The Gryazev-Shipunov GSh-6-30


The Gryazev-Shipunov GSh-6-30 is a Russian 30mm cannon used by Soviet and later CIS military aircraft.
The GSh-6-30, designed in the early 1970s and entering service in 1975, is a six barrelled Gatling gub similar in design to the Gryazev-Shipunov GSh-6-23. It was based on the naval AQ-18 used in the AK-630 system. Unlike rotary cannon, it is gas operated rather than electric, aloowing it to “ spin up “ to maximum rate of fire more quickly, allowing more rounds to be placed on target in a short-duration burst. Ignition is electrical, as witj the smaller GSh-6-23.
The GSh-6-30 fires a 30x165mm round with a hard-hitting 390g projectile. With such a high rate of fire. It is a potentially devastating weapon, although its tactical usefulness is restricted by ammunition suply. That limitation may be why the cannon has seen few aircraft applications.
The principal application for the GSh-6-30 is the MiG-27 ‘Flogger”, which carries the weapon in a gondola under the fuselage, primarily for starfing and ground attack. It was fitted to prototype Su-25T aircraft, but subsequently replaced with the GSh-30-2 twin-barreled cannon of the original Su-25. It is also used as the gun component of the CADS-N-1 Kasthan air defense weapon.



Operation            : Gas-operated, electrically fired
Cartridge             : 30x165mm
Weight                 : 149 kg (328 lb)
Length                  : 2,040 mm
Rate of Fire          : 6,000 rpm
Muzzle velocity    : 845 m/s (2,770 ft/s )




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