Multi-charge munitions, incorporating hole-boring charge assemblies
09605935 ยท 2017-03-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F42B3/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B12/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B12/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B1/032
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B12/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B12/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B25/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F42B10/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B12/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Multi-charge munition suitable for defeating a concrete target consists of a detonatable array of hollow primary charges (14) of explosive supported laterally of a line of target penetration on which is disposed a secondary explosive charge (48). Simultaneous detonation of the primary charges in the array causes jet penetrators to be projected together towards the target which produce wide boreholes in concrete suitable for the subsequent emplacement and detonation of the secondary charge. The munition may be an aerially-deliverable bomb or submunition. In one preferred embodiment, the primary charges (14) are positioned in a convergent configuration behind a forwardly-tapered secondary charge (48). Detonation of the primary charges projects penetrators forwardly passed the sides of the secondary charge and thrusts the secondary charge into the borehole produced in the target by the penetrators.
Claims
1. Multi-charge munition for attacking a target having a surface, said munition travelling towards said target, said munition comprising: a detonatable array of at least two hollow primary charges of explosive supported laterally about a fore-and-aft line of target penetration, each primary charge including a recessed forward face and a liner of non-explosive material lining said forward face, each said primary comprising a means, when said primary charge is detonated, for projecting a penetrator derived from the liner forwards along a line of trajectory extending from the array towards the target, said at least two penetrators comprising a means for boring a hole in said target on said line of target penetration; a secondary cratering charge of explosive located on said fore-and-aft line of target penetration rearward of said array; a fuse system for initiating detonation of said array of primary charges and said secondary charge in sequence; a primary detonation means, responsive to said fuse system, for detonating the primary charges in the array in a temporal relationship with respect to one another such that the penetrators are projected towards the target and said line of target penetration concurrently to produce a hole therein; and a secondary detonation means, responsive to said fuse system, for detonating the secondary charge, said secondary detonation means including delay means for delaying detonation of the secondary charge with respect to detonation of the primary charges, said delay means comprising a means for permitting detonation of the secondary charge when the secondary charge is located partly within the hole produced in the target by the penetrators of the array of primary charges.
2. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the primary charges in the detonatable array are all identical.
3. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the primary charges in the detonatable array lie in a plane normal to the line of target penetration.
4. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the primary detonation means is arranged to detonate all the primary charges substantially simultaneously.
5. Munition according to claim 1 wherein each primary charge has a width and a center of gravity, and the center of gravity of each primary charge in the detonatable array is located within a pitch circle diameter of less than 6 primary charge widths.
6. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the primary charges are supported in the array such that the primary charge lines of trajectory lie at angles of from greater than 0 to 30 to the line of target penetration.
7. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the primary charges are geometrically supported in the array such that the lines of trajectory converge towards one another forward of the array.
8. Munition according to claim 7 wherein the lines of trajectory are substantially focused at a focal point located forwards of the secondary cratering charge.
9. Munition according to claim 8 wherein each primary charge liner has a diameter and the focal point is located at a distance of from 2 to 20 liner diameters from each of the forward faces.
10. Munition according to claim 8 wherein the focal point is substantially the same distance from each primary charge and said primary detonation means comprises a means for detonating all the primary charges substantially simultaneously.
11. Munition according to claim 8 wherein the fuse system includes primary fuse means for initiating detonation of the primary charges when said focal point is located beneath the surface of the target.
12. Munition according to claim 7 wherein the focal point lies on the line of target penetration.
13. Munition according to claim 7 wherein said liners are of different materials, said different materials react together exothermically when the penetrators meet at the focal point.
14. Munition according to claim 1 wherein each liner is made of a material having a density of less than 5 gm cm.sup.3.
15. Munition according to claim 14 wherein the material is selected from the group consisting of aluminum, alloys of aluminum, plastics, and plastics loaded with up to 50% by weight of at least one of particulate aluminum and particulate aluminum alloy.
16. Munition according to claim 14 wherein the forward face of each primary charge has a conical recess therein with an apex angle of from 15 to 70.
