Shipunov 2A42
Shipunov 2A42 | |
---|---|
Type | autocannon |
Place of origin | Soviet Union |
Service history | |
In service | 1980–present |
Used by | Russia |
Production history | |
Designer | KBP |
Designed | 1970s |
Manufacturer | Tulamashzavod |
Produced | 1980 |
Variants | 2А72 |
Specifications | |
Mass | 115 kilograms (254 lb) |
Length | 3.027 m (9 ft 11.2 in) |
Barrel length | 2,416 millimetres (95.1 in)[1] |
Cartridge | 30x165 mm |
Caliber | 30 mm |
Barrels | 1 |
Action | Gas-operated |
Rate of fire | 200–300 rds/min (low) 550–800 rds/min (high)[2] |
Muzzle velocity | 960 metres per second (3,100 ft/s) |
Effective firing range | 2,000 metres (2,200 yd) (AP-T) |
Maximum firing range | 4,000 metres (4,400 yd) (HEI) |
Feed system | Twin feed |
The Shipunov 2A42 is a Soviet/Russian 30 mm autocannon. It is built by the Tulamashzavod Joint Stock Company and named after A. G. Shipunov .[3]
Design
The 30 mm 2A42 autocannon was developed as a replacement for 2A28 Grom and has a dual feed. One is for HE-T and the other for AP-T rounds. The gunner can select one of two rates of full automatic fire, low at 200 to 300 rds/min and high at 550 to 800 rds/min.[4] According to the manufacturer, effective range when engaging ground targets such as light armoured vehicles is 1,500 m (4,900 ft) while soft-skinned targets can be engaged out to 4,000 m (13,000 ft). Air targets can be engaged flying at low altitudes of up to 3,000 m (9,800 ft) at subsonic speeds, and up to a slant range of 2,500 m (8,200 ft).[5] In addition to being installed in a two-person turret on the BMP-2 mechanised infantry combat vehicle, this gun is also fitted in the BMD-2 airborne combat vehicle, BMD-3 airborne combat vehicle and BTR-90 (or GAZ-5923) (8 × 8) armoured personnel carrier. A small number of these have now entered service. More recently, the 30 mm 2A42 cannon has been installed in a new turret and fitted onto the roof of the BTR-T heavy armoured personnel carrier based on a modified T-54/T-55 MBT chassis. The cannon is also the main armament of BMPT (Tank Support Fighting Vehicle). It is also used for various armament projects from various manufacturers. The design bureau for the 30 mm 2A42 cannon is the KBP Instrument Design Bureau.
The 2A42 autocannon has also been used on the BMPT and Bumerang-BM, and on unmanned remote controlled weapon station turrets on the new Russian infantry fighting vehicles including the Kurganets-25, VPK-7829 Bumerang, and T-15 Armata.
Variants
- 2A42 – standard version.
- 2A72 – lighter simplified variant with a lower number of parts, a longer barrel, and higher muzzle velocity, but also a lower rate of fire. It is long recoil-operated, not gas-operated.
- ABM-M30M3 – remote Weapon Station made by Impulse-2, for Uran-9 or different armored vehicles.
- ABM-M30M3 Vikhr – another remote weapon station made by Impulse-2.
