The Light Gun has been in service since the early 1980's a very flexible piece of equipment has served across the globe from the Arctic to the desert and performed very well.

138 at current numbers known.sea_eagle wrote:How many light guns are in service with the British Army today? Would there be any prospect of replacing them with the M777 howitzer anytime? We have with the C17/A400M and Chinook aircraft able to transport the heavier M777.
Considering how we use the 105 mm with the paras and Royal Marines, the M777 is probably far too heavy, even if it is transportable by Chinook.sea_eagle wrote:How many light guns are in service with the British Army today? Would there be any prospect of replacing them with the M777 howitzer anytime? We have with the C17/A400M and Chinook aircraft able to transport the heavier M777.
Indeed. The US Army will continue to use the M119A2 for 'light' and 'airborne' units, including:WhitestElephant wrote:Considering how we use the 105 mm with the paras and Royal Marines, the M777 is probably far too heavy, even if it is transportable by Chinook.
I was actually thinking about dumb dual purpose submunitions. Google tells me that there are (US uses M915 and M916 with 42 bomblets). I was wondering if the effectiveness of the 155mm shell against armour was based on the comparison as a cargo carrier or just in terms of fragment energy from a unitary HE shell.ArmChairCivvy wrote:sub-munitions, as in anti-armour, intelligent munitions?
Yes, respecting the treaties they have signed. MLRS AW is a nice companion to unitary, just check out who have placed orders (i.e. they mean business).Chris Werb wrote:US is getting out of the non-smart submunition game. Of course, the Russians aren't and it would arguably give them a considerable advantage in some scenarios