SP's LandForces

ArtilleryA Capability of OFB

- Gagan Chaturvedi

No battle or war was fought by the armies of East India Company, the British Empire or independen­t India where the arms, ammunition and equipment supplied by the Ordnance Factories did not play a crucial role. Now, OFB is leading the clarion call of Prime Minister Modi for “Atmanirbha­r India” by indigenous efforts to ‘Make in India’.

No battle or war was fought by the armies of East India Company, the British Empire or independen­t India where the arms, ammunition and equipment supplied by the Ordnance Factories did not play a crucial role. Now, OFB is leading the clarion call of Prime Minister Modi for “Atmanirbha­r India” by indigenous efforts to ‘Make in India’.

ARTILLERY PRODUCTION IN THE Ordnance Factories began in the 19th century and has continued till today. From the initial brass and iron guns and iron howitzers to rifled cannon to horse and field artillery in 1905 and the 4.5” howitzer in 1913.

In 1920 the manufactur­ing of the 3.7” howitzer commenced and was establishe­d by 1925. This saw extensive use in the Second World War, the Kashmir operations and in the wars of 1962, 1965 and 1971. Even during the Kargil Operation it was used in the direct firing mode. The 106mm RCL, used so effectivel­y in the 1965 war, and the 75/24 howitzers were also production­ised. The indigenisa­tion of the 84mm Rocket Launcher, the manufactur­e of 105m IFG/LFG, 120mm and 81mm mortars, the L-70 anti aircraft gun and more recently the indigenisa­tion of the A.K. 630 Naval Guns are all significan­t achievemen­ts of the Ordnance Factories. No battle or war was fought by the armies of East India Company, the British Empire or the independen­t Indian nation where the arms, ammunition and equipment supplied by the Ordnance Factories did not play a crucial role.

By the end of the 20th century, OFB was making spare barrels and other spare parts of the 155mm 39 calibre Bofors Guns imported from A.B Bofors of Sweden.

These guns, which wreaked havoc on the enemy during the Kargil operations were supported and maintained by OFB manufactur­ed spare parts.

It is against this background, experience and technologi­cal expertise that the twin successes of “Dhanush” and “Sharang” have to be understood.

The “Dhanush” is a 155mm x 45 calibre modern artillery gun system which is a qualitativ­ely and technologi­cally superior weapon system as compared to the 155mm x 39 calibre Bofors Gun.

Not only does it have a longer and metallurgi­cally re-engineered barrel, a new muzzle brake and a larger chamber volume necessitat­ed by the longer barrel, but mechanical and electronic upgrades make it an entirely different weapon on a number of criteria such as:

Range: A new barrel design and a modified double muzzle brake (MDBMB) have enhanced the range from 27 to 38 Km. The MDBMB limits the stresses on the structure to 155/39 levels.

Charge: The modificati­on of the loading trough and the loading tray enables “Dhanush” to accommodat­e the larger diameter of the bi-modular charge system (BMCS).

Laying: “Dhanush” has an auto laying system based on the Fire Control Computer system as compared to the manual system of the Bofors Gun.

Sighting System: “Dhanush” has an Advanced Gun Sighting system with a Day camera (CCD), a night camera, a laser range finder (LRF) and NFOV and WFOV as compared to the optical day and night sights of the Bofors Gun.

Ballistic Calculatio­n: “Dhanush” has an on board Advanced Tactical Com

puter as distinct from Bofors where the ballistic calculatio­ns are done at the command post. Gun Recording: “Dhanush” has an Inertial Navigation System (INS) and a GPS as against the theodolite based system of the Bofors. Gun Positionin­g: “Dhanush” has an advanced Gun Alignment and Positionin­g System (AGAPS) which relies on the INS, GPS, CPU and an odometer.

Muzzle Velocity Recording: “Dhanush” has an on board muzzle velocity recorder (MVR) as distinct from the offboard system of Bofors.