- TRT-30 – remote weapon station.[8]
- ZPT-99 – In the 1990s, the People's Republic of China imported BMP-3 weapon systems technology, and then they re-introduced the cannon. The Chinese production model of 2A72 was named ZPT-99. It was widely used by Chinese armored fighting vehicles.[9]
- ZTM-1, KBA-2 – Ukrainian production[9]
Ammunition
The 2A42 fires 30×165mm ammunition, a cartridge introduced in the 1970s in the Soviet Union to replace previous 30 mm autocannon cartridges. Other weapons using this size of cartridge case include the 2A38, 2A38M, and 2A72 autocannons for various vehicle, helicopter and air defence applications, as well as numerous single-, dual- and six-barrel naval and air force cannons. The 2A42, 2A38, 2A38M, and 2A72 fire percussion-primed ammunition; the naval and aerial cannons use electrical priming, and therefore their ammunition is not interchangeable with the land-based ammunition types, despite the same cartridge case size.[10][11]
Originally three basic types of ammunition were developed in the Soviet Union for the land-based weapons: high-explosive incendiary, high-explosive fragmentation with tracer, and an armour-piercing ballistic capped with tracer. Later a sub-caliber armour-piercing round was introduced, and today also countries other than Soviet Union/Russia manufacture 30x165 mm percussion-primed ammunition. The main types of ammunition are summarized in the table below:
Designation | Type | Projectile weight (g) | Bursting charge (g) | Muzzle velocity (m/s) | Notes | Penetration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3UOF8[12] | HEI | 389 g (13.7 oz) | 49 g (1.7 oz) A-IX-2 | 960 m/s (3,100 ft/s) | A high-explosive incendiary round with A-670M nose fuze.[13] The fuze produces a 0.15 millisecond delay on impact, and a self-destruct mechanism detonating the projectile after 7.5 to 14.5 seconds of flight (3,900 to 5,000 m (12,800 to 16,400 ft) distance from muzzle).[10] | N/A |
3UOR6[12] | HE-T | 385 g (13.6 oz) | 11.5 g (0.41 oz) A-IX-2 | 960 m/s (3,100 ft/s) | Nose-fuzed high-explosive fragmentation tracer round, utilizing the same A-670M impact/self-destruct fuze as the 3UOF8. Tracer burn time 14 seconds. | N/A |
3UBR6[12] | APBC-T | 400 g (14 oz) | none | 970 m/s (3,200 ft/s) | Solid shot with blunt penetrator covered by a hollow windshield cap.[13] Tracer burn time 3.5 seconds. | 20mm RHA at 60 degree impact, 700 m (2,300 ft) range; 22 mm (0.87 in) RHA at 60 degree impact, 500 m (1,600 ft) range[14] |
3UBR8[12] | APDS | 304 g (10.7 oz) | none | 1120 | A sub-caliber discarding sabot. No tracer. | 25 mm (0.98 in) RHA at 60 degree impact, 1,500 m (4,900 ft) |
3UBR10[15] | APBC-T | 398 g (14.0 oz) | none | 970 m/s (3,200 ft/s) | A development of 3UBR6 with plastic driving band for reduced barrel wear. Expected to enter service in 2020 | 20 mm (0.79 in) RHA at 60 degree impact, 700 m (2,300 ft) |
3UBR11[15] | APFSDS-T | none | Modern APFSDS round, developed late 2010s. Production and service status unknown. 1.5 second tracer burn. | Unknown | ||
M929[16] | APFSDS-T | 235 g (8.3 oz) | none | 1,260 m/s (4,100 ft/s) | A sub-caliber fin-stabilized discarding sabot round with tracer from Belgian Mecar, with tungsten alloy penetrator. | More than 50 mm (2.0 in) RHA at 60 degree impact, 1,000 m (3,300 ft) |
Airburst munitions for Russian 30mm and 57mm autocannons are in development.[17][18][19][20]
Platforms
The autocannon has been used since the 1980s on the following platforms:
- 2T Stalker
- MT-LBM 6MB
- BMP-1AM (2A72)
- BMP-2
- BMP-3 (2A72)
- BMD-2
- BMD-3
- BMD-4 (2A72)
- BTR-3 (2A72)
- BTR-4 (2A72)
- BTR-80A (2A72)
- BTR-82A (2A72)
- BTR-87
- BTR-90
- BTR-T
- GAZ Vodnik with BPPU module (2A72)
- BPsVI/BVP-M
- BMPT
- Fahd 280-30
- Boragh
- T-15 Armata
- VPK-7829 Bumerang
- Kurganets-25
- Lazar 3
- Makran IFV
- Scorpion IFV (2A72)
- Toros
- Tosan IFV
- Volat V2
- ZBD-86A (2A72)
- ZSL-92B (2A72)
- ZBD-03 (2A72)
- ZBD-04 (2A72)
- ZBD-05 (2A72)
- ZBL-08 (2A72)
Similar 30mm autocannons
The 2A72 30mm autocannon, designed by KBP Instrument Design Bureau, is a lighter, less complex cousin of the 2A42, with a longer barrel. While the latter has 578 parts, 2A72 has only 349 parts, allowing it to weigh only 84 kg (with 36 kg barrel). 2A72 uses long recoil principle, resulting in lower recoil (7t instead of 20), but lower rate of fire (300-330 instead of 550). 2A72 is used in:
- BMP-3 – mounted in between 2A70 100 mm gun/launcher and PKT coaxial MG
- ABM-M30M3 – remote Weapon Station made by Impulse-2, for Uran-9 or different armored vehicles.
