ramana wrote:shaun et al can we have a list of standard PPE used in NATO and FSU countries in artillery troops.

Please id the below image and whether its still in use.

ramana wrote:shaun et al can we have a list of standard PPE used in NATO and FSU countries in artillery troops.
I think it's a 25-pounder or possibly a Yugoslav 76mm Mountain Howitzer.shaun wrote: Please id the below image and whether its still in use.
Must be 25 - Pounder but is it still in use.Jaeger wrote: I think it's a 25-pounder or possibly a Yugoslav 76mm Mountain Howitzer.
What planet do you inhabit? Have you even read what has been penned in the preceding posts?Gyan wrote:
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There is a huge lobby against Dhanush, lets see what happens.
IIRC ATAGS has 27 liter chamber.Singha wrote:the atags will be perhaps the first army howitzer in world with a 25 liter chamber unless the pzh2000 and denel G6 has it.
naval cannons however have been 55cal for a while incl all the USN ships.
we got to be careful about considering every aspect of this on the atags.
From Sanjayshaun wrote:ramana wrote:shaun et al can we have a list of standard PPE used in NATO and FSU countries in artillery troops.Pretty exhaustive eh.. .!!!...NATO have different armies with various equipment , apart from what Nirav ji have told , i will surely dig in to it.
Please id the below image and whether its still in use.
Marten, Excellent question.Marten wrote:Can anyone share the shrapnel (airburst) radius? Unnamed sources claim 100m for 155. Is this correct?
I am still studying accounts from WWII onwards and will report back.negi wrote:^ Side slap can cause a shell to go off if the fuze is armed and is designed to go off on impact (be it head on or grazing impact); of course all depends on how violent the side slap is i.w what is impulse which the shell experiences when decelerating within the barrel due to the side slap, however in this case side slap was not the only event that occurred as per reports shell did hit the muzzle break so if the impact was much closer to a head on impact shell would go off.
ramana wrote:Marten, Excellent question.Marten wrote:Can anyone share the shrapnel (airburst) radius? Unnamed sources claim 100m for 155. Is this correct?
When the shell bursts most of the fragments will be from the cylindrical portion. The nose tip and the base would come off as one piece due to their stiffness.
There is a Canadian artillery presentation of the lethality of the shell fragments as function of distance will try to locate. Meantime you can Google too! Use key words: shell fragments super quick and 155 mm.
Airburst shells are different as they have small spherical pellets held together in wax or epoxy. US calls them beehive from the buzz of the pellets whizzing by. These have a proximity fuze and bursting charge along the middle.
In Angola, the South Africans found most Western ordnance developed for fighting in Europe is useless as the shell fragments are too large and hence lose velocity. So they came up with these pellet loaded shells and even 250 kg bombs.
SOP was one regular shell with delay fuze to burst a shelter followed by a pellet shell.
Google For
The Last Cold War Battle: Angola"
another iran-iraq-syria shia militia thing - the so called elephant rocket. a low grade propellant & range but a heavy chargeramana wrote:Those truck mounted guns don't have stiffness and hence accuracy could be an issue.
The CAG report says 81mm and 155mm shells (~50% of the returns) were returned for cause by the IA to the OFB. Do we know what was the defects that were found?Not only did the OFBs fail to produce critical ammunition for the Indian Army, but produced poor quality ammunition, the CAG has observed.
Of the ammunition found to be faulty, the majority were 81 mm and 155 mm ammunition, the CAG observes. The 81 mm ammunition that the CAG mentions are mortars which are used respond to ceasefire violations by Pakistan. The 155 mm ammunitions are artillery shells - those used by the Bofor's Field Guns. These two alone accounted for about 59 per cent of ammunition returned.
detonation may not always be fuze initiated, especially when it happens within the barrel.ramana wrote:I am still studying accounts from WWII onwards and will report back.negi wrote:^ Side slap can cause a shell to go off if the fuze is armed and is designed to go off on impact (be it head on or grazing impact); of course all depends on how violent the side slap is i.w what is impulse which the shell experiences when decelerating within the barrel due to the side slap, however in this case side slap was not the only event that occurred as per reports shell did hit the muzzle break so if the impact was much closer to a head on impact shell would go off.
Side-slap could result in loads up to 40,000 gs lateral.
In the barrel it is accelerating!!!
There is detonation initiation chain from the nose area which occurs only if the fuze is activated.
The side-slap acceleration could be enough to set off the explosives from the shock.
If so the broken nose would be found in debris and not initiated.
That's why all those questions.
Very interesting. Was not aware of this piece of ordinance. Information online seems thin on the ground. Many thanks.ramana wrote:From Sanjay
On the artillery thread - could you educate posters that the gun most recently posted was a 75/24 pack howitzer that was used in the direct fire role during Kargil.
Here is CAG report for 2004-2005. LinkShortage in base bleed (propellant) grains from Ordnance Factory at Itarsi
Manufacturing defects in empty shells from Ordnance Factory at Ambajhari
ramana wrote:These are like Mughal cannons.
Thankfully IA guns are much superior.
Anyone know who makes the OFB shells? Which factory?
Manish_P
The CAG report says 81mm and 155mm shells (~50% of the returns) were returned for cause by the IA to the OFB. Do we know what was the defects that were found?Not only did the OFBs fail to produce critical ammunition for the Indian Army, but produced poor quality ammunition, the CAG has observed.