Back up Sight: “Dhanush” has a direct and indirect sighting system based on a day and night sight (RS420) and an indirect sight 104 developed by Ordnance factory, Dehradun in addition to the Electronic Sighting System.

The “Sharang” on the other hand is a cost effective up gunned version of the old 1950s vintage 130mm Soviet guns to 155mm x 45 calibre.

The success of “Sharang” grew out OFB’s success in upgrading the T-55 tank guns in erstwhile Yugoslavia in the 1980-1990. Around the same time the inadequaci­es of the limited range of 27 km of the 130mm gun came to be increasing­ly realised. Attempts at upgradatio­n by Soltam Systems of Israel were unsuccessf­ul and when the first guns were supplied in 2002 obturation failures, affecting accuracy, consistenc­y and sustained use began to be observed.

The OFB’s solution of up-gunning was a low cost option to convert it to an all terrain, all weather, accurate gun system capable of firing the full range of 155mm in – service ammunition. For this the gun was equipped with manual loading and pneumatic ramming features. The sighting system of the gun was retained for reasons of cost effectiven­ess and simplicity.

The solution finally submitted in the field evaluation trials (FET) proved to be superior to those fielded by two private sector firm who had tied up with OEMs, in the crucial areas of maximum range, direct firing capability, accuracy and consistenc­y. It was a result of this that OFB bagged the order of up-gunning 300 M-46 130mm Guns to 155mm x 45 calibre.

The OFB today is recognised as an OEM of repute with in-house capability of design and mass manufactur­e of a modern artillery gun system for the 21st century. The main elements of this capability are as under:

Design: OFB, over the years has generated large amounts of proprietar­y data pertaining to design parameters, manufactur­ing, testing and validation and performanc­e across the entire lifecycle of a large number of artillery guns across all calibers – 155 x 39, 155 x 45, and 155 x 52.

This resource is unique and unparallel­ed and coupled with in-house domain expertise, honed over years, will drive future developmen­ts in the field of artillery in the foreseeabl­e future.

Metallurgy: The Ordnance Factories have been manufactur­ing world class weapons grade steel for artillery, tanks, mortar barrels and trails at the Metal and Steel Factory at Ishapore for more than a century.

In designing the barrel of the “Dhanush” and later the 155 x 52 calibre Mounted Gun System, the methodolog­y of the Bofors 39 calibre – considered a gold standard the world over – had to be reworked. The OFB designers and metallurgi­sts mastered the methodolog­y and a measure of that success is that the OFB exported 155mm x 52 calibre barrels to BAE for testing purposes which have proved to be comparable, if not superior, to barrels manufactur­ed in Europe.

Cost Effective Products: OFB’s expertise of effective design, in-house metallurgy, efficient manufactur­ing protocols, and high levels of quality control provide an ability to turn out extremely cost competitiv­e products. It is significan­t that both “Dhanush” and “Sharang” are deployable across terrains and battlefiel­d conditions as terrain specific ordnance is very costly.

Capacity: The end to end capacity for manufactur­e of Large Calibre Weapons under augmentati­on by the Large Calibre Weapons (LCW) project will result in the world’s largest capacity for barrels and breech mechanisms produced with high end cutting edge technology.

Supply Chain: OFB has developed supply chain for specialise­d ESR steel and major sub-assemblies built in-house as well as vendors in the public and private sectors.

Proof and Testing: OFB has the entire infrastruc­ture for carrying out Proof testing and other tests for certifying the quality of modern artillery gun systems.

The Author is Deputy Director General, Corporate Communicat­ion and HRD, Ordnance Factory Board

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 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­S: OFB ?? Dhanush during winter trial at Leh
PHOTOGRAPH­S: OFB Dhanush during winter trial at Leh
 ??  ?? 130-155mm Upgun Sharang
130-155mm Upgun Sharang
 ??  ?? Sharang Upgun
Sharang Upgun
 ??  ?? Dhanush Firing
Dhanush Firing
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