PzH 2000

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Panzerhaubitze 2000 in profile

Panzerhaubitze 2000
General characteristics
Crew 5 (Commander, Driver, Gunner, 2 Loaders)
Length 11.7 m (38.4 feet)
Width 3.6 m (11.8 feet)
Height 3.1 m (10.2 feet)
Weight 55.3 tons combat loaded
Armour and armament
Armour
Main armament Rheinmetall 155 mm L52 Artillery Gun
Secondary armament Rheinmetall MG3 7.62 mm machine gun
Mobility
Power plant MTU 881 Ka-500
986 hp
Suspension
Road speed 60 km/h (37 mph)
Power/weight 17.83 hp/ton
Range 420 km (261 mi)

The Panzerhaubitze 2000, or PzH 2000 for short, is a German 155mm self-propelled howitzer developed by Krauss-Maffei Wegmann (KMW) together with Rheinmetall for the Bundeswehr (the German Armed Forces). The PzH 2000 is one of the most powerful conventional artillery system currently deployed. It is particularly notable for a very high rate of fire; in burst mode it can fire three rounds in 9 seconds, ten rounds in 56 seconds, and can fire between 10 and 13 rounds per minute continuously depending on barrel heating. PzH 2000 has also been selected by the Italian, Dutch and Greek Armies, and more orders are probable as forces upgrade their M109 Paladins.

The loading of shells is automated, two operators should be able to load 60 shells in 12 minutes.

Contents

In 1986 Italy, the United Kingdom, and Germany, agreed to terminate their existing development of the PzH 155-1 (SP 70) program, which had run into problems and was also clearly inferior to the new guns being introduced by NORICUM based on Gerald Bull's GC-45 howitzer. German industry was asked for proposals to build a new design with an even more powerful gun that would better the SP 70 requirements, based on Bull's Extended Range, Full Bore concepts. Of the returned designs, Wegmann's was clearly the best.

German PzH 2000 used for training
German PzH 2000 used for training

Rheinmetall designed the 155mm 52-calibre gun, which is chromium-lined for its entire 8 metre length and includes a muzzle brake on the end. The gun uses a new standardized charge system with six different charges, which can be combined to provide exactly the power needed and no more. Primer is loaded separately via a conveyor belt, and the entire loading, laying and clearing is completely automated. The maximum range of the gun is 30km with the standard L15A2 round (from the US M109), about 35km with base bleed rounds, and at least 40km with assisted projectiles. In April 2006 a PzH 2000 shot assisted shells (Denel V-Lap) over a distance of 56km with a probable maximum range of over 60km.[1]

Wegmann supplied both the chassis, sharing some components with the Leopard 1, and the turret for the gun. The system has superb cross-country performance and considerable protection in the case of counter-fire. The turret includes a phased array radar on the front glacis for monitoring outgoing rounds and correcting for windage. Laying can also be automatically provided via encrypted radio links from rear area command. A crew of three was needed for full operation, commander, layer and driver.

Wegman eventually won a contract in 1996 for 185 to be delivered to Germany's rapid reaction force, followed by another 410 for the main force. Wegmann and Krauss-Maffei, the two main German military tracked vehicle designers, merged in 1998.

A number of armies have tested the system and its ability to provide accurate fire at 40km has been a major selling point. In addition to sales of complete systems, the turret has been mounted on a German frigate to test it as a naval gun (the project was called Modular Naval Artillery Concept, or MONARC) and it's likely that a naval gun based on this concept will be part of the upcoming Type 125 frigate of Germany.

The British Army had also adopted the gun itself for use on upgraded version of their AS90 Braveheart system, but these plans were later put on hold and an upgraded version of the Royal Ordnance (BAE) gun chosen instead.

The PzH 2000 was considered for the US Army's Crusader concept system, but several requirements of the Crusader made it unsuitable. In particular the Crusader placed the crew and gun in separate compartments, allowing a single highly-armored crew compartment to control the firing of an entire battery of guns.

The PzH 2000 was used by the Dutch Army in August of 2006 against Taliban targets in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, in support of Operation Medusa. [2]

  • Crew: 5 (commander, driver, gunner, 2 loaders)
  • Length: 11.7 meters (38.4 feet)
  • Width: 3.6 meters (11.8 feet)
  • Height: 3.1 meters (10.2 feet)
  • Combat weight: 55.3 tons

  • Primary: Rheinmetall 155 mm L52 Artillery Gun
    • Rate of fire: 3 firings per 10 seconds, 8 firings per minute, 20 firings per 3 minutes
    • Range (of the artillery fire): 30 km (19 miles), 40 km (35 miles) with rocket-assisted projectile
  • Secondary: MG3 - 7.62 × 51 mm machine gun

  • Engine: MTU 881 Ka-500
    • Power: 986 hp
    • Power/weight: 17.83 hp/ton
  • Top road speed: 60 km/h (37 mph)
  • Top off-road speed: 45 km/h (28 mph)
  • Range (of the vehicle): 420 km (261 miles)
  • Fuel Economy: 240 L/100 km

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