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A 75mm smoothbore CTA autocannon would be made for the vehicle, originally designated as the medium caliber, antiarmor automatic cannon (MC-AAAC), later designated XM274. The gun was to be developed under a DARPA contract by Ares Incorporated. The original contract specified a 60mm, but it was later changed to be 75mm. [1]
The French Navy adopted the 75 mm modèle 1897 for its coastal batteries [31] and warships [32] The 75 mm modèle 1897–1915 [33] was placed on SMCA modèle 1925 mountings with a vertical elevation of -10 to +70° and a 360° rotation. This allowed it to be used in an anti-aircraft role. New 75 mm guns were developed specifically for anti ...
Bofors 40 mm gun L/60 Sweden: World War II 40: Internal: Bofors 40 mm gun L/70 Sweden: Cold War 40: Internal: Ho-301 cannon Empire of Japan: World War II 40: Internal: QF 2-pounder pom-pom United Kingdom: World War I 40: Internal: Vickers S gun United Kingdom: World War II 40: Internal: Otobreda Fast Forty Italy: Cold War 40: External ...
The main armament consisted of an Ares Incorporated XM274 75 mm CTA autocannon with 2-axis stabilization [5] capable of firing Armour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot and high-explosive. Secondary armament consisted of a coaxial 7.62 mm M240 machine gun and a commander's M240. [1]
Canon de 75 mm antiaérien mle 1932 ABS - Atelier de Bourges (ABS) developed a new gun carriage with four folding cruciform outriggers. It used the same mle 1928 barrel and was equipped with an automatic breech which raised the rate of fire of 25 rounds per minute. The carriage was designed for motor traction and could be towed at 40 km/h (25 ...
An autocannon, automatic cannon or machine cannon is a fully automatic gun that is capable of rapid-firing large-caliber (20 mm/0.79 in or more) armour-piercing, explosive or incendiary shells, as opposed to the smaller-caliber kinetic projectiles fired by a machine gun.
M2 75 mm gun as mounted in medium tank M3. The 75 mm tank gun has its origins in the January 1937 specification for a light anti-aircraft gun T6 which would have supplemented heavy 3-inch guns and used the same range of 75x350R ammunition as the 75 mm field gun M1897. After the gun, which featured a 31-caliber barrel and a sliding block breech ...
1 × 40 mm Bofors autocannon, 2 × 20 mm MG 151 autocannons, 2 × 7.92 mm MG 17 MGs, 2 × 13 mm MG 131 MGs (rear armament), 6 × 150 mm rockets: Weiss Manfréd WM-23: Fighter: 1 prototype 2 × 12.7 mm Gebauer MGs, 2 × 8 mm Gebauer MGs MÁVAG Héja II Zuhanóbombázó: Dive bomber: 3 converted from Héja II fighters [9] [10]