Of the ammunition found to be faulty, the majority were 81 mm and 155 mm ammunition, the CAG observes. The 81 mm ammunition that the CAG mentions are mortars which are used respond to ceasefire violations by Pakistan. The 155 mm ammunitions are artillery shells - those used by the Bofor's Field Guns. These two alone accounted for about 59 per cent of ammunition returned.
I was thinking the latency of the arming mechanism itself provides the delay to clear the gun barrel and some safety distance beyond that. Because even a split second latency is enough to give 200mtr distance. So I searched along the lines and sure enough I found a patent saying the exact same thing:ramana wrote:We need to understand better the dynamics inside the tube. Everyone is confident that they arm 200 feet away from the muzzle. So what other feature is needed?
So the arming is triggered inside the barrel itself but the arming mechanism is designed in a way that it takes a certain time to fully arm the fuse. By this time the shell has cleared the gun and moved away safely. Issue with this mechanism could easily make premature arming or no arming at all.This bore safety of the detonator must exist not only prior to firing the projectile, but also for a brief time after it is fired, as the projectile must not explode as soon as it leaves the muzzle of the gun or even be able to explode immediately as it leaves the muzzle. To this end a relatively long spring is wound around the ball-type detent so that a certain period of time is necessary in order for the entire length of spring to unwind and allow the pin to move into the armed position. As a result of this multiturn construction there is considerable friction force so that it is almost impossible to calculate just when the projectile will be armed after it is fired. Furthermore the balls of the detent are themselves urged centrifugally outwardly with considerable force, and frequently press on and deform the inner turns of the spring. This deformation again increases the arming time so that it is not rare in such arrangements that a projectile strikes a given target before it is armed.
Good rate of fire, glad to see all that ammo expended in these times of doom and gloom.jamwal wrote:https://www.facebook.com/ajaybaru.1976/ ... 329476261/
Looks like some live fire exercise. They are firing all types of mortar rounds, smoke, HE and illuminating. Machine gun and perhaps some heavy gun fire is audible too.
Can't help there.ramana wrote:KaranM, JayS,
Do you have any artillery officer contacts? I would like to know about the phenomena of fall-back in separate charge shells. E.g.. large bore 155mm and bagged or disc charges. Minimum qty charge and high angle fire.
Even if the time fuse was not set correct it should not have triggered explosion before the shell cleared the safety distance, because the fuse itself was not supposed to have armed until then. Time fuse will come into picture after its armed. Here we are talking of failure of arming mechanism. If this is happening systematically under some conditions then its a design flaw.negi wrote:^ But we do not know if the delay mechanism was set right ? Isn't that set on conventional arty fuses by rotating or winding it ? What if it was not done ? In that case only safety is that it won't get armed until threshold RPM is reached .
Also the online literature on fuze which OFB makes for 155 mm as per the linked article states
" It is not watertight and is not drop safe. Prematures have occurred when the weapon is fired at high muzzle velocities from longer-barrelled weapons."
Article clearly statesJayS wrote:Even if the time fuse was not set correct it should not have triggered explosion before the shell cleared the safety distance, because the fuse itself was not supposed to have armed until then. Time fuse will come into picture after its armed. Here we are talking of failure of arming mechanism. If this is happening systematically under some conditions then its a design flaw.negi wrote:^ But we do not know if the delay mechanism was set right ? Isn't that set on conventional arty fuses by rotating or winding it ? What if it was not done ? In that case only safety is that it won't get armed until threshold RPM is reached .
Also the online literature on fuze which OFB makes for 155 mm as per the linked article states
" It is not watertight and is not drop safe. Prematures have occurred when the weapon is fired at high muzzle velocities from longer-barrelled weapons."
Wow! Very impressive analysis Ramana Sir. Makes every moment on BRF worthwhile reading this kind off analysis. Thank You!ramana wrote:All right here goes:
...
IV Conclusion
We looked at unusual phenomenon of balloting and shell fall back and the M572 fuze design. In all cases it is the shell and not the gun that could be at fault. And between the shell and the fuze, its more likely it is the shell and the charge being used in the gun. We don’t know what the QA at the shell factory is regarding center of gravity offset measurements but that is a place for improvement for safety of the operators. A further look at the operating procedures with respect to ramming could be useful. ARDE Pune has the capability to perform balloting analysis of the shell and tube systems as evidenced by many papers from them in Defence Science Journal. It would be useful to have them conduct an analysis to confirm the phenomenon. Also would recommend not use the M572 in long guns (>45 caliber) and confine usage to the 39 caliber guns till inventory is over.
By "this" in the last sentence I meant by the two things you mentioned and that this would be design fault in the fuse if its happening in systematic manner. Initially the discussion was focused on failure in arming mechanism itself. But I guess if the fuse is setting off for some reason even without the arming mechanism coming into the picture then we have two things to look at. Whether its failure in the arming mechanism, or in the fuse, or both..?negi wrote:Article clearly statesJayS wrote:
Even if the time fuse was not set correct it should not have triggered explosion before the shell cleared the safety distance, because the fuse itself was not supposed to have armed until then. Time fuse will come into picture after its armed. Here we are talking of failure of arming mechanism. If this is happening systematically under some conditions then its a design flaw.
1. Not drop safe.
2. Prematures have occured when fired at high MV from large cailbre guns
even other wise safety distance is based on a default time offset issue is the distance in meters now is completely dependent on muzzle velocity in a longer calibre gun with high MV the fuse can get armed a lot earlier in flight so the distance from firing is not a constant it is actually a function of offset time and MV.
"Katrathu Kai Mann Alavu, Kallathathu Ulagalavu"ramana wrote:If they fix the problem with the Dhanush using these grains of sand, this squirrel will be happy.