U-5TS
The U-5TS (production designation 2A20) tank gun is a 115 mm-calibre weapon that was fitted exclusively to the Soviet Union's T-62 main battle tank. It was the first smoothbore weapon designed for tanks and heralded the change in main armament from rifled cannons.
U-5TS | |
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U-5TS tank gun on display at the Motovilikha Plant Museum in Perm. Russia. | |
Type | smoothbore Tank gun |
Place of origin | Soviet Union |
Service history | |
In service | 1961 |
Wars | Sino-Soviet border conflict Yom Kippur War Ogaden War Soviet–Afghan War Lebanese Civil War 1982 Lebanon War Chadian–Libyan conflict Polisario War Angolan Civil War Ethiopian Civil War Iran–Iraq War Ethiopian–Eritrean War Gulf War First Chechen War Second Chechen War Operation Iraqi Freedom South Ossetia War (2008) Libyan Civil War Syrian Civil War War in Afghanistan (1978–present) |
Production history | |
Designed | Late 1950s |
Specifications | |
Barrel length | 6.05 m L/52.6 |
Shell | 115×728mmR |
Caliber | 115 millimetres (4.53 in) |
Rate of fire | 6–10/minute |
Muzzle velocity | 1,600 m/s (APFSDS) |
Effective firing range | 2,000 m-high target – 1,870 m; 3 m-high target – 2,260 m;[1] 4,000 m AT-12 missile. |
History
As the T-54/55 series began to replace the T-34 tanks in the Soviet Army in the 1950s it was recognised that the standard NATO tanks of the time—the Centurion and M48 Patton—had armour that was too heavy to be easily defeated by the existing ammunition for the 100 mm D10 gun that the new tanks carried. The Soviets set about designing a new "heavy" vehicle which was required to complement the tanks in an overwatch capacity and to provide greater anti-armour capability.[2]
The new vehicle, the T-62, was to be equipped with a new smoothbore design—which allows higher velocity and greater armour penetration with kinetic rounds—based on an enlargement of the 100 mm 2A19 anti-tank gun that had entered production in 1955. The new weapon, designated as U-5T, could penetrate 300mm of vertical RHA at a 1,000 metres[3] and re-established a comfortable penetration capacity against Western armor.
Though the T-62 would have variable success in the conflicts it was involved in the U-5TS would remain a formidable weapon that proved capable of penetrating the armour of any comparable NATO tank until the deployment of third generation MBTs in the late 1970s and early 80s. This was proven by examination of Iranian Chieftain and M60s knocked out by Iraqi T-62s during the Iran–Iraq War. These examinations led to the development of add-on armour packages such as Stillbrew to try to counter the U-5TS.[4]
Ammunition
Another first with this gun was the use of armour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding-sabot ammunition, with the initial 3VBM-1 rounds featuring steel penetrators. The subsequent development of this type of ammunition for this gun led to an array of penetrator designs and different materials with the final model, the 3UBM-13, using depleted uranium.[5] In accordance with later Soviet and current Russian practice an anti-tank guided missile, the 9K118 Sheksna, has been developed for use with the T-62 and U-5TS. There is also HE-FRAG and HEAT ammunition available for this weapon.
Due to the comparatively low height of the T-62 design - in line with Soviet tank design philosophies of the time[6] - the U-5TS is limited to a rate-of-fire of 6-10 shots per minute due to little room for the loader to perform his activity. Experienced loaders were capable of reloading the gun in 6 seconds.[7]
Current and former users
See also
Weapons of comparable role, performance and era
- Royal Ordnance L11A5: British 120-mm rifled equivalent
Notes
- Jane's Ammunition Handbook. Jane's Information Group. 2010.
- Zaloga, Steven (1984). Modern Soviet Combat Tanks. London: Osprey. p. 8.
- Zaloga, Steven (1984). Modern Soviet Combat Tanks. London: Osprey. p. 9.
- "About Chieftain Stillbrew armour". Tank Net. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
- "115 mm 3UBM-5 APFSDS-T cartridge (Russian Federation), Tank and anti-tank guns". Jane's Information Group. Retrieved 22 December 2012.
- Zaloga, Steven (1984). Modern Soviet Combat Tanks. Osprey. p. 12.
- Zaloga, Steven (1984). Modern Soviet Combat Tanks. London: Osprey. p. 15.
References
- Zaloga, Steven; Modern Soviet Combat Tanks; Osprey Publishing, London; 1984
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 115 mm gun 2A20. |