GK .Dundas
Army.ca Veteran
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Actually off of Magnificent (Maggie) with a kludged up ground mount .
Yup. Bonnie never had 40mm Bofors.
She had 4x 3"50 twin mounts, plus 3x 6 pdr Saluting guns.
Why 1 12 tube battery? What advantages are there in doing that? To be your grouped a great deal of guns in one organization which limits it mobility, ability to sustain, and command and control. “Ah but we’ll deploy them as troops you see” - well if that troop is large enough to command 6 guns, has its own organic logistics, and has all the other bells and whistles it is in effect a battery.Proposal -
WW1 saw 3 gun batteries and 1 howitzer battery per regiment
WW2 saw 3 gun-howitzer batteries with 8 gun-howitzers per battery
The Cold War saw 3 to 4 howitzer plus or minus an air-defence battery.
What happens if
The Regiment becomes 2 AD Batteries, 1 large 12 tube howitzer battery and 1x 8 launcher HIMARS battery?
The AD Batteries could be responsible for UAS and overall situational awareness and make the targeting of the howitzers more effective. The HIMARS battery would be under the Brigade Commander's direct control and informed by the Recce Regiment's inputs.
The real plus I see is that it changes the focus to defence from attack while retaining the systems to conduct attacks. In a country where we aren't allowed to buy "Attack Helicopters" and "Peace Keeping" is our thing, then having artillery regiments whose first priority is to Defend might make them an easier sell. It would certainly result in a justification for the Artillery to lead the way on even benign Peace Keeping missions. And GBAD seems to be the flavour of the month.
The GBAD batteries would also take all the C2 into the field with them so that they could be accompanied by a troop of howitzers and/or a section of HIMARs if the situation warranted.
It would also leave the Reserves free to focus on supplying firing troops for the howitzers and the HIMARS.
Money could be spent on stocks of ammunition and spare turrets.....
Thought: If the GBAD system can co-ordinate multiple remote gun and missile turrets in operation against multiple targets could the turret array include fixed remote 155mm and GMRLS turrets?
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Boxer RCH 155 demonstrates MRSI and fire-on-the-move capabilities – Below The Turret Ring
below-the-turret-ring.com
Your GBAD battery, with 2 watchkeepers could now comprise 6x 35mm, 2x NASAMs with 12 total AIM9s/AIM120s/AIM7s/ESSMs.... a pair of 155s and a couple of MRLS pods.
Analysis: 155mm Wheeled Mobile Howitzers Could Become Anti-Ship Artillery - Naval News
The concept of 155mm tracked Self-Propelled Howitzers (SPHs) acting as mobile coastal artillery isn’t particularly new; however, the reality of implementing this concept recently got much better with new advances in GPS precision-guided rocket-assisted projectiles and Hypervelocity shell technology.www.navalnews.com
The range revolution - Nammo
www.nammo.com
The static turrets could also be deployed from the backs of vehicles as well to supply manoeuvre support.
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Agreed. We need to be operationally mobile. How tactically mobile do we need to be?We’re an expeditionary army be design, always have been (be 1885 was expeditionary in terms of deployment).
No we do not see a fixation on a fixed turret. We see a fixation on the modular, remote turret which is available in all calibres, and all effectors and sensors. And which is the continuing state of the art and Best Available Technology.And again we see the fixation on the fixed turret, which provide not real advantages.
Why 1 12 tube battery?
What advantages are there in doing that?
To be your grouped a great deal of guns in one organization which limits it mobility, ability to sustain, and command and control. “Ah but we’ll deploy them as troops you see” - well if that troop is large enough to command 6 guns, has its own organic logistics, and has all the other bells and whistles it is in effect a battery.
I do not think anyone believes that it is the universal solution.From the bottom up...
Agreed. We need to be operationally mobile. How tactically mobile do we need to be?
Deploying an Engineer Squadron, a Light Infantry Battalion and a GBAD battery - easier or harder than a mechanized battlegroup? More or less useful across all phases of war?
I accept that it is a debatable issue.
I don't accept that the Mech Battle Group is the universal solution.
