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Rocket-assisted projectile

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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

A rocket-assisted projectile (RAP) is a cannon, howitzer, mortar, or recoilless rifle round incorporating a rocket motor for independent propulsion. This gives the projectile greater speed and range than a non-assisted ballistic shell, which is propelled only by the gun's exploding charge. Some forms of rocket-assisted projectiles can be outfitted with a laser-guide for greater accuracy.

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Transcription

History

Colour-coded section view of a rocket assisted projectile ammunition round

The German Sturmtiger (1944) used a 380 mm Rocket Propelled Round as its main projectile. These rounds were high explosive shells or shaped charges with a maximum range of 6 kilometres (3.7 mi). The gun first accelerated the projectile to 45 m/s (150 ft/s), the 40 kg (88 lb) rocket charge then boosted this to about 250 m/s (820 ft/s).

Also the German Krupp K5 railway gun of World War 2 used rocket assisted projectiles in the later stages of the war, although it also used conventional artillery projectiles.

The North Korean M-1978 / M-1989 Koksan 170mm self-propelled gun can use rocket assisted projectiles to achieve a range of around 60 kilometres (37 mi); at one time this was the world's longest range tube field artillery piece.[1]

When NATO standards required member armies to have corps-level artillery that could fire to a minimum range of 30 kilometres (19 mi), nearly all member nations solved the problem with RAP rounds in their 155 mm (6.1 inch) artillery. The Belgian Army was the only NATO member army that did not require RAP, reaching the required range with a conventional round.[citation needed]

The XM1113 RAP round replaced the M549A1 RAP round for the M777 howitzer and other 155mm artillery after 2016. The new round had a range of 24 miles (40km) instead of the 30km NATO standard then extant. As of 2016, the XM1113 was scheduled for Limited Rate Initial Production in Fiscal Year 2022.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "M-1978 / M1989 (KOKSAN) 170mm self propelled (SP) gun". Global Security. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  2. ^ Calloway, Audra (August 25, 2016). "Army developing safer, extended range rocket-assisted artillery round".

External links


This page was last edited on 29 March 2024, at 21:00
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