The T249 Vigilante was a prototype 37mm self-propelled anti-aircraft gun (SPAAG) designed as a replacement for the Bofors 40 mm gun and M42 Duster in US Army service.[1] The system consisted of a 37mm T250 six-barrel Gatling gun mounted on a lengthened M113 armored personnel carrier platform.
Autocannon
T250 Vigilante
Type
Autocannon
Placeoforigin
United States
Production history
Designer
Springfield Armory
Designed
1956–1962
No.built
6
Specifications
Length
130 inches (330 cm)
Barrellength
100 inches (254 cm)
Cartridge
37×219mmSR T68
Barrels
6
Action
Hydraulically powered, rotary
Rateoffire
Maximum 3,000 rpm in anti-aircraft use, decreased to 120 rpm for ground targets
Muzzlevelocity
915 m/s
Feedsystem
192 rd drum magazine
In the early 1960s, the Army decided that gun-based systems were outdated, and canceled further development in favor of the MIM-46 Mauler missile system that also failed to enter service. The designer, the Sperry Utah Engineering Laboratory, later revived the Vigilante, rechambering it for NATO-standard 35×228mm rounds and mounting it on a M48 Patton tank chassis for the Division Air Defense (DIVAD) contest. However, it ultimately lost to Ford's M247 Sergeant York that also failed to enter service.
Development
Very little information exists of the T249 Vigilante and its T250 cannon. The conceptual design for the T250 cannon was initiated in 1956. While the design of cannon of this caliber would ordinarily be handled by Watervliet Arsenal, it was decided that Springfield Armory would take responsibility due to their previous development experience with smaller caliber rotary cannon such the 20mm T171. The T250 was the largest Gatling gun ever assembled. Its 37×219mmSR round was based upon a shortened and necked-down 40×311mmR Bofors cartridge case. Hydraulically powered, the gun was able to vary between 120 rpm for (especially stationary) ground targets and 3,000 rpm for air targets.[1]
It had a 192-round drum magazine, which in the maximum 3,000 rpm mode would have equated to approximately 4 seconds of fire. When Springfield engineers finished their work in 1962, the design was handed over to Watervliet for production. The Sperry Utah Engineering Laboratory was selected to handle the integration of the T250 gun with the modified M113 chassis to create the T249.
Surviving Examples
One T249 Vigilante is currently displayed at the Air Defense Artillery Training Support Facility, at Ft. Sill, OK. This example was previously located at the US Army Ordnance Museum in Aberdeen, MD.
A T 250 machine gun is on display in Wehrtechnische Studiensammlung in Koblenz, Germany.
Machine canon T-250 in Wehrtechnische Studiensammlung Koblenz
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