The present disclosure relates to a method and an arrangement for producing a relative displacement of specific elements included in artillery missiles, this relative displacement being intended to be activated as soon as the missile has left the barrel from which it has been fired.
The disclosure is in the first instance intended to be used in those artillery missiles which are fired without rotation or at a low inherent rotation about their longitudinal axis (e.g., by use of a so-called “skidding drive band”), and which, for stabilizing them in the continued trajectory towards the target, are assumed to be provided with stabilizing fins which are arranged at the rear end and are initially retracted until the missile has completely exited the launch arrangement from which it has been fired, and then are deployed once it has left the launch arrangement. To guide the missiles in their trajectories in pitch and yaw towards their intended targets, they can also be provided with guide members arranged for this purpose preferably at their front end and deployable more or less simultaneously.
Airborne missiles can be rotation-stabilized in their trajectory or stabilized in another way, for example by means of fins. Rotation-stabilized missiles have steady trajectories and they can be made mechanically simple since the launch arrangement as a rule is responsible for ensuring that the missile acquires the necessary initial rotation. However, the high rotational velocity has at least hitherto made it impossible to provide this type of missile with a well-functioning guidance system. When work is undertaken today to develop effective guidable missiles, one has therefore concentrated efforts on missiles which do not rotate at all, or rotate only slowly, about their own longitudinal axis and which are aerodynamically stabilized by means of fins arranged in their rear part.
In addition to stabilizing the missile flight, the stabilizing fins, in a fin-stabilized non-rotating missile, or in a missile rotating only slowly, can additionally, if they are arranged for this purpose, give rise to an active lifting force which acts on the missile and can be used to increase its range of fire.
A current trend in the development of artillery technology is towards new long-range artillery missiles guided in their final phase, and interest has increased in different types of fin-stabilized shells intended for firing in conventional guns and howitzers. To make it possible to launch fin-stabilized shells with a low inherent rotation directly from grooved barrels, the shells need to be provided with a drive band (conventionally known as a “skidding drive band”) as their only direct contact with the grooving of the barrel. The same gun or howitzer can thus be used, without special intermediate measures, to successively fire essentially non-rotating shells provided with drive bands and with stabilizing fins, which can be deployed in trajectory, and entirely conventional rotation-stabilized shells.
In controlling the trajectory of fin-stabilized missiles such as shells, rockets and projectiles, it is necessary to know and be able to control the roll position of the missile. This is necessary in order to be able to control the missile in pitch and yaw. This control is achieved preferably with special control elements, for example in the form of movable nose fins, so-called canard fins, or jet nozzles. The roll control moment which such control members in the front part of the missile give rise to can however in many cases be counteracted or completely eliminated by the guide fins in the rear part of the missile, unless special measures are taken. This is due to the fact that the vortices caused by the control moment from the rudder or other control activity impact the fins and this in turn gives rise to a counteracting moment.
A way of solving this problem which has already been tested to an at least limited extent is to let the part of the missile in which the fins are secured constitute a unit which can rotate freely in relation to the rest of the missile about an axis concentric with the longitudinal axis of the missile. In this way, the effect of the control moment on the fins cannot be transferred to the front part of the missile, as a result of which the missile is made easier to control.
However, the design and function of the fins are of secondary importance in connection with the present disclosure to the extent that it does not concern the fins as such, although an embodiment of this offers a method and arrangement for protecting the fins and keeping them retracted during the launch phase and releasing them as soon as the missile in question has left the barrel of the gun or howitzer from which it is fired.
The disclosure can thus be applied both to those fin units which during the launch phase are protected by a special protective casing which has to be removed in order to release the fins, and in those fin units which during the launch phase are protected inside the missile and which, immediately after the latter has left the barrel, are pushed out behind the original rear plane of the missile.
The basic concept of embodiments of the disclosure is that it is possible during the actual launch phase, that is to say while the missile is being driven through the barrel of the gun, howitzer or the like from which it is being fired, to introduce some of the powder gases driving the missile from the space behind the missile into a partially closed chamber in the missile, this chamber being delimited in at least one direction by the object, element or the like which is displaceable relative to the rest of the missile and which is to be displaced after the missile has left the barrel, while the inlet through which the powder gases are introduced into the chamber in question is so dimensioned that the high powder gas pressure inside the chamber is not able to equalize as quickly as the pressure behind the missile is equalized in relation to the surrounding atmosphere as soon as the missile has left the barrel. If correctly dimensioned, the pressure inside the chamber then gives rise to the desired relative displacement as the powder gas pressure inside the chamber acts on the displaceable object which, when the missile has left the barrel, is no longer acted upon in the opposite direction by the rear barrel pressure.
This basic idea can then be used to release and push aside a protective casing which during the launch phase covers the rear part of the missile and a fin unit included therein or in a corresponding manner to push out a fin unit which during the launch phase has been retracted in the rear part of the missile, or to force out radially displaceable fins, or for other areas of application which fall within the scope of this basic idea.
