The M198 155mm howitzer is a towed field artillery piece of a split trail carriage design. The M198 is equipped with a double baffle muzzle brake and a variable length hydropneumatic recoil mechanism.
Updated howitzer? BAE Systems shows off fast-firing artillery system Get a look at the ‘Archer,’ a potential update for the Army howitzer that BAE systems says can out-survive current systems ...
The M777 Lightweight 155mm howitzer provides timely, accurate and continuous firepower in support of Marine and Army infantry forces and replaces the M198 towed Howitzer. In 2005, the Army and ...
The Hawkeye 105 mm Howitzer mobile artillery system developed by Mandus Group looks like something straight out of Command & Conquer By Brad Howard Posted on Aug 6, 2018 9:31 PM EDT The Hawkeye ...
Detroit Arsenal, Michigan – The U.S. Army announced today the awarding of five contracts for the Army’s upcoming Self-Propelled Howitzer Performance Demonstration. The contracts were awarded ...
[Flasutie] took it a step further by engineering a 3D-printed howitzer that doesn’t just sit pretty—it launches shells with a hydrogen-powered bang. The howitzer itself is like something out ...
Manufactured by BAE Systems, the M777 Howitzer is a new spin on an old weapon. In this case, the use of titanium and other advanced materials in its construction has created a truly lightweight ...
An intriguing example is the ultralight 2-CT Hawkeye howitzer, produced by AM General. It is currently undergoing combat ...
The field gun featured: a D-74 122 mm howitzer, which the Soviet Union developed in the late 1940s. Yet its age wasn't the main attraction. Russia has, after all, been regularly deploying Cold War ...
EDITOR'S NOTE: This year, MLS and its community outreach initiative, MLS WORKS, launched a new platform, called "Soccer for All." Soccer for All signifies that everyone is welcome to MLS ...
Thirty years after the Barcelona Olympic Games, the “father” of Cobi, Javier Mariscal, has updated the image of one of the most popular Olympic mascots since they first appeared in 1968.