TBH Modular often brings complexities that are not really needed -- or realities that it isn't a feasibly modular as portrayedNo we do not see a fixation on a fixed turret. We see a fixation on the modular, remote turret which is available in all calibres, and all effectors and sensors. And which is the continuing state of the art and Best Available Technology.
This is where I dont understand the benefit of the same turret.Those turrets can be "fixed" on a cement pad, on the deck of a ship or boat, on the back of a truck, or the back of an APC, or even a helicopter or aircraft, manned or unmanned. The same turret. Fixed or Mobile.
No disagreement thereIf you are going to put down trails for three months, or three years or thirty years why would you waste time, effort and money maintaining and replacing wheels, replacing tyres and bearings, greasing them, reinflating them --- or worse yet tying up a perfectly useful vehicle that could be doing other things for you?
The issue is see is then a lot of the actual mobile systems get ignored or not acquired.The Swedes defended their coasts for the duration of the cold war with emplaced artillery. We defended Lahr for the like duration with guns on trailers and guns on tracked tractors.
Riga needs defending and isn't going anywhere. Camp Adazi likewise. Munitions factories. Srebrenica. Medak. Camp Bondsteel. Kandahar. All of those needed defending and an mobile weapons system tied up in their defence was over kill for the defence and a waste of resources that could be employed offensively.
Most things worth defending aren't going anywhere.
The best we can do is to make the defence as efficient as possible, meaning to use as few people as possible while destroying as many targets as possible and fortunately that equates to industrial practices.
I don't think anyone I saying that GBAD isn't needed -- but you are missing the major issue in that your GBAD assets are not part of a Battle Group - and potentially not part of a Bde -- when you are considering fighting you want a cohesive formation, something that the Tank Squadron is...The clear answer is that it is easier to convert 4 regiments of 4 batteries than it is to raise 3 or 4 more regiments.
Also I do not accept that all forces have to be mobile to be effective. See above.
In fact many effective forces MUST be static.
And being expeditionary does not mean being mobile.
Some mobile forces, like Heliportable Divisions and Armoured Divisions are decidedly difficult to expedite due to their lack of mobility. Not just the physical limits but, as you point out, their sustainment costs.
Conversely a GBAD battery at Adazi (I have to assume that somebody has already got that covered but why could that not be a Canadian contribution?) is probably a good idea.
I know GBAD batteries take money away from tank squadrons. My choice would be for the GBAD battery as a priority over a tank squadron, or even an Apache squadron.
The false economy of "modularity" as they need dedicated vehicles if they are maneuver support systems.All of my "fixed" turrets are only "fixed" when the circumstances permit or demand. All of them can be mounted on any mobile platform and converted to manouever support systems. Equally all of them can go trails down for extended periods and be wired in to a protected CIC/FCS and manned by a couple of watchkeepers rather than requiring a separate crew for every turret. Those "redundant" crews could be on course, on leave, or training for manoeuvre warfare.
I do not think anyone believes that it is the universal solution.
But if that is what you are asked for by allies, it is what you should supply.
TBH Modular often brings complexities that are not really needed -- or realities that it isn't a feasibly modular as portrayed
This is where I dont understand the benefit of the same turret.
The stability requirements as well as the armor one will want are going to be significantly different - as well a vehicle mounted system will generally want to be much more of an "All in one" platform than a fixed site system needs to be.
No disagreement there
No matter what is acquired something else will not be acquired. See comment about not having the luxury of buying the best of everything for every occasion. Equally as bad, as far as I am concerned, is having the absolute best equipment for only one occasion. The enemy, in the words of the great philosopher Meatloaf, "won't do that".The issue is see is then a lot of the actual mobile systems get ignored or not acquired.
What on earth are you havering about?I don't think anyone I saying that GBAD isn't needed -- but you are missing the major issue in that your GBAD assets are not part of a Battle Group - and potentially not part of a Bde -- when you are considering fighting you want a cohesive formation, something that the Tank Squadron is...
The false economy of "modularity" as they need dedicated vehicles if they are maneuver support systems.
You will then end up without one or the other...
Swedish Coastal Artillery, when’s the last time they fired a shot in anger again ?
