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SA 50

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(Redirected from CN-90-F3)
75 SA 50
TypeRifled tank gun
Place of originFrance
Service history
In service1956-present
Production history
DesignerArsenal de Bourges (ABS)
Designed1950
ManufacturerArsenal de Bourges (ABS)
Produced1952-1959
No. built2200
VariantsCN 90 F3 (D 960)
Specifications
Length4.64 m (15 ft 3 in)
Barrel length61.5 calibres

Shell75×597mmR
Shell weight6.4 kg (APC-T shot POT-51A)
Calibre75 mm (2.95 in)
Barrelsautofrettaged
Actionsemi-automatic horizontal sliding-wedge breech
Breechhorizontal sliding-wedge
Recoil330 mm
CarriageFL 10 or modified D50878 (Israeli Super Sherman) turret
Elevation-6° to +14° (FL 10)
Traverse360°
Rate of fireup to 14 rounds per minute
Muzzle velocity1000 m/s
Maximum firing range8000 m (with HE shells)
SightsAPX L 862

The 75 SA 50 (French: 75 mm Semi-Automatique Modèle 1950; English: 75 mm Semi-Automatic 1950 Model) also called 75 Mle 50 or CN 75-50 is a French 75 mm high-velocity rifled gun. Although originally designed for the AMX-13 light tank, the SA 50 has also been used on the EBR wheeled reconnaissance vehicle and foreign medium tanks such as the Israeli upgraded Super Sherman.

History

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By the end of 1944, the chief engineer Lafargue considered a more powerful alternative to the 75 mm SA 44 developed for the upcoming ARL-44 transitional tank destroyer. The new 75 mm gun should have ballistic performance similar to the German 7.5 cm KwK 42; which means firing a round weighing a little more than 6 kg at a muzzle velocity close to 1000 m/s. A longer gun barrel (L/70), an increased chamber volume with a higher chamber pressure were thus required to achieve such performance. The new gun was made from existing components (breech block, gun tube, ...) developed clandestinely during the German occupation.[1] Although not retained for the ARL-44, the gun was later selected for the AMX-13 prototype and was subsequently standardised as 75 mm SA 50.

Second life

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In 1962, the decision was taken to rebore the SA 50 to the internal dimensions of the D 921A 90 mm low-pressure rifled gun (CN 90 F1) of the AML-90, allowing the retroffited AMX-13 to also use the powerful OCC 90 EMP Mle 62 fin-stabilized HEAT shell but fired at a higher muzzle velocity of 950 m/s.[2] A single baffle muzzle brake replaced the original double baffle muzzle brake.

The re-bored 75 SA 50 took the factory designation of D 960 and was later known as CN 90 F3 (French: CaNon de 90 millimètres modèle F3; English: 90 millimeters gun F3 Model). After a preliminary study and testing carried out between 1964 and 1966, 675 FL 10 turrets were transformed between 1966 and 1970.

Ammunition

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  • POT-51A : a 6.4 kg APBC-T with a muzzle velocity of 1000 m/s, it is able to penetrate 110 mm of RHA at an angle of 0° at 1000 m.
  • PCOT-51P : a 6.7 kg APCBC-T with a muzzle velocity of 1000 m/s, it is able to penetrate 170 mm of RHA at an angle of 0° at 1000 m
  • 75 OE : a 6.2 kg high-explosive shell with a muzzle velocity of 750 m/s.
  • SC 75/54/40 : a 3.9 kg tungsten carbide APDS with a muzzle velocity of 1310 m/s. It is able to penetrate 300 mm of armour at an angle of 0° at 1000 m or 80 mm at 60° at the same range. Developed in 1956, it was never adopted by the French Army.
  • 75 CC : a shaped-charge shell.
  • 75 canister : a 6.4 kg canister round developed by Advanced Material Engineering for the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF). The steel-aluminium projectile contains 1200 steel spheres, each 9 mm in diameter and are projected in a 9°cone with a maximum range of at least 200 m.[3]
  • 75 APFSDS : a Singapore APFSDS developed in the late 1980s by Singapore Technologies Kinetics Ltd under the codename Project Spider[4] for their upgraded AMX-13 SM1.

See also

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Weapons of comparable role, performance, and era

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References

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  1. ^ Tauzin, Michel. "Tome 9 L'armement de gros calibre" (PDF). www.irsem.fr (in French). Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  2. ^ Petit, Pierre (2013). "Panhard EBR l'exception à la française". Trucks & Tanks Magazine (in French) (37): 35.
  3. ^ "75 mm French M50 tank gun ammunition". GFKJQB. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Projects Spider and Archer" (PDF). www.dso.org.sg. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
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