M167 VADS

The M167 Vulcan Air Defense System (VADS)[1][2][3][4] is a towed short-range United States Army anti-aircraft gun designed to protect forward area combat elements and rear area critical assets. It was also used to protect U.S. Air Force warplane airfields and U.S. Army helicopter airfields. The heart of the M167 was a variant of the M61 Vulcan 20×102 mm rapid-fire rotary cannon.

M167 VADS
A JASDF JM167A1 mounted on an AA gun mount at Tsuiki Air Base.
TypeRotary cannon
Place of originUnited States
Service history
WarsWar in Darfur
Sudanese conflict in South Kordofan and Blue Nile
Yemeni Civil War (2015–present)
Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen
Production history
VariantsSee Variants
Specifications
Cartridge20×102 mm
Caliber20 mm (0.787 in)
Barrels6-barrel (progressive RH parabolic twist, 9 grooves)
ActionHydraulically operated, electrically fired, rotary cannon
Rate of fire1000 or 3000 rounds per minute

It was also effective against lightly armored ground targets. The M167 gun has now been withdrawn from service by U.S. military units, but it might still be used by other countries.

History

Starting in 1994, the M167 was replaced in U.S. service by the M1097 Avenger missile launcher and in 2005, by a ground-based version of the Phalanx CIWS self-defense gun[5] which the U.S. Navy uses on its ships. The Phalanx CIWS uses the same basic 20 mm rapid-fire Gatling gun as the M167.

Design

A JASDF VADS on display at the JASDF's Hanamatsu base.

The M167A2 VADS was modified with an improved fire-control subsystem. The improvement was obtained by replacing the disturbed reticle sight with a director reticle sight, the sight current generator with a digital processor, and the azimuth drive assembly with a harmonic drive. It also had an extra wheel put on each side which prevented flipping by providing a longer lever.

Sudan and Yemen used M167 guns seated upon the Soviet BTR-152 APC.[6][7]

An M167 mounted on a Toyota Land Cruiser as a “technical” has been sighted in action in Yemen with the Houthi.

Operators

Map with M167 VADS operators in blue with former operators in red

Current operators

Former operators

gollark: And they probably want people to use OOP awfulness and "code standards".
gollark: And I'm expected to do *unit tests*.
gollark: And people will complain if a config tweak takes down everything for 20 minutes.
gollark: The industry is æ. They have "deadlines" and "requirements" and use bad languages I don't like.
gollark: Anyway, I haven't really decided much yet, but I *probably* don't really want to work in software as a job.

See also

References

  1. "M167 Vulcan Towed / Static Air Defense System - United States".
  2. Pike, John. "M167 VADS Vulcan Air Defense System". www.globalsecurity.org.
  3. "M167 Vulcan - Weaponsystems.net". weaponsystems.net.
  4. "20mm M167 VADS". 23 January 2014.
  5. "CIWS now does surface targets, too – Murdoc Online". www.murdoconline.net. Archived from the original on 2009-04-12. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  6. Steven Zaloga, Soviet wheeled armoured vehicles, Concord: Hong Kong, 1990
  7. Ye. Prochko, Bronetransporter BTR-152, Bronyekollektsya 5(38)/2001 (in Russian)


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