17. Munition according to claim 16 wherein the apex angle is from 20 TO 55.
18. Munition according to claim 1 further including a moveable support means for displacing each primary charge laterally outwards with respect to the fore-and-aft axis of target penetration from a confined position at which the primary charges are packed together in a cluster, to a detonatable position in the array.
19. Munition according to claim 18 further including an energizing means, positioned between the primary charges, for activating said moveable support means for displacing the primary charges towards said detonatable position in the array.
20. Munition according to claim 18 wherein the moveable support means includes latch means for restraining the primary charges at said detonatable positions in the array.
21. Munition according to claim 18 further including a petalled housing means for housing said primary charges, said housing means is closed when the primary charges are disposed in their confined positions and is open when the primary charges are moved outwards to said detonatable positions in the array.
22. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the number of primary charges in the detonatable array is from three to six.
23. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the secondary cratering charge has a thickened ogival nose section.
24. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the munition comprises an aerially-dispensable submunition dispensable from a multi-submunition dispenser.
25. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the munition comprises an aerially-delivered bomb, the primary charges in the detonatable array being located in front of a bomb body containing the secondary charge.
26. Munition according to claim 25 wherein said bomb includes a forward guidance system with a plurality of flight guidance canards and the primary charges are supported about the fore-and-aft axis of target penetration between the bomb body and a forward guidance system for the bomb, said system including a body member disposed along said axis of target penetration and said forward guidance system.
27. Munition according to claim 26 wherein the lines of trajectory of the primary charges in the detonatable array extend between the canards.
28. Munition according to claim 26 wherein the number of primary charges and canards are the same.
29. Munition according to claim 26 wherein the primary charges and canards are each equispaced around the fore-and-aft line of target penetration.
30. Munition according to claim 26 further including aerodynamically-shaped shielding at least part of which is fitted over the outside diameter of the bomb body for supporting said primary charges.
31. Munition according to claim 30 wherein the shielding is at least partly contoured about the primary charges, and means for mounting said primary charges and body member to be axially rotatable relative to each other about said fore-and-aft line of target penetration.
32. Munition according to claim 1 wherein the second charge comprises a hollow charge having a recessed forward face lined with a non-explosive liner.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments of multi-charge munitions incorporating hole-boring charge assemblies in accordance with the present invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which
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DETAILED DISCUSSION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(12) Referring first to the embodiment illustrated in
(13) The support shaft 8 is attached at its rear end to a flat cylindrical housing 20 disposed to the rear of the primary munitions 6, which houses a folded parachute 22 attached to the shaft and a safety and arming unit 24. Flexible electric firing leads 25 extend from the unit to the detonators 17 in the primary munitions 6. At its forward end the shaft 8 is attached to a circular protective support plate 26 which extends across the entire width of and is attached to the secondary munition 10.
(14) Referring now also to
(15) At some point between the launch of the reverse follow-through munition dispensed from its airborne carrier and its arrival at the target, an annular gas generator charge 30 located centrally about the support shaft 8 between two support rings 32 is ignited (for example, by a delayed signal received from the unit 24) and the combustion gases produced simultaneously urge the support rings slideably apart along the shaft. The movement of the rings 32 causes forward and rearward linkages 34 pivotally connected between the rings and the casings 12 of the primary munitions 6 to rotate outwards from their initial positions parallel with the shaft, and so urge the primary munitions outwards from the axis AA until they collide with the walls of frangible canister 2. The force of the collision, which is augmented by the direct outward thrust of combustion gases from the gas generator charge 30, is sufficient to burst the canister 2 open at the regions of impact, allowing the primary munitions 6 to continue on their lateral trajectory from the axis AA.
(16) The rings 32 eventually collide and nest within the internal bases of cup-shaped stops 36 coaxially mounted on the shaft 8, which rings interact with the linkages 34 to arrest the primary munitions 6 at their required positions ready for detonation. Spring-loaded clips 38 emerge from the shaft 8 once the rings 32 have passed over them to lock the rings into positive engagement with the stops 36 and so prevent any further lateral movement of the primary munitions 6. The annular lips 36a of the cup-shaped stops 36 engage with the deployed linkages 34 to prevent any longitudinal or further rotational movement of the primary munitions 6. Thus during the flight of the reverse follow-through munition to its target, the shaft 8 supports the primary munitions 6 through the rings 32, stops 36 and linkages 34 and the secondary munition 10 through the protective support plate 26.
