Military Wiki
GAU-19/A
Type Heavy machine gun
Place of origin Flag of the United States United States
Service history
Used by See History
Production history
Designer General Electric
Manufacturer General Dynamics
Produced 1983–present
Variants 3-barrel or 6-barrel
Specifications
Mass With feeder and transfer unit:139 lbs. (63 kg)
Length 53.9 in. (1,369 mm)
Barrel length 36 in. (914 mm)
Width 13.5 in. (343 mm)
Height 15 in. (381 mm)

Cartridge .50 BMG (12.7×99mm NATO)
Barrels 3
Action Electric
Rate of fire 1,000 or 2,000 rounds per minute
Muzzle velocity 2,910 fps (887 m/s)
Effective firing range 1,800 m
Maximum firing range 6,000 m
Feed system linkless or M9 linked belt

The GECAL 50, officially designated by the United States military as the GAU-19/A, is an electrically driven Gatling gun that fires the .50 BMG (12.7×99mm) cartridge.

Technical specifications[]

The GAU-19/A is designed for a linkless feed, but can be fed from a standard M9 linked belt if a delinker feeder is used. The rate of fire is selectable to be either 1,000 or 2,000 rounds per minute. The Humvee armament kit version fires at 1,300 rounds per minute. The average recoil force when firing is 500 pounds-force (2.2 kN). In January 2012, General Dynamics announced they would be delivering a new version designated the GAU-19/B. It provides the same firepower in a lighter platform, weighing 106 lbs.[1]

History[]

The GECAL 50 was first manufactured by General Electric, then by Lockheed Martin, and now by General Dynamics. Design work began in 1982. Early prototypes had six barrels, but a three-barreled configuration is now standard. The GAU-19/A was originally designed as a larger, more potent version of the M134 Minigun. Due to the loss of nine helicopters in Grenada GE started building prototypes of the weapon in both a three barreled and a six barreled configuration. The six-barreled version was designed to fire 4,000 rpm, and could be adapted to fire up to 8,000 rpm. The GAU-19 takes 0.4 seconds to reach maximum firing rate.[2] Soon it was recommended as a potential armament for the V-22 Osprey.[3] The magazine would be located underneath the cabin floor and could be reloaded in-flight. However, plans to mount the gun were later dropped.[4] In 2005, the GAU-19/A was approved to be mounted on the OH-58D Kiowa helicopter. It also could have been used on the Army's now cancelled ARH-70.[5] In January 2012, the U.S. Army ordered 24 GAU-19/B versions for use on helicopters. All were delivered by the next month.[1]

In 1999, the United States sent 28 GAU-19s to Colombia.[6] Oman is known to use the GAU-19/A mounted on their HMMWVs. The navy of Mexico uses MDH MD-902 series helicopters with the GAU-19/A system mounted for anti-narcotics operations.[7]

Users[]

See also[]

Non-NATO:

General:

Notes[]

References[]

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 GAU-19 and the edit history here.