Military Wiki
Register
Advertisement
M109 Howitzer
Artillery Corps Fires Practice Cannon3
Israeli Defense Force M-109 in action during military exercise.
Type Self-propelled artillery
Place of origin United States
Specifications
Mass 27.5 tons
Length 30 ft (9.1 m)
Width 10 ft 4 in (3.15 m)
Height 10 ft 8 in (3.25 m)
Crew 6 (2 Loaders, Gunner, Assistant Gunner, Commander, Driver)

Shell separate loading, bagged charge
Caliber 155 mm L/39 caliber[1]
Breech interrupted screw
Traverse 360°
Rate of fire Maximum: 6 rpm
Sustained: 3 rpm
Effective firing range Conventional: 18 km (11 mi)
RAP: 30 km (19 mi)

Main
armament
M126 155 mm Howitzer
Secondary
armament
.50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2 machine gun
Engine Detroit Diesel 8V71T
450 hp (335.56 kW)
Power/weight 18.7 hp/t
Suspension torsion-bar
Operational
range
216 mi (350 km)
Maximum speed 35 mph (56 km/h)

The M109 is an American-made self-propelled 155 mm howitzer, first introduced in the early 1960s. It was upgraded a number of times to today's M109A6 Paladin. The M109 family is the most common Western indirect-fire support weapon of maneuver brigades of armored and mechanized infantry divisions.

The M109 has a crew of six: the section chief, the driver, the gunner, the assistant gunner and two ammunition handlers. The gunner aims the cannon left or right (deflection), the assistant gunner aims the cannon up and down (quadrant). The M109A6 Paladin needs only a crew of four: the commander, driver, gunner and ammunition loader.

The British Army replaced its M109s with the AS-90. Several European armed forces have or are currently replacing older M109s with the German PzH 2000. Upgrades to the M109 were introduced by the U.S. (see variants below) and by Switzerland (KAWEST). With the cancellation of the U.S. Crusader, the Paladin remains the principal self-propelled howitzer for the U.S. for the foreseeable future.

History[]

The M109 was the medium variant of a U.S. program to adopt a common chassis for its self-propelled artillery units. The light version, the M108 Howitzer, was phased out during the Vietnam War, but many were rebuilt as M109s.

The M109 saw its combat debut in Vietnam. Israel used the M109 against Egypt in the 1973 Yom Kippur War and in the 1982 Lebanon War and 2006 Lebanon War. Iran used the M109 in the Iran–Iraq War, in the 1980s. The M109 saw service with the British Army, the Egyptian Army and Saudi Arabian Army in the 1991 Gulf War. The M109 also saw service with the U.S. Army in the Gulf War, as well as in the Iraq War from 2003 to present.

Upgrades to the cannon, ammunition, fire control, survivability, and other electronics systems over the design's lifespan have expanded the system's capabilities, including tactical nuclear projectiles, Cannon Launched Guided Projectiles (CLGP or Copperhead), Rocket Assisted Projectile (RAP), FAmily of SCAtterable Mines (FASCAM), and improved conventional munitions (the Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munition, DPICM).

The developing BCT Ground Combat Vehicle Program will likely replace the M109 as well as many other US army vehicles.

Design[]

The M109 was developed by the Ground System Division of United Defense LP (now BAE Systems Land and Armaments)[1]

Armament[]

M109BREECH

Open breech of M109A5 howitzer.

or L4 Light machine gun

Variants[]

M109[]

Self-propelled-howitzer-vietnam

M109 enters South Vietnam.

First produced in 1963, with 155 mm M126 gun in the M127 Howitzer Mount, 28 rounds of 155 mm were carried. Also armed with a .50cal M2HB machine gun mounted, and 500 rounds of .50cal ammunition.

M109A1 and M109A1B[]

Replaced M126 with longer barreled M126A1 gun for greater effective range. Same M127 mount and ammunition amounts carried. A more recent model, intended for export incorporated more recent improvements into a new production M109A1. These were designated M109A1B.

M109A2[]

Incorporated 27 Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability (RAM) mid-life improvements. Most notably, the long barreled 155 mm M185 cannon in the M178 gun mount, ballistic protection for the panoramic telescope, counterbalanced travel lock, and the ability to mount the M140 alignment device. Stowage increased from 28 rounds of 155 mm, to 36 rounds, .50cal ammunition amount remain 500 rounds.

M109A3 and M109A3B[]

M109A1s and M109A1Bs rebuilt to M109A2 standard respectively. Some A3s feature three contact arm assemblies while all A2s have five.

M109A4[]

M109A2s and M109A3s improved with Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical / Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability (NBC/RAM) improvements, including air purifiers, heaters, and Mission Oriented Protective Posture (MOPP) gear.

