons the Pentagon Chief Wants for Tomorrow s Wars Archived 3 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine Defense one 2 February 2016 Micro Drones Arsenal Plane Railguns Funded in New Defense Budget Archived 2016 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Military com 2 February 2016 Robot Boats Smart Guns amp Super B 52s Carter s Strategic Capabilities Office Archived 9 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine Breaking defense 5 February 2016 ABMS Demo Proves AI Chops For C2 Breaking Defense 3 September 2020 Smart Bullet Downs Cruise Missile in 2nd ABMS Test Air Force Magazine 4 September 2020 Lathrop R 5 February 2005 M109 155mm Self Propelled Howitzer 1960 2005 Osprey Publishing p 15 ISBN 9781841766317 M109 155mm SP Howitzer Archived from the original on 7 May 2016 Retrieved 9 May 2016 M109 ruag com Archived from the original on 9 July 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2018 a b Chile Requests a Mechanized Artillery Battalion Defense Industry Daily 6 October 2011 Archived from the original on 9 May 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Denne gjor Haeren sterkere Forsvaret in Norwegian 4 September 2020 Retrieved 4 June 2022 Denne gjor Haeren sterkere Forsvaret in Norwegian 4 September 2020 Retrieved 4 June 2022 a b Norway has donated M109 to Ukraine regjeringen no Norwegian Government 8 June 2022 Oryx Attack On Europe Documenting Ukrainian Equipment Losses During The 2022 Russian Invasion Of Ukraine Oryx Retrieved 5 November 2022 a b 김대영의 무기 인사이드 우리 군에서 영구 결번된 비운의 국산장갑차 K66 나우뉴스 in Korean Retrieved 8 August 2022 李敦琯기자 한반도 전쟁발발시 美전투력 즉각 증강 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 8 August 2022 국산 1백55mm 자주포 대량수출 전망 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 8 August 2022 1백55mm 국산자주포 수출 무산 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 8 August 2022 朴成雨기자 포병학교 자주포 조종 시뮬레이터 개발 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 8 August 2022 기자 김남권 국방위 내년 국방예산 7천146억원 증액 의결 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 12 August 2022 국방일보 K55A1 자주포 국방일보 Retrieved 10 August 2022 a b c 국방일보 생존 기동 효율성 완벽 호흡 환상의 짝꿍 자랑 국방일보 Retrieved 14 August 2022 똑똑하게 다시 태어났다 K55A1 자주포 retrieved 12 August 2022 TZEN APU www tzen co kr Retrieved 12 August 2022 방위산업용 부품 주 모트롤 in Korean Retrieved 19 August 2022 똑똑하게 다시 태어났다 K55A1 자주포 retrieved 12 August 2022 TZEN APU www tzen co kr Retrieved 12 August 2022 방위산업용 부품 주 모트롤 in Korean Retrieved 19 August 2022 국방일보 전투장비 100 성능발휘 보장 국방일보 Retrieved 10 August 2022 a b c Army developing new self propelled howitzer 1 September 2011 Archived from the original on 11 October 2012 Retrieved 5 September 2011 US Army Breaking Out the Big New Guns Defensenews com 27 April 2014 BAE Systems could obtain new contract from U S Army for M109A7 155m self propelled howitzer Archived 29 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Armyrecognition com 26 October 2013 New Paladin to Enter Low Rate Production Defensenews com 21 October 2013 BAE Systems Awarded Contract to Begin Production of Paladin Integrated Management Archived 2 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine BAE press release 31 October 2013 Self propelled howitzer M109A7 and M992A3 carrier ammunition enter in service with U S Army Archived 16 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine Armyrecognition com 20 May 2014 Army accepts delivery of first M109A7 Self Propelled Howitzer system Archived 10 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Army mil 9 April 2015 U S Army contracts for full rate production on M109A7 weapon vehicle Military Embedded Systems mil embedded com Archived from the original on 27 December 2017 Retrieved 28 December 2017 Plan would double artillery upgrades in Army arsenal over the next five years Army Times 22 March 2019 a b US Army to demo precision strike hypersonics ramjet capabilities in just a few years Defense News 20 March 2018 New Army Cannon Doubles Range Ramjet Ammo May Be Next Breaking Defense 6 March 2020 Army Outlines Ambitious Schedule For Robots Armor Breaking Defense 19 March 2021 K66 Archived from the original on 30 April 2011 Hanwha Defense K77 www hanwha defense co kr Retrieved 8 August 2022 한화디펜스 K56 www hanwha defense co kr in Korean Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b K55A1자주포의 단짝 K56탄약운반장갑차 실전 배치 www korea kr in Korean Retrieved 19 August 2022 제13회 방위사업추진위원회 개최 결과 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 12 August 2022 K 55용 탄약운반 장갑차 3년내 개발 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 19 August 2022 a b 송한진 李 국방 제28회 방위사업추진위원회 주재 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 19 August 2022 자주포 탄약운반장갑차 개발 엉터리 조사 토대로 軍 1조2000억원대 사업 강행 국민일보 in Korean 27 September 2010 Retrieved 19 August 2022 軍 중기 전력 13개 사업 재검토 국민일보 in Korean 14 June 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2022 홍장기 탱크 여러대 잡는 확산탄 2014년 도입 n news naver com in Korean Retrieved 19 August 2022 제 68회 방위사업추진위원회 개최결과 