The Ares Incorporated XM274 (originally designated as the medium caliber, antiarmor automatic cannon, MC-AAAC) was an American smoothbore 75mm autocannon designed by Eugene Stoner. [1] It used a rotating breech block with cased telescopic ammunition. It was developed for the HIMAG program, but was later used on a variety of test vehicles. [2]
In 1975 DARPA proposed for a high performance test bed vehicle to be made, to evaluate, among other things, a high velocity, high fire rate medium caliber autocannon. The vehicle would begin to be built in 1976 and designated the High Mobility Agility (HIMAG) vehicle. A 75mm smoothbore CTA autocannon would be made for the vehicle, originally designated as the medium caliber, antiarmor automatic cannon (MC-AAAC), later designated XM274.
The gun was to be developed under a DARPA contract by Ares Incorporated. The original contract specified a 60mm, but it was later changed to be 75mm. [1] The original design for the gun used a sliding breech, however after a failure to meet the required dispersion during testing in January 1979, the gun was instead switched to use a rotating breech. The complete HIMAG system, and thus the MC-AAAC, were sent to the Abeerdeen Proving Ground in 1980, for evaluation by the US army. [2] The HIMAG was then shipped to Fort Knox were it completed tests in 1981, and was then later used for testing in other programs. The MC-AAAC was found to have similar dispersion to a large caliber tank gun (105/120 mm), and 2 round bursts were found to be the most effective method of shooting on the move. [2]
In 1976, the HIMAG project was moved from being a DARPA contract to being under the newly formed Armoured Combat Vehicle Technology (ACVT) program, jointly run by DARPA, TACOM and the USMC. [2] Under this new program, another vehicle using the MC-AAAC was developed, the High Survivability Test Vehicle - Lightweight (HSTVL). The HSTVL had its origins in early proposals for the HIMAG. From February to July 1977 both AAI Corporation and Pacific Car and Foundry Company each designed and developed a proposal for the HSTVL project. They were both armed with the MC-AAAC, with the AAI Corporation proposal mounting it in a conventional turret with a 60 round magazine and the Pacific Car and Foundry Company proposal mounting the gun in an external elevating trunnion with 22 rounds ready. [2]
After evaluation of both proposals in late 1977, the contract was awarded to AAI Corporation, who then built the vehicle, and was then used in testing. While Pacific Car and Foundry Company lost the contract for the HSTVL, they went on to develop the elevating trunnion gun mount further. Pacific Car and Foundry Company received a contract to build the Elevated Kinetic Energy (ELKE) vehicle which was completed and sent off for testing in 1982. It mounted the MC-AAAC in an external elevating trunnion mount with a very wide range of elevation and depression angles, with the turret mounted on the hull of an M551. [2]
Also under the ACVT program, 25 different vehicle design concepts were produced, including scout vehicles, IFV's and light tanks. Most of these were to be equipped with the MC-AAAC, however a few were to be equipped with a scaled up 90mm version of the MC-AAAC, of which little information is known about, only that it was built and tested but never used in a vehicle. [3] None of these design concepts were ever built. [2]
In 1980, AAI Corporation further developed the HSTVL concept into the Rapid Deployment Force Light Tank (RDF/LT) prototype. This was, like the HSTVL, to be armed with the MC-AAAC which had now officially been designated as the XM274. As the RDF/LT was intended to have a secondary anti air role, a 75mm proximity fused HE round was made for the gun. As the XM274 was not permitted for export, another version of the RDF/LT was proposed armed with the M32 76mm rifled cannon used on the M41 for which a new APFSDS round was developed. A towed variant of the gun was also proposed, to be carried on a M31 gun carriage used by the M102 105mm howitzer, with a video system mounted on the gun so that it could be remotely aimed and fired with the gun feeding from a 6 round magazine. [3]
By the early 1980's, it was becoming apparent to the US army that the 75mm would no longer be suitable for use against more modern armor and so all new proposals for light vehicles intended to fight tanks were to instead use a larger caliber gun such as the 105mm M68, which would then lead to the AGS program. No further vehicles were produced with the XM274, though any test vehicles using the gun may have still be in use at this time. [2]