- ABM-M30M3 Vikhr – another remote weapon station made by Impulse-2.
- TRT-30 – remote weapon station.[8]
The 2A38 and 2A38M are 30mm twin-barrel autocannons, Gast-type. They are mainly used on air defense vehicles like 2K22 Tunguska and Pantsir-S1. It weighs 195 kg and has a maximum rate of fire of 2500 rd/min.
The Ordnance Factory Medak in India has developed the Medak gun[citation needed] and CRN 91 Naval Gun out of this platform.
Users
Current operators
- Algeria
- China[9]
- Czech Republic
- Egypt
- Finland
- India
- Iraq
- Iran
- Russian Federation
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Syria
- Ukraine
- Viet Nam
Former operators
See also
- List of Russian weaponry
- 2A42 Cobra
- 2A46
- M242 Bushmaster 25mm chain gun
- Mk44 Bushmaster II
- Bushmaster III
- Bushmaster IV
- M230 chain gun
- Medak gun
References
- Notes
- ^ "30 mm automatic gun 2A42". ztsspecial.sk.
- ^ "2A42 30mm Automatic Cannon – Minotor-Service, Minsk, Belarus". minotor-service.com. Archived from the original on 2 February 2020. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
- ^ "30mm Shipunov 2A42". Weaponsystems.net.
- ^ "ОАО "Конструкторское бюро приборостроения" – 2А42". kbptula.ru. Archived from the original on 7 February 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
- ^ "30-mm AUTOMATIC GUN 2A42". Tulamashzavod. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
- ^ "Strazh new Ukrainian BMPT fire support vehicle based on T-64 MBT". Retrieved 5 February 2024.
- ^ "30 mm automatic gun 2A42 / GTS-30". Retrieved 25 February 2024.
- ^ a b "RG31 gets TRT-30 weapon system". Jane's 360.
- ^ a b c "30 mm 2A72". Weaponsystems.net.
- ^ a b Jane's Ammunition Handbook 2009, "Cannon – 20 to 30 mm cannon."
- ^ "An introduction to collecting 30 mm cannon ammunition". Archived from the original on 13 August 2022. Retrieved 1 March 2019.
- ^ a b c d "Land Forces Weapons" (PDF).
- ^ a b "Russian Ammunition Page, http://www.russianammo.org
- ^ [arsenal-bg.com/c/30x165-mm-rounds-for-automatic-guns-2a38-2a42-and-2a72-137/rapit-capap-t-199 JSC Arsenal AD website.] Retrieved 04/17/2023.
- ^ a b https://i.imgur.com/NZa83Od.jpg [bare URL image file]
- ^ https://www.nexter-group.fr/images/catalogues/nexter_catalogue_munitions_2016_en.pdf [dead link ]
- ^ "Russia's military built a "Terminator" and now it's getting smart weapons". Newsweek. 21 June 2018.
- ^ "Russia to develop anti-drone shrapnel ammunition". TASS.
- ^ "UVZ to unveil modernized BMP-1 with 2A72 cannon at Army 2018 | August 2018 Global Defense Security army news industry | Defense Security global news industry army 2018 | Archive News year". www.armyrecognition.com.
- ^ "Russia has developed low cost programmable air explosive ammunition that can be detonated by laser remote control. | jqknews". Archived from the original on 28 November 2018. Retrieved 27 November 2018.
- ^ "New K-4386 Typhoon-VDV 4x4 armoured field tested by Russian army". www.armyrecognition.com.
- ^ "Russia upgrades Uran-9 combat UGV". Jane's 360.
- Bibliography
- Koll, Christian (2009). Soviet Cannon – A Comprehensive Study of Soviet Arms and Ammunition in Calibres 12.7mm to 57mm. Austria: Koll. p. 271. ISBN 978-3-200-01445-9.