www korea kr in Korean Retrieved 10 August 2022 NEWSIS 2 January 2018 한화테크윈 종속사 방위청과 4729억원 규모 공급 계약 체결 newsis in Korean Retrieved 22 August 2022 머니투데이 30 June 2020 한화디펜스 3803억원 규모 K56 장갑차 4차 양산 계약 머니투데이 in Korean Retrieved 22 August 2022 국방일보 K56 탄약운반장갑차 국방일보 Retrieved 22 August 2022 Fire Support Combined Arms Tactical Trainer FS CATT US Army Archived from the original on 9 November 2011 Retrieved 10 December 2011 Howitzer Crew Trainer HCT Sources Sought W900KK 19 C HCT1 Federal Business Opportunities Opportunities Archived from the original on 22 January 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2019 Shanker Thom 30 May 2002 President Formally Seeks Halt to Crusader Artillery Program The New York Times Retrieved 5 August 2018 Censer Marjorie 14 December 2009 Promising thorough vehicle review DOD Acquisition Chief Formally Terminates Army s NLOS Cannon Inside the Army Vol 21 no 49 Inside Washington Publishers JSTOR 24831487 Retrieved 18 February 2022 Vandiver John New Army cannon hits target 43 miles away in test Stars and Stripes a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Panzerhaubitze M 109 KAWEST He 18 December 2009 Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 23 December 2010 a b RUAG Land Systems 155 mm M109 upgrade Switzerland Armour amp artillery Jane s Kosmogonia gia to pyroboliko toy ES Agorazontai 36 PzH 2000 kai 169 metaxeirismena M109A3GEA2 in Greek Defence net 13 May 2009 Archived from the original on 12 May 2011 Retrieved 23 December 2010 Mehta Sureesh 2008 South Asia Defence And Strategic Year Book Pentagon Press p 329 ISBN 978 81 8274 320 5 Cold War Bargains Still to Be Had Strategy page 22 February 2010 Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 6 May 2013 a b Military Balance 2022 Obus Autopropulsado ATP M 109 A2 in Spanish Infanteria de Marina Armada Espanola Archived from the original on 26 April 2011 Retrieved 23 December 2010 Norway has donated M109 to Ukraine Norwegian Government 8 June 2022 Ministr oborony podpisal dogovor o pokupke b u gaubic u Avstrii TV net in Russian 27 May 2017 Retrieved 30 May 2017 Video Brunotie speki sak apgut jaunas haubices The Armed Forces start to master the new howitzers LSM in Latvian 9 October 2017 Archived from the original on 16 March 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 Latvija noslegusi ligumu ar Austriju par vel 18 pasgajejhaubicu iegadi TV net 18 May 2021 Retrieved 18 May 2021 armyrecognition com Six M109A5Oe self propelled howitzers sent to Ukraine by Latvia already 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1980 ISBN 0 85368 197 X M 109 A5 FMC United Defense BAE Systems Portugal Area militar Archived from the original on 23 November 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2011 ATP 155 39 M 109 A5E in Spanish Ejercito de tierra 1 December 2001 Archived from the original on 12 November 2010 Retrieved 23 December 2010 Binnie Jeremy 24 November 2016 Morocco takes delivery of M109A5 howitzers IHS Jane s 360 Retrieved 28 November 2016 The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 155mm M109A6 Paladin Medium Self Propelled Howitzer System Defense Security Cooperation Agency 5 April 2018 Archived from the original on 7 April 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2018 U S approves potential sale of howitzers to Taiwan Pentagon Reuters 4 August 2021 Retrieved 5 August 2021 Taiwan considers alternative weapons after US informs howitzer delay Al Arabiya 2 May 2022 Retrieved 3 May 2022 U S pledges 3 billion in arms to help Ukraine retake territory Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 7 January 2023 Judson Jen 21 December 2017 US Army awards BAE contract to build full rate production howitzers Defense news Stort set intet fungerende dansk artilleri tilbage Ingenioren October 2015 Quote Of the 6 operative are only 2 4 available Oto Melara 155 mm M109L self propelled howitzer Italy Armour and Artillery Jane s 9 February 2010 Archived from the original on 12 December 2009 Retrieved 23 December 2010 Fremover Bekrefter norsk artilleri til Ukraina 2022 05 24 M 109 A2 A3 FMC United Defense BAE Systems Portugal Area militar Archived from the original on 23 November 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Transformation Structure fact sheet The Canadian Army 2006 Archived from the original on 7 June 2008 Lathrop R Zaloga Steven J 2005 M109 155mm Self Propelled Howitzer 1960 2005 Bloomsbury USA p 48 ISBN 978 1 84176 631 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to M109 howitzer Gary s Combat Vehicle Reference Guide M109A7 155mm self propelled tracked howitzer artillery vehicle United States on armyrecognition com Fas org Globalsecurity org Israeli weapons com M109 Technical Manuals M109 Technical Library amp M109 Spare Parts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M109 howitzer amp oldid 1133540513, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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