The main component of the gun is the rotating breech block. This worked by allowing the breech block to rotate to the vertical so that a round could be loaded from an autoloader, then the breech block would rotate back to the firing position to be horizontal with the barrel. When the gun was fired, the casing would then expand to seal the gap between the casing and the barrel. After firing the breech block would then rotate again to the vertical, the spent case would then be ejected from the top of the breech block by the next round being rammed up into it. [2] A self contained hydro-pneumatic recoil system was used. [3]
The maximum rate of fire was 2 rounds a second, however the FCS and stabilization was not able to keep up with this and so operationally the rate of fire was set to 1 round a second. [1] For all applications an autoloader was used with the XM274, however the type of autoloader varied depending on which vehicle it was mounted in, in the HIMAG it used a 6 round vertical carousel and in the HSTVL a 60 round vertical magazine was used. [2] The gun was also designed to be lightweight, using a composite gun sleeve which also had holes cut into it to reduce weight, the recoil mechanism was also incorporated into the breech reducing it's weight further. [1]
All the types of ammunition used were cased telescopic. The projectile was embedded in the solid propellant (liquid propellant was originally intended, but later moved to a separate project), [2] shortening the length of the round and allowing a rotating breech block to be used and increasing the rate of fire. [4] All types of ammunition were 406mm in length and 132mm in diameter, with each weighing 15.6kg. [3]
The M551 "Sheridan" AR/AAV was a light tank developed by the United States and named after General Philip Sheridan, of American Civil War fame. It was designed to be landed by parachute and to swim across rivers. It was armed with the technically advanced but troublesome M81/M81 Modified/M81E1 152 mm gun/launcher, which fired both conventional ammunition and the MGM-51 Shillelagh guided anti-tank missile.
The Leclerc is a third-generation French main battle tank developed and manufactured by Nexter Systems. It was named in honour of Marshal Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque, a commander of the Free French Forces, who led the 2nd Armoured Division in World War II.
A chain gun is a type of autocannon or machine gun that uses an external source of power to cycle the weapon's action via a continuous loop of chain, similar to that used on a motorcycle or bicycle, instead of diverting excess energy from the cartridges' propellant as in a typical automatic firearm.
A rotary cannon, rotary autocannon, rotary gun or Gatling cannon, is any large-caliber multiple-barreled automatic firearm that uses a Gatling-type rotating barrel assembly to deliver a sustained saturational direct fire at much greater rates of fire than single-barreled autocannons of the same caliber. The loading, firing and ejection functions are performed simultaneously in different barrels as the whole assembly rotates, and the rotation also permits the barrels some time to cool. Rotary cannons, external or self-driven are used in aircraft over reciprocating bolt autocannons which are more prone to jamming in high g environments. The rotating barrels on nearly all modern Gatling-type guns are powered by an external force such as an electric motor, although internally powered gas-operated versions have also been developed.
The Type 74 was a main battle tank (MBT) of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF). It was built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries as a supplement to the earlier Type 61. It was based on the best features of a number of contemporary designs, placing it in the same class as the US M60 Patton or German Leopard 1. Like these designs, it mounted the M68 rifled 105 mm gun. The design did not enter widespread use until 1980, by which point other Western forces had introduced more capable designs.
The 75 mm gun, models M2 to M6, was the standard American medium caliber gun fitted to mobile platforms during World War II. They were primarily mounted on tanks, such as the M3 Lee and M4 Sherman, but one variant was also used as an air-to-ground gun on the B-25 Mitchell medium bomber aircraft. There were five main variants used during the war: M2, M3, M4, M5 and M6.
