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canon de 100mm
100mm turret on the La Motte-Picquet
100mm turret on the Lieutenant de vaisseau Lavallée
Type naval gun
Place of origin France
Service history
Used by France, Belgium, Portugal, Turkey, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Bulgaria
Wars Gulf war
Production history
Designer Tonnelé
Designed 1953 — 1961
Manufacturer GIAT
Produced 1961 — present
Variants modèle 53
modèle 64
modèle 68
modèle 100 TR
Specifications
Mass 22 metric tons
Barrel length 55 calibres
Crew 2 (modèle 68) ; later version entirely automatic

Calibre 100 mm
Elevation 29°/s
Traverse 40°/s
Rate of fire 78 round/min
Muzzle velocity 870 m/s
Effective firing range

17,000 m (elevation 40°)
Maximum practical range:

  • 6,000 m against aerial targets
  • 12,000 m against surface targets

Modern French 100 mm naval guns are multipurpose artillery pieces (anti-air, anti-ship, ground), capable of a high rate of fire. Most modern French warships are equipped with one of its versions.

History[]

At the end of the Second World War, the French Navy was equipped with numerous calibres, most of which were due for decommissioning. In 1953, the STCAN of Paris, under engineer Tonnelé, drafted the design of a polyvalent 100 mm gun. The gun was designed to be effective for

  • anti-air defence
  • anti-ship combat
  • ground shelling

The first turret of the family, "modèle 53", was tested at sea on the escort Le Brestois in 1958 and the escort aviso Victor Schoelcher in 1961.

Description[]

The most common version, modèle 68, features a completely automatic action and control. The ammunition is stored in a magazine underneath the turret, and fed to the gun by a lift regularly manned by two crewmen. A flexible pipe allows feeding the gun under any orientation.

Rounds of ammunition are fed automatically; empty shell is ejected through an evacuation door on the front of the turret after firing. Cooling is provided by water circulating in layers of steel around the tube of the gun, and by an injection of air and water after every shot.

The turret can be used in three modes:

  • Remote control by the main weapon control system, from the Operation Center
  • Remote control from a secondary weapon control system
  • Manual control by the joystick at the left of the gun (except the 100TR version)

In manual mode, two crewmen serve the turret: the gunner, at the left of the gun, uses a joystick to point the gun, and optic ranging and aiming instruments to direct the fire; the observer monitors the operations from the back of the turret.

Aiming is performed by two electric motors, one for the elevation (left of the turret) and the other for the traverse (right of the turret). Two hydraulic systems feed the gun. The gun can also be moved manually for maintenance.

Since it is usually installed on the bow deck of warships, these turrets are often exposed to breaking waves and humidity. To prevent corrosion and mechanical problems, the turret is made water-tight by rubber joints. The gun itself is sealed by a rubber tampion, which can be shot through in case of emergency.

The plexiglas viewbay used to manually aim the gun is usually protected by a steel cover.

Versions[]

Over the years, the 100 mm turret went through several improvements, notably bringing more reliable operation and increased firing rate, new ammunition optimized to shoot down missiles, and compatibility with modern firing computers. Three main versions of French 100mm guns can be cited:

  • modèle 53: the first shell had to be fed manually, with subsequent shots taking advantage of recoil to load automatically, firing at up to 60 rounds per minute. Employs electro-mechanical fire control, with two manual command stations on the front of the turret. The modèle 64 is a direct offspring of the 53, with a 78 round/min rate of fire. This version can be connected to modern firing computers.
  • modèle 68 In this model, the turret was lightened and can load the first round automatically, but rate of fire is reduced back to 60 rounds per minute. This version may operate unmanned with only one manual station remaining as a backup. This version was later improved to the CADAM standard (Cadence Améliorée, "improved rate of fire"), restoring the 78 rounds/min rate of fire. A derivative is the modèle 100 TR (used on the La Fayette class frigates), mechanically similar to the 68, but with a stealth armour. The manual control has been removed.
  • Compact: This weapon has only been exported to China (see also China's Type 210 100 mm naval gun), Malaysia, Portugal and Saudi Arabia. It is even lighter than the modèle 68, at only 19 metric tons including gunhouse (14 metric ton alone), deck and magazine. Later Mk 2 versions also fire faster, at up to 90 rounds per minute. However, it is also limited to firing short bursts of no more than 6 rounds.

Usage[]

The 100 mm gun has been used in the French navy on most warships equal or greater than avisos (the A69 especially, built and exported in 20 units). The Charles de Gaulle, with her MBDA Aster-only defence, is the main exception. Also, the future Horizon CNGF frigates should be equipped with the 76 mm Oto-Breda gun. It is not yet known whether this is a general tendency to abandon the 100 mm gun, or only a special case for certain specialized vessels.

The 100 mm has been sold abroad, and is used by the navies of Argentina, Belgium, China, Portugal, Turkey, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Bulgaria & Germany (Mounted on Köln class frigates and Hamburg class destroyers. Both classes were already retired), and others. Belgian Wielingen class frigates using the gun were sold to Bulgaria in 2004-2008.

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at French 100 mm naval gun and the edit history here.
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