On Monday, in trial firing at the Pokhran
Ranges in Rajasthan, the advanced towed artillery gun system (ATAGS) being indigenously
developed for the Indian Army demonstrated its potential to be a world-beating
system.
The 155-millimetre, 52-calibre gun-howitzer
fired three shells out to a world-record distance of 47.2 kilometres from the
gun position. This was achieved using special, long-range ammunition called “high
explosive – base bleed” (HE – BB).
In comparison, 155-millimetre, 52-calibre guns
in service worldwide fire this ammunition to maximum ranges of 40-45
kilometres.
The achievements coincides with the
appointment of Nirmala Sitharaman as defence minister.
The ATAGS is being developed by the Defence
R&D Organisation (DRDO) on two parallel tracks – one prototype in
partnership with Tata Power (Strategic Engineering Division) and another with
Bharat Forge. The prototype that broke the record was the Tata Power (SED) gun.
Earlier, on Saturday, the same gun had
broken another record by firing “high explosive – boat tail” (HE – BT)
ammunition to a range of 37.2 kilometres.
Range, accuracy and consistency are the key
attributes of an artillery gun. A longer range allows more area to be engaged
from a “gun position”, without having to redeploy (or shift) the guns.
The need to cater for this higher “shock of
firing” makes the ATAGS a heavier gun. It weighs in at 17-18 tonnes, while
comparable guns worldwide weigh 14-15 tonnes.
So promising is the ATAGS that both
existing prototypes were paraded on January 26 in New Delhi.
After the gun successfully completes
development and firing trials, the army is likely to procure at least 2,000
ATAGS. At an estimated Rs 15 crore apiece, that will result in Rs 30,000 crore
in business for the production eco-system, benefiting a large number of private
defence firms.
With the current round of “summer trials”
having successfully concluded in Pokhran, the ATAGS will now undergo
modifications and prepare for “winter trials” in December, probably in Sikkim. Each
vendor will build three more ATAGs gun prototypes to expedite trials.
The first ATAGS firing trials were carried
out in Balasore, Odisha, last December.
While ATAGS looks much like the Bofors
FH-77B – the infamous “Bofors gun” that India bought 410 of in the 1980s before
scandal derailed indigenous construction – the ATAGS is in face significantly
bigger than the 155-millimetre, 39-calibre Bofors.
Another global first in the ATAGS is its
all-electric drive, which supersedes the more unreliable hydraulic drives in
other towed guns. The all-electric drive operates all the ATAGS’ gun controls:
ammunition handling, opening and closing the breech, and ramming the round into
the chamber.
The ATAGS is the world’s only gun with a
six-round “automated magazine” that fires a six-round burst in just 30 seconds.
Most other existing 155-millimetre, 52-calibre guns have three-round magazines,
which must be reloaded after firing three rounds.
A high “burst fire” capability will provide the army a significant advantage since artillery causes most casualties in the initial burst of fire, when enemy soldiers are caught in the open (and not after they dive into their trenches).
ajaishukla
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