The general concept of the disclosure is defined in the attached patent claims and it will now be described in more detail in connection with three different examples of how the disclosure can be used.
Of these, the first describes a method of removing a protective casing which initially covers the rear part of a missile and which during the launch phase protects an axially fixed fin unit comprising blade fins incurved towards that part of the missile body situated inside the casing. In this variant, the barrel pressure is introduced during the launch phase into the casing via an opening provided and dimensioned for this purpose. As soon as the pressure behind the casing drops, that is to say as soon as the shell has left the barrel, the pressure inside the same forces the casing off from the missile body, whereupon the hitherto incurved fins are deployed.
In the second use of the disclosure described below, the same internal barrel pressure is used to push rearwards in the direction of flight of the shell, an axially movable fin unit out from a first position retracted in the missile to a second position in which the fins, which can also be deployable, reach behind the original rear plane of the missile. In this variant of the disclosure, some of the barrel pressure during the launch phase is introduced into an inner chamber situated between the axially displaceable fin unit and the main part of the missile, and when the counter-pressure behind the missile which also loads the fin unit ceases when the missile leaves the barrel, this internal pressure forces the axially movable fin unit out to its rear position in the longitudinal direction of the missile.
The third example describes how the same barrel pressure is used to release a protective casing of approximately the same type as in the first example and additionally at the same time to force radially movable fins out from a first retracted position to a second deployed position.
However, all these examples must be seen for what they are, namely a few possible variants of practical applications of the disclosure, which itself can be given other applications falling within the scope of the patent claims.
The missile shown in
As will be seen from
As will further be seen from the figures, the body part 4 is joined to the rest of the shell via a ball bearing 14 which means that the fin unit can rotate freely after the fins have been deployed. This does not in itself have anything to do with the present disclosure even though, as mentioned in the introduction, it does have some important advantages.
The shell illustrated in
The fin body with its retracted fins is shown in the retracted position in
The special feature of the variant of the disclosure described here is that when the shell has left the artillery piece from which it is fired the whole of the fin body 31 is displaced from its fully retracted position in the space 30 to a position where only its front part 34 is left in its outlet, where it is blocked by means of a deformation joint of one type or another, while the whole of the rear part 35 of the fin body is located behind the original rear plane B of the shell and where the fins 32 are deployed in the manner indicated in
For moving the body part 31 to its rear position, propellant powder gases are used which during the launch phase are allowed to flow via the channel 39 into the inner chamber which is labeled 38. When the shell leaves the barrel from which it has been fired, the pressure behind the fin unit quickly drops to atmospheric pressure, while the pressure inside the chamber 38 becomes higher. As the counter-pressure behind the fin unit drops, the gas quantity at a higher pressure inside the chamber 38 will expand. This gives the desired displacement of the fin unit to its outer position shown in
The maximum pressure inside the chamber 38 is entirely dependent on what quantities of propellant gas leak into the chamber through the channel 39 as the missile passes through the barrel. The maximum pressure inside the chamber can thus be regulated by precise dimensioning of this channel.
A particular advantage of the push-out fin unit is that its fins reach further away from the centre of gravity of the missile than when the fins are secured directly at the rear end of the missile. This in turn means that the fins of the push-out fin unit can be made smaller while retaining the stability of the missile.
FIGS. 8 to 10 show the rear part of a shell which otherwise can correspond to the shell 1a in
The secondary fins 53 are correspondingly mounted and are displaceable in the primary fins 52 and thus are also dependent on the powder gas pressure in the powder chamber 44 for their deployment. Until the moment when the shell 1a has left the barrel of the artillery piece in connection with the launch phase, allowing for a slight margin, both the base-bleed unit 42 and the retracted fins are covered by a protective casing 58.
At the same time as or immediately after the protective casing 58 is removed, the powder charge of the base-bleed unit is initiated, and at the same time the remaining pressure from the barrel phase is used to force out the fin parts. When the primary fins 52 reach their respective outer positions, their respective inner longitudinal edges 56 seal the gap in the base-bleed unit wall through which they are deployed and at the same time the gas pressure also forces out the secondary fins 53 to a correspondingly sealed and blocked outer position.
As can be seen principally from
Since each of the powder sectors has in this way been able to be given a limited size and a good lateral support between the protective walls 54, 55 of the adjoining primary fins 52, it has been possible to eliminate the risks of the powder charge in the base-bleed unit being damaged during actual firing, that is to say before it is brought into operation, and at the same time the division gives the powder bodies a high level of strength right up to the time they burn out.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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002479.4 | Jul 2000 | SE | national |
This application is a continuation of co-pending application Ser. No. 10/312,763 filed on Jul. 1, 2003. Application Ser. No. 10/312,763 is a National Stage Entry of International Application PCT/SE01/01331, filed on Jun. 13, 2001. International Application PCT/SE01/01331 claims priority to Swedish application serial number 00024794.4, filed on Jul. 3, 2000. The entire contents of each of these applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10312763 | Jul 2003 | US |
Child | 10907301 | Mar 2005 | US |