The traversing mechanism's clutch is hydraulic, as compared to the electric mechanism on previous M109s, and features a manual override in the event of an electrical failure. The A4 also adds an additional hydraulic filter, for a total of two. Also included is an improvement to the engine starting equipment, greatly improving the ability to start in an emergency.

Ammunition amounts remain the same as two previous models.

M109A5[]

Replaces 155 mm M185 cannon in M178 mount with 39-caliber 155 mm M284 cannon in the M182 mount, giving the A5 a maximum range of 23,500 meters with unassisted projectiles and 30,000 meters with Rocket Assisted Projectiles (RAP Rounds). The vehicle can carry 36 complete rounds of ammunition, has a 440 hp engine instead of the standard 405 hp engine.

M109A5 in repair

M109A5 under repair.

M109A5+[]

Various manufacturers have upgraded the fire control and other components of the M109A5. BAE Systems in York PA recently delivered 12 M109A5+ vehicles to Chile.

M109A6 "Paladin"[]

M109A6 Paladin night fire

M109A6 "Paladin" firing at night.

Fallujah11092004-11-09

An M109A6 howitzer from Alpha Battery, 3rd Battalion, 82nd Field Artillery, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, sends a round down range during combat operations in Fallujah, Iraq.

Overall product improvement in the areas of survivability, RAM, and armament. This includes increased armor, redesigned (safer) internal stowage arrangement for ammunition and equipment, engine and suspension upgrades, and product improvement of the M284 cannon and M182A1 mount. The greatest difference is the integration of an inertial navigation system, sensors detecting the weapons' lay, automation, and an encrypted digital communication system which utilizes computer controlled frequency hopping to avoid enemy electronic warfare and allow the howitzer to send grid location and altitude to the battery fire direction center (FDC). The battery FDCs in turn coordinate fires through a battalion or higher FDC. This allows the Paladin to halt from the move and fire within 30 seconds with accuracy equivalent to the previous models when properly emplaced, laid, and safed — a process that required several minutes under the best of circumstances. Tactically, this improves the systems survivability by allowing the battery to operate dispersed by pairs across the countryside and allowing the howitzer to quickly displace between salvos, or if attacked by indirect fire, aircraft, or ground forces.

The performance improvement of the M109A6 is comparable to that of the first self-propelled artillery over the preceding towed artillery,[citation needed] since the howitzers are not fixed, but may move with the combat forces. They need stop only when a target is identified. After firing on a target, the Paladin is immediately able to resume movement.

Ammunition stowage is increased from 36 to 39 155 mm rounds.

M109 "KAWEST"[]

This Swiss improved version produced by Ruag incorporates a new Swiss-designed L47 155 mm gun with an increased firing range of up to 36 km. The L47 155 mm gun is derived from the Swiss Bison fortress gun's inertial navigation system coupled with a new gun-laying system and more ammunition storage. The KAWEST (lit. Kampfwertsteigerung = upgrade of combat capabilities) requires only 6 crew members instead of 8, and is able to fire 3-round bursts within 15 seconds or maintain a constant firing rate of over one round per minute. Technical modifications: Increased firing range of up to 27 km, increased rate of fire (burst of 3 rounds in 15 sec.), increased ammunition autonomy (40 rounds, 64 charges). New electrical system increases reliability (better than Mil STD 1245A, higher operational readiness, increased mean time between failures, fault-finding diagnostics with test equipment.) Integrated inertial navigation and positioning system, increased mobility (gears, engine), day and night operations capabilities, effective fire suppression system installed, NEMP and EMP protection. Camouflage: paint and netting. Upgraded Swiss PzHb (Panzerhaubitze) 79 and 88 (M109A1) are known as respectively PzHb 79/95 and PzHb 88/95.

M109L52[]

Jointly developed by the Dutch firm RDM and the German firm Rheinmetall, the M109L52 was first revealed in 2002. The main improvement was replacing the M126 series gun with the longer 52-caliber cannon from the PzH 2000, thus the MTLS ammunition of the PzH 2000 can be used. In addition, improvements to the loading system were made. This resulted in an increase of the rate of fire to 9–10 rds/min from the original 3 rds/min, and this high rate of fire can be sustained for up to 2 minutes. A total of 35 rounds can be carried.

