155 mm caliber


"155 mm" is a very widely used calibre for artillery guns and their corresponding artillery shells.

Land warfare

Historic calibres

France - 1874

The caliber originated in France after the Franco-Prussian War.
A French artillery committee met on 2 February 1874 to discuss new models for French fortress and siege artillery, among which there was a weapon in the calibre range.
After several meetings, on 16 April 1874 the committee settled on the calibre, and led to the De Bange 155 mm cannon.

NATO standard

Among the existing and the former 155 mm artillery shells, there is one that has been standardised by NATO under both the AOP-29 part 1, and under the . This standard defines a standard 155 mm projectile with a 23 litre combustion chamber volume.
NATO is now pushing from standardised artillery shell to sharable ammunition. The standard described above enables the use of NATO shells in all NATO guns. But they still need to be qualified on each gun to control the performances and safety.

Retirement of other calibres

This has led to the obsolescence of larger caliber artillery shells such as the. Some militaries continue to retain the smaller 105 mm weapons for their light weight and greater portability. Russia and former Eastern Bloc countries tend to use artillery in similar roles.

Naval warfare

Since the end of World War II, the caliber has not found any use among naval forces despite its ubiquity on land with most NATO and aligned navies using,,, or guns on modern warships. At one point the British Ministry of Defence studied "up-gunning" the Royal Navy's 4.5 inch Mark 8 naval guns to give increased firepower and a common caliber between the Royal Navy and the British Army. Despite superficially appearing to be inferior based on a simple comparison of round diameters, when firing conventional ammunition the smaller, 4.5 inch Mark 8 naval gun is comparable to the standard 155 mm gun-howitzer of the British Army. The standard shell from a 4.5 inch Mark 8 naval gun has the same, if not better, range. Only by using rocket-assisted projectiles can most 155 mm guns have comparable range to the 4.5 inch Mark 8 naval gun and by doing so there is a reduction in the payload. This is because naval guns can be built much more strongly than land-based self-propelled gun-howitzers, and have much longer barrels in relation to caliber. This allows naval guns to fire heavier shells in comparison to shell diameter and to use larger propellant charges in relation to shell weight, leading to greater projectile velocities. Even without active cooling, the heavier naval gun barrels allow a faster sustained rate of fire than field guns, and this is exploited with an autoloading system with a capacity of several hundred rounds. The 155 mm is better than the 4.5 inch Mark 8 naval gun for firing cannon-launched guided projectiles as the lower velocity of the 155 mm shell makes it much easier for the projectiles' internal electronic guidance systems to survive being fired.
While the US Navy's Advanced Gun System also uses a 155 mm caliber, it is not compatible with NATO-standard 155 mm ammunition. Only one type of ammunition was ever developed and procurement was discontinued in 2016 due to its high cost, making the AGS unusable.

155 mm guns

Current

NATO and allies

Compatible with NATO projectiles:
Unknown compatibility:

NATO compatible

  • : Modular Naval Artillery Concept – proposed but never produced
  • : 155 mm Future Naval Gun – proposed but never produced

    Not NATO compatible

  • : 15.5 cm/60 3rd Year Type naval gun
  • : Canon de 155 mm Modèle 1920
  • : Advanced Gun System – in limited service, but with no ammunition available

    155 mm shells

Country of originNameServiceNotes
Chinacvt|30|,|40|and|50|km|micvt|35|,|45|and|60|km|mi

Twenty-first century production and usage rates

–March 2023, Ukraine was firing up to 10,000 artillery shells per day, with the average monthly rate of 90,000–110,000 of 155 mm shells. In March 2023, the Ukrainian defense minister asked allies for 250,000 of such shells per month.
Before the start of the large-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, the US produced 14,400 shells per month., the rate has increased to 20,000 per month. The US declared its plans to increase the production to 90,000 per month, to reach 1,000,000 shells per year in 2025.
Germany's Rheinmetall was producing 60,000–70,000 per year in 2022. Rheinmetall said it was ready to boost production to 500,000 per year.
Ukraine has a domestic production of shells. As of December 2022, the production rate was "in the thousands".
In summer 2023, the EU approved a plan that provides for the production of 650,000 large-calibre ammunition per year, and pledged to supply one million artillery shells to Ukraine over the next 12 months.