That was more a general point that looking to the Swedes for inspiration should be tempered by the knowledge they haven’t fought a war since the invention of the combustion engine.Don't know about the Swedes but I know when the Norwegians did and they were untrained conscripts who did pretty well.
* Someone else will have to provide the movie clip because I haven't a clue how to do that from my phone.
We should supply what we promise.
We should supply things that benefit our national defence first.
The things we supply should be surplus to our direct needs but be seen as an opportunity to gain operational experience with them.
Uncle Sam needs jungle fighters. Fine. We don't. Talk to somebody that has them.
See I am a B student. I am quite happy with an 80% solution that works in 90% of the cases. I don't see the benefit of bespoke Gucci kit tailored for one specific mission. We don't have that luxury.
No matter what is acquired something else will not be acquired. See comment about not having the luxury of buying the best of everything for every occasion. Equally as bad, as far as I am concerned, is having the absolute best equipment for only one occasion. The enemy, in the words of the great philosopher Meatloaf, "won't do that".
What on earth are you havering about?
From the bottom up...
Agreed. We need to be operationally mobile. How tactically mobile do we need to be?
Deploying an Engineer Squadron, a Light Infantry Battalion and a GBAD battery - easier or harder than a mechanized battlegroup? More or less useful across all phases of war?
I accept that it is a debatable issue.
I don't accept that the Mech Battle Group is the universal solution.
No we do not see a fixation on a fixed turret. We see a fixation on the modular, remote turret which is available in all calibres, and all effectors and sensors. And which is the continuing state of the art and Best Available Technology.
Those turrets can be "fixed" on a cement pad, on the deck of a ship or boat, on the back of a truck, or the back of an APC, or even a helicopter or aircraft, manned or unmanned. The same turret. Fixed or Mobile.
If you are going to put down trails for three months, or three years or thirty years why would you waste time, effort and money maintaining and replacing wheels, replacing tyres and bearings, greasing them, reinflating them --- or worse yet tying up a perfectly useful vehicle that could be doing other things for you?
The Swedes defended their coasts for the duration of the cold war with emplaced artillery. We defended Lahr for the like duration with guns on trailers and guns on tracked tractors.
Riga needs defending and isn't going anywhere. Camp Adazi likewise. Munitions factories. Srebrenica. Medak. Camp Bondsteel. Kandahar. All of those needed defending and an mobile weapons system tied up in their defence was over kill for the defence and a waste of resources that could be employed offensively.
Most things worth defending aren't going anywhere.
The best we can do is to make the defence as efficient as possible, meaning to use as few people as possible while destroying as many targets as possible and fortunately that equates to industrial practices.
The clear answer is that it is easier to convert 4 regiments of 4 batteries than it is to raise 3 or 4 more regiments.
Also I do not accept that all forces have to be mobile to be effective. See above.
In fact many effective forces MUST be static.
All of my "fixed" turrets are only "fixed" when the circumstances permit or demand. All of them can be mounted on any mobile platform and converted to manouever support systems. Equally all of them can go trails down for extended periods and be wired in to a protected CIC/FCS and manned by a couple of watchkeepers rather than requiring a separate crew for every turret. Those "redundant" crews could be on course, on leave, or training for manoeuvre warfare.
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The weapon is separate from the vehicle and the vehicle is separate from the crew.
We might want to be a bit careful with that line of attack? How long has it been since Panjwaii?
Absolutely. The naval version was called the Boffin. They were in storage after we decommissioned the Bonnie and the Maggie and anecdotally my understanding was that NATO was insisting in the early / mid 1970s that all military airfields be protected by air defence systems (and I think with buildings to be painted in matt green). NATO put up money for that to happen and Canada cashed in, got the Boffins out of storage, bought a bunch of Blowpipe missile systems of the Brits and voila. We created AD batteries and installed the Boffins around our airfields. That didn't change until we did the Low Level Aird Defence project that replaced the Boffins with the Oerlikon and ADATS and the Blowpipes with the Javelins.Didn't the Arty folks get some old 40mm bofors off the Bonnie for use as AFAD in Germany ?