K55/K55A1[]

K55/K55A1 are South Korean variants of the M109, originally based on M109A2 with additional domestic augmentations, license-produced by Samsung Techwin. They are fitted with NBC protection, automatic fire extinguishing system, and a modified ammunition reception module for K56 automatic ammunition resupply vehicle.[2] The Performance Improvement Program variant, K55A1, is a complete domestic overhaul of the K55[3] which is further augmented by Samsung Thales with modern digital ballistic computers, multifunctional data display and controllers, GPS navigation and target acquisition system, wireless datalink equipment, and upgraded fire control storage battery and power supply unit,[4] to closely match the US military's modernization of the Paladin into next-generation standard. Many improved technologies of the South Korean K9 Thunder were retrofitted on the K55A1. 1,180 howitzers of these variants were produced.

M109 PIM[]

Bae PIM upgrade

Prototype

The replacement for the M109A6 in U.S. service is the M109 Paladin Integrated Management (PIM). PIM shares common components with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle such as the engine, transmission, and tracks. This creates commonality with other systems and maximizes costs-savings in production, parts inventory and maintenance personnel. The PIM's on-board power systems harness technologies originally developed for the Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon. The PIM can sustain a one round per-minute rate of fire and a maximum rate of fire of four rounds per-minute.[5]

Prototypes of the vehicle underwent government testing in preparation for an low-rate initial production decision. The testing included reliability, availability, and maintainability mission testing as well as ballistic hull and turret testing. PIM is slated to begin low-rate initial production by 2013. The U.S. Army plans on procuring a fleet of 580 PIM enabled sets of howitzers and ammunition support vehicles. PIM is designed to accommodate networking technologies as they become ready.[5]

In October 2013, the Defense Acquisition Board approved the decision start M109A6 PIM initial production. It did not mean a contract was issued, but started decision making within the Army that precedes contracts. The FY 2014 budget calls for $340.8 million in Paladin funding, which would be two dozen vehicle sets at $14.4 million per vehicle. The Army plans to buy 133 vehicles in 66 one-half vehicle sets starting in 2014, although one PIM howitzer and two supporting PIM ammunition carriers will be destroyed during tests. Low-rate production deliveries will start in early 2015, with a full-rate production decision in February 2017.[6][7] On 31 October 2013, BAE received a $668 million contract to begin low-rate initial production of the M109A6 PIM.[8]

Derivatives[]

M992[]

The Field Artillery Ammunition Supply Vehicle (FAASV) is built on the chassis of the M109-series. It is also colloquially referred to as a "CAT" (referring to its nomenclature, CAT: Carrier, Ammunition, Tracked). It replaces the M548 supply vehicle. Unlike the M548 it is armored. This ammunition vehicle has no turret but has a taller superstructure to store 93 rounds and an equivalent number of powders and primers. There is a maximum of 90 conventional rounds, 45 each in two racks, and 3 M712 Copperhead rounds. Until recently much of the remaining internal crew space is taken up by a hydraulically powered conveyor system designed to allow the quick uploading of rounds or transfer of rounds to the M109-series howitzer. Most early models had an additional mechanism called an X-Y Conveyor to lift the rounds into the honeycomb-like storage racks in the front of the superstructure. A ceiling plate above the two racks can be unbolted and opened to allow the racks to be winched out of the vehicle. This vehicle is fitted with a Halon fire suppression system and a weapons mount similar to that on the M109 turret, usually mounting a Mk 19 grenade launcher for local defense against infantry and light armored vehicles. The latest models have a mounting point for two secure radios.

The hydraulic conveyor system is removed by crews as it is slower than moving the rounds by hand. Recently the army has removed the conveyor system and changed the two horizontal opening doors to two vertical doors opening from the center to provide protection to the crew during transfers.

The vehicle also contains a 2-stroke diesel powered auxiliary power unit that can power all non-automotive energy requirements on the Field Artillery Ammunition Supply Vehicle and on the howitzer when a slave cable is used to connect the two. This reduces fuel consumption when mobility is not required.

Training systems[]

The US Army uses the Fire Support Combined Arms Tactical Trainer (FSCATT) in two versions for initial and sustainment training of the M109A6 and M109A5.[9] The system uses an actual surplus turret and a simulated ammunition system.

The Swiss Army uses a highly advanced KAWEST trainer from Van Halteren Metaal of the Netherlands.

The Dutch, Belgian, Thai, and Israeli Armies have various configurations of the Van Halteren Metaal LARIT M109 trainer.

Operators[]

M109 operators v2

M109 operators 2011 (former operators in red)

Egyptian M109 during Operation Bright Star 2005

M109 self-propelled howitzer of the Egyptian Army during Operation Bright Star.