(17) The secondary munition 10 is additionally suspended from the tapered inside support face 40 of an annular support 42 attached to the inside of the canister 2. An encased, annular auxilliary charge 44 is supported about the shaft 8 between the primary munitions 6 and the support plate 26. The secondary munition 10 is provided in two parts consisting of an encased rear portion 46 containing a main follow-through charge 48, and an encased nose portion 50 containing a secondary munition fuze 52. An annular primary munition fuze 54 is disposed within the frangible canister 2 about the nose portion 50, leaving a tapered, annular gap 56 between the two through which the axes of symmetry of the primary munitions 6 pass when deployed (see
(18) Once the reverse follow-through munition is deployed in the arrangement shown in
(19) In
(20) It has been found that, against a 0.3 m thick concrete vehicle-supporting ground target (eg airfield runway), a triple focussed array of identical shaped charges each having a diameter of 85 mm and conical aluminium liner of 45 apex angle and arranged on a pitch circle diameter of 200 mm with their axes inclined at 856 to a fore-and-aft line of target penetration, such that the forward faces of the charges are located at a distance of 425 mm above the surface of the target and the axes are focussed at a point 200 mm below the surface, will produce a bore-hole of similar throat dimension and penetration depth as a 180 mm diameter unitary shaped charge with an 85 conical aluminium liner and an all-up mass of twice that of the triple array.
(21) A similar reverse follow-through sub-munition to that illustrated in
(22) The parachute 22 and primary munitions 6 are deployed in the same manner as that described with reference to
(23) The effect of these separate penetrators penetrating a hard, brittle target material such as concrete is shown in
(24) The hole (H.sub.b) extends for most of the depth of the holes (h.sub.b) bored initially by the individual penetrators, and its volume is generally considerably greater than that produced by a single shaped charge containing the same total mass of explosive as the four primary munitions 6. Since the position of the array of primary munitions 6 at detonation approximately defines the corner locations hence lateral shape and dimensions of the hole (H.sub.b), these positions in turn approximately define the maximum diameter of secondary munition 70 which can be driven into the hole.
(25) It has been found that a quadruple parallel array of identical shaped charges, each having a diameter of 85 mm and a conical aluminium liner of 45 apex angle, set on a pitch circle diameter of 300 mm and arranged such that the forward faces of the charges are separated from the surface of a 0.3 m thick concrete runway ground target by a distance of 510 mm, will produce a borehole of similar throat dimensions and penetration depth as a unitary shaped charge with an 85 conical aluminium liner and an all-up mass of 1.8 times that of the quadruple array.
(26) It will be seen from
(27) The secondary munition 70 is thrust into the hole (H.sub.B) by the combined blast effect from the detonated primary munitions 6. The shock effects produced by the blast primes the secondary fuze 90 which detonates the follow-through charge 86 soon after emplacement.
(28) Referring next to
(29) In each of the bombs illustrated in
(30) Each primary munitions 6 is linked to the contact fuze within the sensor 116 by a flexible electric firing lead 124. When the sensor strikes a target, the fuze causes the primary munitions 6 to detonate immediately and simultaneously. If the target is a hard, brittle material such as concrete, the detonated primary munitions 6 will bore a hole in the target in the manner described above with reference to
(31) Referring next to
(32) The secondary munition 158, which is shown partly sectioned, is symmetrically disposed about the longitudinal axis. It consists of a cylindrical casing 160 open at its forward end, containing a hollow charge 162 of high explosive having a hemispherical recess 164 in its forward face which is lined with a mild steel Misznay-Shardin plate 166. The mass of the charge 162 is typically from 2 to 10 times that of the individual charges 14 within the primary munitions 6.
