Bushmaster III | |
Origin: | United States |
Type: | Automatic cannon |
Is Ranged: | yes |
Is Artillery: | yes |
Service: | 2008–present[1] |
Used By: | Danish Defence, Armed forces of the Netherlands, Estonian Defence Forces |
Manufacturer: | Alliant Techsystems |
Production Date: | 1998–present |
Weight: | Total: 4800NaN0 Barrel: 2500NaN0 |
Length: | 158.190NaN0 |
Cartridge: | 35 × 228 mm 50 × 228 mm (XM913) 50 × 319 mm |
Caliber: | 35mm |
Action: | Chain gun: open bolt, forward ejection |
Rate: | Cyclic: 200 rounds/minute |
Velocity: | 11800NaN0 /s |
Feed: | Dual linked and linkless, 24 volts |
The Bushmaster III is a 35 mm automatic/semi-automatic cannon designed and built by Alliant Techsystems, based on the 25 mm M242 Bushmaster. The weapon has been selected as primary armament for the CV9035 export versions of the CV90 infantry fighting vehicles (IFV) currently in service with the Danish, Dutch and Estonian armies.[2] [3] The Bushmaster III is a chain gun, like the other members of the Bushmaster family, which grants it great dependability and safety from ammunition cook-off even though it does result in lower rates of fire. The caliber is the NATO standard 35×228 introduced by the Oerlikon KD in the 1950s.
See main article: XM913 chain gun. The U.S. Army is testing the Bushmaster 50 mm cannon as a counter rocket, artillery, and mortar (C-RAM) and counter unmanned aerial vehicle (C-UAV) weapon. Initially developed under the Extended Area Protection and Survivability Integrated Demonstration (EAPS ID), it fires a 50×319 mm cartridge and has been successfully tested in tracking distant moving targets using interferometric radar as a sensor, fire control computer, and radio frequency transmitter and receiver to launch a course-correcting projectile. The command guided interceptors have a thruster that receives commands for maneuvering and warhead detonation, with a tantalum-tungsten alloy liner to form forward propelled penetrators to defeat C-RAM targets, and steel body fragments to destroy UAVs.[4] [5] The systems can destroy UAVs at a range of 1km (01miles) and at a height of 1500m (4,900feet).[6] Converting the Bushmaster III to the 50 mm version can be accomplished by changing the barrel and a few key parts allowing it to fire the SuperShot 50 cartridge.[7]
Separately, under the Army's Advanced Lethality and Accuracy System for Medium Caliber (ALAS-MC) effort, Northrop Grumman (which had acquired Alliant Techsystems) was contracted to develop a 50 mm derivative of the Bushmaster III called the XM913 for the Next Generation Combat Vehicle (NGCV), later designated the XM30 Mechanized Infantry Combat Vehicle (MICV), that would replace the Bradley Fighting Vehicle. Although a further evolution of the Bushmaster III, this weapon fires the 50×228 mm cartridge rather than the 50×319 mm SuperShot 50 cartridge of the previous up-gunned variant. Various rounds include the XM1203 armor piercing sabot round and XM1204 high explosive round with a programmable fuse including delay and airburst.[8] [9]
Receiver: 150 lb (68 kg)
Feeder: 80 lb (36 kg)
Barrel: 250 lb (113 kg1)
Total: 480 lb (218 kg)
1 Includes gun barrel, drive motor, recoil system and integral dual feeder.