Posted on 01/03/2019 4:54:12 AM PST by w1n1
on a Runaway Taliban Vehicle
You can run, but you cant hide from an A-10 Thunderbolt II and its technological advanced GAU-8 30mm weapon system.
U.S. Air Forces Central Command released a un-classified footage of an engagement between an A-10 and what looks to be "a Taliban vehicle fleeing the scene of an attack in Kandahar, Afghanistan."
The short video display a light-colored car speeding down a dusty desert road only to be stopped by a hail storm of 30mm rounds from the A-10.
Zooming in on the stopped vehicle you can see four basketball-sized holes punched in the top of the vehicle before another wave of shells is applied for good measure.
Unfortunately, the video has no sound, but you can imagine the many brrrt pounding the vehicle. The A-10 armed with the General Electric GAU-8/A Avenger 30 mm hydraulically driven seven-barrel Gatling-type auto cannon. See the rest of A-10 Thunderbolt.
“The Army used the 20mm round 6 barrel version...I had four of them in my platoon as a young 2nd LT...also adopted what we called the mini gun, the smaller version strapped to helicopters using either 5.56 or 7.62. The Vulcan came in self propelled and towed versions, both now sitting in museums now.” [Midwesterner53, post 39]
As a cadet at the US Air Force Academy in the early 1970s, I recall Army personnel bringing in a number of weapon systems to augment our field training sessions, for display & education. One was a towed version of the Vulcan gun. It was a high point of a cadet career; I can still recall sitting in the gunner’s seat, manipulating the controls while an NCO explained operation and function for my benefit.
Gun systems have been giving way to missile systems in air defense applications for decades. Individual missile rounds may cost more per shot than gun rounds, but the total missile package (sensors, launchers, fire control, mounting hardware etc) is lighter, boasts longer range, and provides a higher kill probability than any gun.
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