Claims
- 1. A gun barrel comprising a full-length jacket portion of a first alloy, having a multi-layer forebarrel portion wherein the jacket portion is substantially metallurgically bonded to a relatively thick liner portion formed of a second alloy, coextruded within the jacket portion to have a highly-concentric tubular interface, and with an interface diameter D.sub.i relatively greater than the diameter of the barrel bore.
- 2. The gun barrel of claim 1, wherein the jacket portion alloy is selected to have a relatively low coefficient of temperature expansion with respect to the coefficient of temperature expansion of the material of the liner portion.
- 3. The gun barrel of claim 2, wherein the liner portion alloy is selected to have a relatively high degree of hot gas erosion resistance with respect to the hot gas erosion resistance of the material of the jacket portion.
- 4. The gun barrel of claim 3, wherein at least one of the first and second alloys is an alloy having a base of at least one selected one or iron, nickel and cobalt.
- 5. The gun barrel of claim 3, wherein both of the first and second alloys are alloys having a base of at least one selected one of iron, nickel and cobalt.
- 6. The gun barrel of claim 1, further comprising an unbonded breech boreliner in the breech end of the barrel jacket portion, enclosing at least a portion of a firing chamber therein and extending forward from said chamber toward the muzzle.
- 7. The gun barrel of claim 6, wherein the exterior surface of the breech boreliner portion has an average diameter greater than the interface diameter D.sub.i between the liner and jacket portions of the barrel foreportion.
- 8. The gun barrel of claim 6, wherein the boreliner portion has a bore length L.sub.b of less than one-quarter of the total length L of the barrel.
- 9. The gun barrel of claim 6, wherein the breech boreliner is formed of a third alloy.
- 10. The gun barrel of claim 9, wherein the third alloy is a refractory metal having a higher resistance than either of the first and second alloys to erosion by hot gun gases.
Government Interests
The present invention was developed under a contract DAAA21-88-C-0036 with the U.S. Government, which has certain rights in this invention.
US Referenced Citations (8)