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Subject: New Guns
Aussiegunneragain    11/7/2009 5:59:12 AM
Senator the Hon John Faulkner Minister for Defence Printer friendly version 20 Oct 2009 MIN3709/09 DEFENCE FIREPOWER TO RECEIVE MAJOR BOOST The Minister for Defence, Senator John Faulkner, today announced that the Government has given Second Pass Approval for a $493 million project to provide the next generation artillery system for the Australian Army. Senator Faulkner said the first phase of Land 17 (the Artillery Replacement Project) will provide the Army with four batteries of 35 M777A2 155mm Lightweight Towed Howitzers. “The Lightweight Towed Howitzer is the most advanced towed artillery system available in the world. It is air-portable under CH-47 Chinook helicopters and can provide a weight of fire not previously available to rapidly deployed forces,” Senator Faulkner said. “The second phase of the artillery enhancement will include the procurement of a self propelled artillery system, which will be capable of providing fire support to highly mobile mechanised forces. The artillery system will be further enhanced through the future acquisition of a digital terminal control system for the tactical control of artillery, naval and close air support fires by forward observers and joint terminal attack controllers. This element of the project will be considered by Government in the second half of 2010,” said Senator Faulkner. Senator Faulkner said these are high priority acquisitions which will provide improved protection and precision firepower to Australian soldiers, allowing missions to be carried out more efficiently, safely and effectively.
 
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Aussiegunneragain       1/5/2010 8:44:05 PM










I'm no artillery expert of any kind guys, but I've noted one important (I believe) point you have missed so far.







 RAA's ability to deal with armour is being significantly enhanced with the acquisition of the SMART 155 munition, in addition to Excalibur. 







 A dedicated anti-armour munition is something the RAA has not enjoyed previously... 






Cheers. 














Actually we operated Copperhead from the M-198's for a number of years but you are correct in that the new 155mm munitions will potentially give us a much better anti-armour capability, and all the guns would be able to fire it, unlike now. The guns (especially the towed ones) would still be f*cked if we ever got into a direct fire engagement with tanks, but with properly placed OP's on the approaches  or with UAV artillery spotters the tanks might just not get close enough to fire a direct shot.




Yeah. I actually saw a Copperhead shoot once at SWBTA. I am aware ADF had this in extremely limited quantities (barely enough to actually call it a capability IMHO, more like a capability demonstrator if you ask me) so I referred to SMART 155 as the "dedicated" anti-armour weapon, Copperhead of course being a multi-role munition, whereas SMART 155 can only be used for vehicles, not static targets and would only be employed for armoured vehicles most likely, though a General's personal car might be in for a pounding if one were stupid enough to drive in range of RAA and it's SMART 155 munitions... 
)

 

Cheers.


 

 


Fair enough, we should get some then :-). I'm suprised that SMART 155 can only be used for non-static targets though as it has GPS mid-course update so that should make it pretty accurate in the terminal stage.
 
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Aussie Diggermark 2       1/6/2010 2:18:41 AM
We have.
 
AUD $14.5m worth to be precise... :)
 
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Aussiegunneragain       1/6/2010 4:23:20 AM

We have.

 

AUD $14.5m worth to be precise... :)




Awesome.
 
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Aussiegunneragain       1/6/2010 4:24:18 AM

With a critical asset like artillery you would hope that when deployed they would be co located with infantry armed with mortars, ATGW's, AGL's and HMG's.

It is standard practice to co-locate a battle group's artillery with one company of it's infantry in defence.
 
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