- Royal Ordnance L7
infobox weapon
is_UK=yes
is_artillery=yescaliber=105 mm
name=L7
manufacturer=Royal Ordnance The Royal Ordnance L7 is the basic model of Britain's most successfultank gun . The L7 was a 105 mm rifled design intended for use inarmoured fighting vehicle s. It was so successful that it armed not only British post-war designs, but was used almost universally in "the West" as the main armament of almost everymain battle tank of the period.The L7 was developed by Britain's
Royal Ordnance Factories to equip of the postwar (Cold War ) period as the successor to the 20 pounder used on Britain's postwar tank—the Centurion.The L7 was a popular weapon and it was maintained in use even after it was superseded by the L11 series 120 mm rifled tank gun, for some Centurion tanks operating as Artillery Forward Observation and Armoured Vehicle,
Royal Engineers (AVRE) vehicles. The L7, and adaptations of it, can be found today as standard or retrofitted equipment on a wide variety of tanks developed during the Cold War. It is also being used as the main armament of the U.S. Army'sStryker -basedMobile Gun System .History
During the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956 , a SovietT-54A medium tank was driven onto the grounds of the British embassy in Budapest by the Hungarians. After an examination of this tank's armour and 100 mm gun, British officials decided that the 20 pounder was apparently incapable of defeating it. Hence there was a need to adopt a 105 mm gun. [Zaloga 2004, pp 13, 39.]The L7 was specifically designed to fit into the turret mountings of the 20 pounder. This would enable the Centurions to be upgunned with minimum modifications, hence the fleet could be upgraded in a shorter time and at a lower cost.
The first tank to be equipped with the L7 was the Centurion Mark 5 in 1959.Fact|date=February 2007 The gun was subsequently adopted by several other nations for their own MBTs, most notably the German
Leopard 1 (for which the L7A3 variant was developed), theJapan eseType 74 (produced under license byJapan Steel Works ), the SwedishStridsvagn 103 (as the L74, with a longer barrel and automatic loader), the US M60 series of tanks (with the M68), and theIsrael iMerkava . In addition, several countries have used the gun to improve thefirepower of existing main battle tanks. Derivatives have even been mounted in Warsaw Pact-builtT-54 and T-55 tanks in Israel, Egypt and Iraq, andType 79 tanks in China.Technology
The breech uses a horizontally-sliding
breechblock for loading the fixed cartridge cases. The gunrecoil s approximately 29 cm (in most applications), automatically ejecting the empty cartridge case upon reaching full recoil. The barrel of the L7 is fitted with abore evacuator approximately halfway down its length. It is eccentrically mounted, which is a key recognition feature.pecification
*Caliber: 105 mm (4.13 in)
*Weight: 1,282 kg (2,826 lbs)
*Length: 5.89 m (19.3 ft)
*Rate of fire: 10 rounds perminute (maximum)Ammunition Available
* APDS
* APERS-T ("Anti-personnel-tracer")
*APFSDS
* Dummy
* HE
* HEAT
* HESH
* Smoke-White phosphorus incendiary
* Target Practice
* Target Practice DiscardingSabot Variants
* L7A1:Standard British production variant.
* L7A3 :Variant for the (West) GermanLeopard 1 MBT. The upper rear corner of the breech block reduced in size so gun can be depressed without hitting the turret roof.
* L74 :Swedish variant with a 62 calibre (6.51 m) barrel used only for theStridsvagn 103 MBT.
*M68 :US built variant forM60 Patton . Utilises a round breech with a vertically-slidingbreechblock , and a different design of bore evacuator.
*KM68A1 :Republic of Korea Army 's license-produced variant of the U.S. M68 gun. Used on M48A3K, M48A5K and K1 tanks.
*Type 79/81/83:Chinese copies of an L7 supplied by Austria.Use
*Centurion : and derivatives such as Olifant
*EE-T1 Osório
*Leopard 1
*M1 Abrams
*M47 Patton in some upgraded variants (for example Spanish M47E1 and M47E2)
*M48 Patton in some upgraded variants (M48A5,Israel i-rebuilt M48s, etc.)
*K1 Type 88
*M60 Patton
*Merkava I and II
*OF-40
*Pz-61 &Pz-68
*Stridsvagn 103
*Stryker MGS
*T-54 in several upgraded variants (for example Israeli Tiran-4Sh)
*T-55 in several upgraded variants (for example Egyptian modified T-55s)
*TAM medium tank
*Type 74
*Vijayanta
*Ramses IINotes
References
* Zaloga, Steven J. and Hugh Johnson (2004). "T-54 and T-55 Main Battle Tanks 1944–2004". Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 1-84176-792-1.
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