Artillery
Дата: 05.08.2019 06:34:04
BadCorps, on Aug 04 2019 - 18:41, said: Sweden did it better https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandkanon_1 "It had an
exceptionally high rate of fire, being able to fire 14 shells in 45
second. With one round already loaded in the gun beside the two
seven-round clips in the magazine, the rate of fire rose to
official world record of 15 rounds in 45 seconds. The magazine
could then be reloaded with a built-in hoist in about 2 minutes."Einzelganger7: Nice one... Though, the Panzerhaubitze 2000 has no clip so
they could shoot non stop the whole ammo rack of 60
shells (of course, if the cannon remains without getting
overheated).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panzerhaubitze_2000
"It is capable of a very high rate of fire; in burst mode it can fire three rounds in nine seconds, ten rounds in 56 seconds, and can—depending on barrel heating—fire between 10 and 13 rounds per minute continuously. The PzH 2000 has automatic support for up to 5 rounds of Multiple Rounds Simultaneous Impact (MRSI). MRSI is a concept in which fire from different weapons are timed to arrive on target at the same time. It is possible for artillery to fire several shells per gun at a target and have all of them arrive simultaneously. The replenishment of shells is automated. Two operators can load 60 shells and propelling charges in less than 12 minutes."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panzerhaubitze_2000
"It is capable of a very high rate of fire; in burst mode it can fire three rounds in nine seconds, ten rounds in 56 seconds, and can—depending on barrel heating—fire between 10 and 13 rounds per minute continuously. The PzH 2000 has automatic support for up to 5 rounds of Multiple Rounds Simultaneous Impact (MRSI). MRSI is a concept in which fire from different weapons are timed to arrive on target at the same time. It is possible for artillery to fire several shells per gun at a target and have all of them arrive simultaneously. The replenishment of shells is automated. Two operators can load 60 shells and propelling charges in less than 12 minutes."
Artillery