M109[]

M109A1[]

  • Flag of Chile Chile: 48 (24 from Switzerland, upgraded to M-109 KAWEST)[11] 12 A3 and 12 A5+ Upgrade to similar Paladin configuration[12]
  • Flag of Ethiopia Ethiopia: 17
  • Flag of Greece Greece: 51 A1B
  • Flag of Iran Iran: 390
  • Flag of Kuwait Kuwait: 5 A1B
  • Flag of Morocco Morocco: 44 M109A1B
  • Flag of Oman Oman: 15 A0
  • Flag of Peru Peru: 12
  • Flag of Switzerland  Switzerland: 224 (upgraded to M109 KAWEST)[13]
  • Flag of the United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates: 40 (from Switzerland)[11]

M109A2/A3[]

Spanish M109A5 howitzer Bright Star 2001

A Spanish Marines M109A2.

  • Flag of Belgium (civil) Belgium: 127 A2 (of which 64 upgraded to A4BE; all now decommissioned)
  • Flag of Brazil Brazil: 40 A3 (former Belgian) Brazilian Army
  • Flag of Denmark Denmark: 12 (upgraded to M109 A3DK)
  • Flag of Germany Germany: 570 A3GE A1/A2 (phased out by 1 July 2007, replaced by the PzH 2000)
  • Flag of Greece Greece: 84 A2, 50 A3GEA1, 223 A3GEA2[14]
  • Flag of Egypt Egypt: 400 A2
  • Flag of Italy Italy: 221 M109L (with an Italian made 155 mm/39 calibre barrel)[15]
  • Flag of Jordan Jordan: 356 A2/A2-90 (121 M109A2-90 purchased from Netherlands)
  • Flag of Morocco Morocco: 78 M109A2, 22 M109A3 and 40 M-109L47
  • Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands: 126 A2/90 phased out, largely replaced by the PzH 2000.[16]
  • Flag of Norway Norway: 56 A3G (14 upgraded to A3GN, and then nine of these upgraded to A3GNM to suit the winter climate)
  • Flag of Pakistan Pakistan: 150+ A2 in service with the Pakistan Army. Being Upgraded to M109A5 standard.[17][18]
  • Flag of Portugal Portugal: 6 A2 since 1981 (Portuguese Army). Currently retired from active-service and being used only in training duties.[19]
  • Flag of Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia: 60 A2s are currently being upgraded to A5s (2010)
  • Flag of Spain Spain: 6 (Spanish Marines)[20]
  • Flag of Tunisia Tunisia: 19-20 A2

M109A2/A5[]

  • Flag of Austria Austria: 80 A2/A5Ö
  • Flag of the Republic of China Taiwan: 225,

M109A4[]

  • Flag of Belgium (civil) Belgium: 64 A4BE (all now decommissioned and 40 A3BE sold to Brazil)
  • Flag of Canada Canada: 76 A4B+[21] Phased out from the Canadian Forces since 2005, they were used between 1967 to 2005. All vehicle had been modernized to the M109A4B+ SPH standard in 1980s. They were primary used by the 4 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group in Germany.[22]
  • Flag of Morocco Morocco: 4 M109A4

M109A5[]

Moroccan M109A5 howitzer, 2012-03

Moroccan M109A5 howitzer in March 2012.

  • Flag of Brazil Brazil: 36 surplus U.S. Army on order, to be upgraded to M109A5+[23]
  • Flag of Egypt Egypt: 201
  • Flag of Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia: 36
  • Flag of Iraq Iraq: 24
  • Flag of the Philippines Philippines: unknown
  • Flag of Israel Israel: 600
  • Flag of Pakistan Pakistan: 115 [17][24]
  • Flag of Portugal Portugal: 18 since 2002 (Portuguese Army). 14 of these vehicles were M109A2/A3 upgraded to A5 variant. This variant replaced the previous 6 M109A2 operated by the Portuguese Army.[25]
  • Flag of Thailand Thailand: 20
  • Flag of Greece Greece: 12
  • Flag of Spain Spain: 96 (Spanish Army)[26]
  • Flag of Morocco Morocco: 60

M109A6 Paladin[]

K55/K55A1[]