(33) The use of the projectile illustrated in
(34) Referring lastly to
(35) Forward of the nose section 204 is located a cylindrical housing 212a, 212b supported by a tubular support member 214 extending between the housing and the nose section. The housing 212a, 212b and support member 214 are both coaxially located about the common axis EE. The closed rear end 215 of the support member 214 is screwed into the nose section 204 and acts as a nose plug for the bomb body 202.
(36) The housing 212a, 212b is divided into a fixed rearward housing 212b connected by a limited rotation bearing 216 to a rotatable housing 212a. At its front end, the forward housing 212a carries a sensor 218, for example a laser sensor, which incorporates a contact fuze. Four equispaced longitudinal canards 220 radiate outwards from the housing 212a along its length. The canards 220 are supported on bearings 222 which allow the canards a limited degree of rotation about axes radiating transversely from the axis EE. The degree of rotation of the canards 220 is controlled by a motor (not shown) located within the forward housing 212a. The motor is in turn controlled by a guidance system (not shown), for example a laser guidance system.
(37) The rearward housing 212b supports four equispaced, petalled bulbous cowlings 224 independently pivotable on hinges 226 attached to the rearward housing. Each cowling 224 houses one of the primary munitions 6. The cowlings 224 extend radially beyond the outside diameter of the bomb body 202, but are encompassed by the outside diameter of the array of canards 220 as can be seen from
(38) Each of the equispaced primary munitions 6 housed within its associated cowling 224 is supported fore and aft by fore and aft articulated linkages 230 and 232 respectively which extend through longitudinal slots 234 in the tubular support member 214. The linkages 230 and 232, which are shown folded in
(39) The sensor 218 is electrically connected to the gas generator charge 240, and to the delay fuze 210. Four flexible, electric firing leads 246 extend from the fuze within the sensor 218 one to each of the detonators 17 in the primary munitions 6.
(40) The forward housing 212a is, as shown in
(41) Once the bomb 200 has been dropped from its carrier, the forward housing 212a is rotated on the bearing 216 a one-eighth turn (45) to a new fixed position at which the cowlings 224, hence the primary munitions 6, are located in the quadrant spaces between the canards 220.
(42) As the bomb 200 approaches its target towards the end of it guided flight path, a signal is transmitted from the sensor 218 to the ignite the gas generator charge 240. The gas pressure generated by the ignited gas generator charge 240 pushes the two pistons 236 and 238 apart within the support member 214, causing the articulated linkages 230 and 232 to unfold. This in turn pushes the four primary munitions 6 outwards against the cowlings 224. The outward forces acting on the cowlings 224 ruptures the seal 227 and causes the cowlings to pivot outwards from the shell 228 about their respective hinges 226. The axial motion of the pistons 236 and 238 is eventually arrested by the stops 242 and 244 before the pistons reach positions at which pressure between them can exhaust through the slots 234. The abutment of the articulated linkages 230 and 232 against the stops 242 and 244 respectively and against the ends of the slots 234 prevent further movement of the primary munitions 6. The primary munitions 6 are arrested in a focussed array illustrated in
(43) With the forward housing 212a and primary munitions 6 deployed in their respective positions shown in
(44) If the target is a hard, brittle material such as concrete of considerable depth, then the jet penetrators will typically produce a funnel-shaped, approximately axisymmetric hole H in the surface S of the target T, as is shown in
(45) Once lodged in the hole, the delay fuze 210 initiates detonation of the main charge 206 through the detonator 209. The acute taper of the inner region (r.sub.2) of the hole provides an ideal hole shape to ensure that the bomb lodges a sufficient distance above the bottom of the hole to provide adequate standoff for the collapsing conical liner 208 to form into an effective jet penetrator capable of penetrating a considerable distance into the target. Subsequent damage to the target is caused by the synergistic effect of shaped charge jet pentration produced by the collapsed liner 208 followed by axial pressure applied through the penetration hole by the detonation products of the main charge 206.
(46) The delay fuze 210 may alternatively be set to detonate the main charge 206 just before the bomb body 202 is arrested by collision with the tapered inner region (r.sub.2) of the hole. This further reduces the probability of damage or disturbance to the main charge 206 before it is detonated.