- Flugabwehrkanonenpanzer Gepard
Infobox Weapon
name=Flugabwehrkanonenpanzer Gepard
caption=Gepard 1A2 of the GermanArmy
origin=FRG
type=Self-propelled anti-aircraft gun
is_vehicle=yes
service=
used_by=
wars=
length= (guns forward) 7.68 m
width= 3.71 m
height= (radar lowered) 3.29 m
weight= 47.5 t
suspension=torsion bar
speed=65 km/h
vehicle_range=550 km
primary_armament=2 x 35 mmautocannon
2 x 320 rounds anti-air ammunition and
2 x 20 rounds anti-tank
secondary_armament= 2 x 4 smoke grenade dischargers
armour=conventional steel
engine=10-cylinder, 37.4 litre MTUmulti-fuel engine
engine_power=830 hp (610 kW)
pw_ratio=
crew=3 (driver, gunner, commander)"For the World War II German self-propelled anti-aircraft gun see
Flakpanzer 38(t) "The Flakpanzer (shortened form of the German "Flugabwehrkanonenpanzer" or "anti-aircraft cannon tank") Gepard (English: "
Cheetah ") is an autonomous, all-weather-capable Germanself-propelled anti-aircraft gun (SPAAG). It was developed in the 1960s and fielded in the 1970s, and has been upgraded several times with the latest electronics. It constitutes a cornerstone of theair defence of theGerman Army (Deutsches Heer) and a number of otherNATO -states.Description
It is based on the Leopard 1 tank hull with a large fully rotating turret carrying the armament—a pair of 35 mm Oerlikon KDA autocannons and the two radar dishes—a general search radar at the rear of the turret and the tracking radar, and a laser rangefinder, at the front between the guns.
The guns are 90 calibres (3.15 m) long, with a muzzle velocity of 1,440 m/s (FAPDS - frangible, armour piercing, discarding sabot rounds), giving an effective range of 5,500 m. The KDA autocannon can take two different ammunition types, and the usual loading is a mix of 320 AA and 20 AP rounds per gun. Combined rate of fire is 1,100 rounds/min.
The electrically driven turret is powered by a 40 kW generator driven by a 4-cylinder, 3.8 litre
Mercedes-Benz OM 314 multi-fuel engine.Since the eighties Stinger teams have been accompanying the Gepard units, to take advantage of their long-range scanning capacity. To combine this capacity in a single unit a missile system upgrade which mounts the U.S. Stinger
surface-to-air missile to the autocannon is in development;The Gepard was developed from 1963 onwards. In 1969 construction began of four A prototypes testing both 30 and 35 mm guns. On
25 June 1970 it was decided to use the 35 mm type. In 1971 twelve second phase B prototypes were ordered; the same year the Dutch army ordered a CA preseries of five vehicles based on a parallel development that had used a German 0-series Leopard 1 vehicle made available by the German government in March 1970 as the C-prototype. The Germans made a small preseries of both the B1and B2R. On5 February 1973 the political decision was made to produce the type; in September 1973 the contract was signed withKrauss-Maffei for 432 B2 turrets and 420 hulls with a total value of DM1,200,000,000. Each vehicle would thus be about three times more expensive than a normal Leopard 1. The first was delivered in December 1976. Belgium ordered 55 vehicles, identical to the German version. The Dutch ordered three batches, the CA1, CA2 and CA3 with in total 95 vehicles, equipped withPhilips radar systems.Variants
There are two variants of Gepard in service; the Dutch has a different radar installation.
Germany
* Searchradar :S band , 15 km range
* Tracking radar:Ku band , 15 km range
*Laser rangefinder The Netherlands
*Search radar:X band , 15 km range
*Tracking radar: X/Ka band , 13 km rangeThe Dutch version was officially called the PRTL ("PantserRupsTegenLuchtdoelen" or "Armoured Tracked Anti-Aircraft"), pronounced as "pruttle" by the soldiers. The Dutch series version was made public through a photograph of a vehicle from a C-Company, the first to be equipped with the new weapon. Traditionally all Dutch vehicles in a company have names beginning with the company designation letter and this vehicle happened to have the individual name "Cheetah" painted in bold type on its turret. Inevitably the international press assumed "Cheetah" was the Dutch name for their Gepard version and this mistake found its way into most armour publications on the subject. In 2000 the Dutch military authorities, tired of constantly having to explain all this and considering "pruttle" was hardly a martial name anyway, conformed themselves to common error and made "Cheetah" the official designation, when the system was upgraded.Users
*flag|Germany: 377 originally built, 94 remaining in service.
*flag|Netherlands: 60 vehicles, mostly in reserve now.
*flag|Belgium: 55; withdrawn from service.
*flag|Romania: 43, all ex-German Bundeswehr. [http://www.forter.ro/ro/inzestrare/ghepard/]
*flag|Chile: 30+; 12 units for each armored brigade, of a total of 5 brigades. [http://www.segurancaedefesa.com/Gepard_2_Chile.html Chile orders 30 Gepard (In Portuguese)] [http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ej%C3%A9rcito_de_Chile Process of modernization - Armored Brigades (In Spanish)]Comparable systems
*
Tunguska-M1
*Type 95 SPAAA
* M6 Linebacker
*Type 87 Self-Propelled Anti-Aircraft Gun References
External links
* [http://www.primeportal.net/apc/gepard.htm Gepard Photos and Walk Arounds on Prime Portal]
* [http://www.army-technology.com/projects/gepard/ Army Technology]
* [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/europe/gepard.htm Global Security.org]
* [http://defencejournal.com/feb-mar99/gepard.htm Defence Journal]
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