Gun data computer
The gun data computer was a series of artillery computers used by the U.S. Army for coastal artillery, field artillery and anti-aircraft artillery applications. For antiaircraft applications they were used in conjunction with a director computer.
Variations
- M1: This was used by seacoast artillery for major-caliber seacoast guns. It computed continuous firing data for a battery of two guns that were separated by not more than. It utilised the same type of input data furnished by a range section with the then-current types of position-finding and fire-control equipment.
- M3: This was used in conjunction with the M9 and M10 directors to compute all required firing data, i.e. azimuth, elevation and fuze time. The computations were made continuously, so that the gun was at all times correctly pointed and the fuze correctly timed for firing at any instant. The computer was mounted in the M13 or M14 director trailer.
- M4: This was identical to the M3 except for some mechanisms and parts which were altered to allow for different ammunition being used.
- M8: This was an electronic computer built by Bell Labs and used by coast artillery with medium-caliber guns. It made the following corrections: wind, drift, Earth's rotation, muzzle velocity, air density, height of site and spot corrections.
- M9: This was identical to the M8 except for some mechanisms and parts which were altered to accommodate anti-aircraft ammunition and guns.
- M10: A ballistics computer, part of the M38 fire control system, for Skysweeper anti-aircraft guns.
- M13: A ballistics computer for M48 tanks.
- M14: A ballistics computer for M103 heavy tanks.
- M15: A part of the M35 field artillery fire-control system, which included the M1 gunnery officer console and M27 power supply.
- M16: A ballistics computer for M60A1 tanks.
- M18: FADAC, an all-transistorized general-purpose digital computer manufactured by Amelco and North American—Autonetics. FADAC was first fielded during 1960, and was the first semiconductor-based digital electronics field-artillery computer.
- M19: A ballistics computer for M60A2 tanks.
- M21: A ballistics computer for M60A3 tanks.
- M23: A mortar ballistics computer.
- M26: A fire-control computer for AH-1 Cobra helicopters,.
- M31: A mortar ballistics computer.
- M32: A mortar ballistics computer,.
- M1: A ballistics computer for M1 Abrams main battle tanks.
Systems
- The Battery Computer System AN/GYK-29 was a computer used by the United States Army for computing artillery fire mission data. It replaced the FADAC and was small enough to fit into the HMMWV combat vehicle.
- The AN/GSG-10 TACFIRE direction system automated field artillery command and control functions. It was composed of computers and remote devices such as the Variable Format Message Entry Device, the AN/PSG-2 Digital Message Device and the AN/TPQ-36 Firefinder field artillery target acquisition radar system linked by digital communications using existing radio and wire communications equipment. Later it also linked with the BCS which had more advanced targeting algorithms.
TACFIRE used the AN/GYK-12, a second-generation mainframe computer developed primarily by Litton Industries for Army divisional field artillery units. It had two configurations housed in mobile command shelters. Field artillery brigades also use the division configuration.
Components of the system were identified using acronyms:
- CPU Central Processing Unit
- IOU Input/Output Unit
- MCMU Mass Core Memory Unit
- DDT Digital Data Terminal
- MTU Magnetic Tape Unit
- PCG Power Converter Group
- ELP Electronic Line Printer
- DPM Digital Plotter Map
- ACC Artillery Control Console
- RCMU Remote Control Monitoring Unit