M120 Rak


M120 Rak is a self-propelled wheeled gun-mortar equipped with an automatically loaded 120 mm mortar mounted on a tracked and wheeled chassis, designed by Huta Stalowa Wola. It is produced in Poland, and used by Polish Land Forces. Serial production and the first delivery started in 2017.

History

Work on the Rak mortar started in 2006, and the first prototypes were presented in 2009. Initially designed by HSW, later with co-financing from the Ministry of Science and Higher Education. Most of the mortar elements are produced in Poland. HSW has received several patents for the construction of individual mortar solutions.
In April 2016, with the consortium of HSW and ROSOMAK S.A., a contract was signed for the supply of eight KMO Rak systems in 2017–2019. In October 2019, another contract was signed for the supply of two KMO Rak systems and two mortars for training at the Centrum Szkolenia Artylerii i Uzbrojenia in Toruń. In May 2020, the Inspektorat Uzbrojenia signed a contract with the consortium for the delivery of another 5 KMO Rak systems.

Description

The Rak Mortar can be built on a variety of chassis. The tracked chassis version is based on the lightweight HSW tracked chassis, while the wheeled chassis is based on the Rosomak APC. In 2013, as part of the MSPO exhibition, the manufacturer presented the implementation of the mortar on the chassis of the German Marder infantry fighting vehicle. The fire set of the 120 mm self-propelled mortars, Rak, consists of eight cannons, used to throw mortar bombs at a distance.
It can shoot accurately at distances from 8 to 12 km. In addition to standard bombs, it can fire shells with a HEAT warhead for armored targets like combat vehicles, smoke shells, and illumination ammunition. The time to transition from march to the combat position is 30 seconds maximum. The combat position can be left within 15 seconds of the last shot being fired.
The complete Rak mortar system, apart from the latter, includes accompanying vehicles: artillery command vehicles, reconnaissance vehicles, technical and logistic support vehicles and armament repair vehicles. The vehicle is equipped with a digital fire control system, including a thermal camera and a laser rangefinder, so it can work effectively during the day or night. The data may, inter alia, draw from the FlyEye unmanned aerial vehicle.
The Rak mortar can fire remotely as an unmanned weapon, using commands and data transmitted electronically to the vehicle's computer. Initially, until the implementation of modern ammunition with a range of 10,000 m, Polish Rak mortars use old OF843B bombs for towed mortars, modernized with special fittings, with a weight of 16.02 kg and a range of 6,900 m, intended for training.

Operational history

The mortar system was spotted in Ukraine in December 2023 in the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Technical and tactical data

Source:
  • Caliber 120 mm
  • Number of barrels 1
  • Ammunition capacity 46 rounds
  • Maximum range 12,000 m
  • Time to be ready to fire 30 s
  • Time to leave the firing position 15 s

    Operators