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Improving the USN's Mk45: the coming revolution in surface warfare guns

CougarKing

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More food for thought:

Forbes

Jan 11, 2016 @ 09:00 AM 9,036 views
Coming To Naval Surface Warfare: A Revolution In Guns And Ammunition

Loren Thompson

Contributor

The Surface Navy Association is holding its 28th National Symposium near the nation’s capital this week, and there is a lot to talk about.  After 25 years of being able to take U.S. maritime superiority for granted, the Navy now faces what its top admiral, Chief of Naval Operations John M. Richardson, calls “a return to great power competition.”  Russia and China are rapidly expanding the scope of their naval operations while implementing anti-access/area denial strategies aimed at excluding American forces from nearby seas.  Even smaller countries such as Iran are able to leverage new technologies to challenge U.S. use of strategic waterways such as the Strait of Hormuz.

The Navy has seen this threat coming for some time.  At last year’s symposium, the commander of naval surface forces, Vice Admiral Thomas Rowden, called for greatly increasing the firepower of destroyers, cruisers and other surface combatants so that they could operate in hunter-killer surface action groups under a new warfighting concept called “distributed lethality.”  The basic idea is that every warship will now be able to take the fight to the enemy, even when there isn’t an aircraft carrier nearby.  As Rear Admiral Peter Fanta put it at the 2015 symposium, from now on, “if it floats, it fights.”  That’s a big shift from the defensive missions many warships have been assigned since the Cold War ended.

Navy leaders don’t plan to develop new warship designs to implement the offensive strategy, because they don’t have the time or the money.  Threats are emerging too quickly in Europe, the Middle East and East Asia, and the Navy’s shipbuilding budget is already overstretched by the need to begin replacing the nation’s sea-based nuclear deterrent — 14 Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines — in the coming decade. Even with military spending capped by legislation, the Congressional Budget Office foresees a return to trillion-dollar federal budget deficits by 2025.  So the transformation of naval strategy will have to be accomplished using ship designs and technology that already exist today.

That will require some rigorous thinking about what is feasible and affordable.  As Bryan Clark, a naval warfare expert at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, put it in a 2014 report, “The combination of rising threats and reduced resources places a premium on innovative thinking as the surface fleet works to sustain its ability to help ensure access for U.S. forces.”  Much of that innovative thinking in recent years has been about relatively exotic ways in which lethality can be enhanced, such as lasers and electromagnetic rail guns.  Even the more down-to-earth experts tend to think of new missiles when they talk about enhancing the effects of naval weapons. But there is another option that deserves the Navy’s attention: guns.

Every surface combatant in the current fleet is equipped with guns such as the Mk 45 five-inch naval gun system. After four decades of continuous evolution, the Mk 45 in its latest configuration is a technological marvel.  It is highly automated, fires ten rounds per minute, and can address a wide range of threats from cruise missiles to fast surface craft.  For all its improvements, though, the Mk 45 still fires dumb ammunition with limited range — about 13 nautical miles max (15 statute miles). So although its magazine contains hundreds of rounds, there are limits to what it will be able to achieve against tomorrow’s threats.

But it doesn’t have to be that way.  The same new technologies that are forcing a change in naval surface warfare strategy are also being applied to ammunition by gun-maker BAE Systems , with spectacular results.  Adapting technology that it developed for the advanced gun system on the Navy’s Zumwalt-class land attack destroyer, BAE and subcontractor Lockheed Martin LMT -1.40% have come up with precision-guided gun projectiles that can fly four times further – up to 60 miles — and then hit within a few yards of intended targets.  The rounds use GPS and inertial guidance to adjust their trajectory in transit, assuring high accuracy and minimal unintended damage to assets near targets.

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I think you will find that Oto Melara is the class of the field in this respect - particularly with their Vulcano rounds for both the 5" (127mm) and the 76mm, recently in Canadian services on the 280s.  They also do a very nice 155 for the artillery.

http://archive.defensenews.com/article/20140401/DEFREG01/304010016/Oto-Melara-s-Vulcano-Munitions-Ready-Sale

http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNIT_5-64_LW.htm

http://www.finmeccanica.com/en/-/vulcano-127mm

http://www.finmeccanica.com/en/-/vulcano-76

http://www.finmeccanica.com/en/-/vulcano-155mm



And there is also the Strales system for the 76s

http://www.finmeccanica.com/en/-/strales



 
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