  • Flag of South Korea Republic of Korea: 1,180 K55/K55A1

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Paladin 155mm Self-Propelled Howitzer". Army Technology. http://www.army-technology.com/projects/paladin/. Retrieved 2010-12-23. 
  2. "K56". http://www.samsungtechwin.com/product/product_05_01_06.asp. 
  3. K55PIP overhaul
  4. "Fire Control System For K55A1". http://www.samsungthales.com/eng/product/product.asp?idx=9. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Army developing new self-propelled howitzer". 1 September 2011. http://www.army.mil/article/64728/Army_developing_new_self_propelled_howitzer/. Retrieved 5 September 2011. 
  6. BAE Systems could obtain new contract from U.S. Army for M109A6 PIM 155m self-propelled howitzer - Armyrecognition.com, 26 October 2013
  7. New Paladin to Enter Low-Rate Production - Defensenews.com, 21 October 2013
  8. BAE Systems Awarded Contract to Begin Production of Paladin Integrated Management - BAE press release, 31 October 2013
  9. "Fire Support Combined Arms Tactical Trainer (FS-CATT)". US Army. http://www.peostri.army.mil/PRODUCTS/FS-CATT/. Retrieved 10 December 2011. 
  10. "Esoteric Armour Libya M109". http://esotericarmour.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/libya-m109.html. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 "RUAG Land Systems 155 mm M109 upgrade (Switzerland)". http://www.janes.com/articles/Janes-Armour-and-Artillery-Upgrades/RUAG-Land-Systems-155-mm-M109-upgrade-Switzerland.html. 
  12. baesystems.com
  13. "Panzerhaubitze M 109 KAWEST". He.admin.ch. 2009-12-18. http://www.he.admin.ch/internet/heer/de/home/verbaende/pzbr11/mittel/hauptwaffensysteme/panzerhaubitze.html. Retrieved 2010-12-23. 
  14. "DefenceNet - "Κοσμογονία" για το πυροβολικό του ΕΣ: Αγοράζονται 36 PzH-2000 και 169 μεταχειρισμένα Μ109Α3GEA2" (in Greek). Defencenet.gr. 2009-05-13. http://www.defencenet.gr/defence/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=7683&Itemid=47. Retrieved 2010-12-23. 
  15. "Oto Melara 155 mm M109L self-propelled howitzer (Italy)". Jane's Armour and Artillery. Janes.com. 2010-02-09. http://www.janes.com/articles/Janes-Armour-and-Artillery/Oto-Melara-155-mm-M109L-self-propelled-howitzer-Italy.html. Retrieved 2010-12-23. 
  16. Being phased out in 2007-2008 in favor of the PzH 2000 NL: "Koninklijke Landmacht - "M109" (combat support material)" (in Dutch). http://www.landmacht.nl/materieel/huidig_materieel/Gevechtssteunmaterieel/m109.aspx. Retrieved 2006-08-24. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 Mehta, Admiral Sureesh (2008). South Asia Defence And Strategic Year Book 2008. Pentagon Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-81-8274-320-5. 
  18. "Cold War Bargains Still To Be Had". strategypage.com. February 22, 2010. http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htart/20100222.aspx. Retrieved 6 May, 2013. 
  19. "M-109 A2/A3 - FMC-United Defense / BAE Systems / Portugal". Área militar. http://areamilitar.net/DIRECTORIO/ter.aspx?NN=12&P=77. Retrieved 2011-05-08. 
  20. "Obus Autopropulsado ATP M-109 A2 - Infantería de Marina - Armada Española" (in Spanish). Armada.mde.es. http://www.armada.mde.es/ArmadaPortal/page/Portal/ArmadaEspannola/buques_infanteria/prefLang_es/05_material_IM--02_armamento--10_obus_m109_es. Retrieved 2010-12-23. 
  21. "The Canadian Army - 2006 - Structure - Fact Sheet - Transformation". Archived from the original on 2008-06-07. http://web.archive.org/web/20080607182117/http://www.army.forces.gc.ca/lf/English/1_6_3_2.asp. 
  22. M109 155mm Self-Propelled Howitzer ... - Google Livres. Books.google.ca. http://books.google.ca/books?id=Hv7DB_R0KtQC&pg=PA48&lpg=PA48&dq=M109A3B+SPH&source=bl&ots=jOcPTRypDE&sig=y54sCWkTBJm8aJHTSkj8JYOJ6CY&hl=fr&ei=8IE6SvjvBNOFmQewk6DsBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1. Retrieved 2010-12-23. 
  23. Brazil; Army plans to purchase US Army surplus 155mm artillery pieces - Dmilt.com, March 13, 2013
  24. "U.S. delivers 48 field artillery cannons to Pakistan Army". News.xinhuanet.com. 2010-02-14. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-02/14/c_13174848.htm. Retrieved 2013-03-19. 
  25. "M-109 A5 - FMC-United Defense / BAE Systems / Portugal". http://areamilitar.net/DIRECTORIO/ter.aspx?NN=13&P=77. Retrieved 2011-05-08. 
  26. ":Ejército de tierra - ATP 155/39 M-109 A5E:" (in Spanish). Ejercito.mde.es. 2001-12-01. http://www.ejercito.mde.es/materiales/armamento/ATP-155-32. Retrieved 2010-12-23. 

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 M109 howitzer and the edit history here.
Advertisement