The 37 mm gun M3 is the first dedicated anti-tank gun fielded by United States forces in numbers. Introduced in 1940, it became the standard anti-tank gun of the U.S. infantry with its size enabling it to be pulled by a jeep. However, the continuing improvement of German tanks quickly rendered the 37 mm ineffective and, by 1943, it was being gradually replaced in the European and Mediterranean theaters by the more powerful British-developed 57 mm gun M1. In the Pacific, where the Japanese tank threat was less significant, the M3 remained in service until the end of the war, but some 57mm guns were issued.
Ares Incorporated is an American weapons manufacturer and firearms engineering company co-founded by the American weapons inventor and developer Eugene Stoner in 1971. The company is based in Port Clinton, Ohio, and produces fire control systems, turret systems, small arms, automatic cannons and industrial machinery. Mr. Stoner left the company in 1989, joining Knight's Armament Company in 1990, where his designs included the Stoner 96, a further refinement of the Ares LMG/Stoner 63.
The 37 mm Automatic Gun, M4, known as the T9 during development, was a 37 mm (1.46 in) recoil-operated autocannon designed by Browning Arms Company and entered service in 1942. The M4 and its variants would primarily be manufactured by Colt's Manufacturing Company and Oldsmobile and is therefore sometimes referred to as the "Colt M4" or "Oldsmobile M4." It was primarily mounted in the Bell P-39 Airacobra and P-63 Kingcobra, with the U.S. Navy also utilizing it on many PT boats.
The 2A28 Grom also known as KBP 2A28 Grom, is the main armament of the Soviet-designed BMP-1 and BMD-1 infantry fighting vehicles. It is a 73 mm low pressure smoothbore semi-automatic gun with a wedge breech block. Development of the 2A28 Grom was directly linked to that of the SPG-9 recoilless gun; both fired projectiles similar to rocket-propelled grenades.
The Armored Gun System (AGS) was a U.S. Army competition in the 1990s to design a light tank to replace the M551 Sheridan and TOW-equipped HMMWVs. It was the ultimate incarnation of several research programs run in the 1970s with the aim of providing air-mobile light infantry forces with the firepower needed to last in the battlefield.
An oscillating turret is a form of turret for armoured fighting vehicles, both tanks and armoured cars. The turret is unusual in being made of two hinged parts. Elevation of the gun relies on the upper part of the turret moving relative to the lower part.
The ELC project was a prototype light tank project launched by the French Ministry of Defense in 1955. The purpose of the ELC project was to develop a lightly armoured, heavily armed fighting vehicle capable of being airlifted for rapid deployment.
The T69 was a prototype American medium tank with an oscillating turret mounting a 90mm cannon with an eight-round drum autoloader. It held a crew of three. Developed on the basis of the T42 experimental medium tank in the mid-50s, the vehicle never entered mass production.
The 8 cm Kanone C/80 was a field gun developed during the late 1800s by Krupp for the export market. It saw action in numerous regional conflicts as well as World War I.
The CN08 is a 120 mm 55-caliber smoothbore tank gun produced by Hyundai WIA. It is incorrectly known as the licensed production of the Rheinmetall Rh-120 L/55, but it was indigenously developed by the Agency for Defense Development and WIA from 2003 to 2008 for the XK2 development project started in 1995. The development was completed after the field test ended in September 2008.
The 60mm HVMS gun is a self-loading autocannon jointly developed by IMI Systems of Israel and OTO Melara of Italy. It was designed to be mounted on light armoured vehicles to provide an anti-armour capability using high-velocity sub-calibre kinetic ammunition.
The M68 is an American 105 mm tank gun. It uses British-designed L7 gun tube and cartridges with an American-designed mount, breech assembly and recoil mechanism.
The High Survivability Test Vehicle (Lightweight) (HSTV(L)) was a U.S. Army light tank manufactured by AAI Corporation. It was developed under the Tank-automotive and Armaments Command (TACOM) Armored Combat Vehicle Technology (ACVT) program.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link)