- Source: MG 151 cannon
The Maschinengewehr (MG) 151 is a belt-fed autocannon for aircraft use, developed in Nazi Germany from 1934 to 1940 and produced by Waffenfabrik Mauser during World War II. It was originally produced in 15.1 mm caliber from 1940, with a 15×96mm cartridge, but due to demand for higher effect against aircraft, especially with the introduction of mine shells for the 20 mm MG-FF/M aircraft cannon, the design was rechambered to 20 mm caliber in 1941, using a newly developed 20×82mm cartridge which traded projectile velocity for explosive power. The initial 15 mm variant then became known as the MG 151/15, with the new 20 mm variant becoming the MG 151/20.
The MG 151/20 cannon was widely used on German Luftwaffe combat aircraft throughout World War II, mainly as offensive armament, but also seeing some use as defensive guns. Existing MG 151/15 guns saw use as aircraft armament throughout the war, albeit more limited compared to the MG 151/20, but also as anti-aircraft guns in various configurations, such as the SdKfz 251/21 Drilling half-track which carried three MG 151/15.
Post-war, salvaged MG 151/20 saw usage by many nations. France had salvaged many guns and became the main user and exporter of the MG 151/20 during the Cold War, fitting it to not only aircraft, but also armoured fighting vehicles as anti aircraft weaponry. France continued exporting the gun all the way into the 1960s, then primarily as flexible dorsal gunship armament for the Aérospatiale SA-3160 and SA-3164 Alouette III utility helicopter. SA-3160s armed with MG 151/20s were bought by Portugal, Rhodesia and South Africa in 1966 and saw service until the early 1990s. South Africa reused the 20×82mm cartridge from the MG 151/20 to chamber their Denel NTW-20 anti-materiel rifle.
Development and wartime history
The pre-war German doctrine for arming single-engine fighter aircraft mirrored that of the French. This doctrine favoured a powerful autocannon mounted between the cylinder banks of a V engine and firing through the propeller hub, known as a moteur-canon in French (from its first use with the Hispano-Suiza HS.8C engine in World War I, on the SPAD S.XII) and by the cognate Motorkanone in German by the 1930s. The weapon preferred by the French in this role was the 20 mm Oerlikon FF S model, but this proved too big for German engines. Mauser was given the task of developing a gun that would fit, with a minimum sacrifice in performance. As a stop-gap measure, the MG FF cannon was developed from the Oerlikon FF and put in widespread use, but its performance was lackluster.
Production of the MG 151 in its original 15 mm calibre format began in 1940. After combat evaluation of the 15 mm cartridge as the main armament of early Messerschmitt Bf 109F-2 fighters, the cannon was redesigned with a larger cartridge as the 20 mm MG 151/20 in 1941. Combat experience showed that a more powerful explosive shell was preferable to a higher projectile velocity. The MG 151/20 cartridge was created by expanding the neck of the cartridge to hold the larger explosive shell used in the MG FF cannon, and shortening the length of the cartridge case to match the overall length of the original 15 mm cartridge. These measures simplified conversion of the 15 mm to the 20 mm MG 151/20, requiring only a change of barrel and other small modifications. A disadvantage of the simplified conversion was reduction of projectile muzzle velocity from 850 metres per second (2,800 ft/s) for the 15 mm shell to 700 m/s (2,300 ft/s) for the larger and heavier 20 mm shell. A 20 mm AP projectile could penetrate only 10–12 mm of armor at 300 m (at 60 degrees), compared to 18 mm penetration for the 15 mm under the same conditions but this was not seen as a significant limitation. The 20 mm version became the standard inboard cannon from the Bf 109F-4 series. The 20 mm MG 151/20 offered more predictable trajectory, longer range and higher impact velocity than the 580 m/s (1,900 ft/s) cartridge of the earlier MG FF cannon. The MG FF was retained for flexible, wing and upward firing Schräge Musik mounts to the end of the war.
The German preference for explosive power rather than armor penetration was taken further with the development of the mine shell which had been first introduced for the MG FF (in the Bf 109 E-4) and later for the MG 151/20. Even this improvement in explosive power turned out to be unsatisfactory against the four-engine bombers that German fighters were up against in the second part of the war. By German calculations, it took about 15–20 hits with the MG 151/20 to down a heavy bomber but this was reduced to just 3–4 hits for a 30 mm shell with the shattering effects of its hexogen explosive filling used by the long-barreled MK 103 and shorter barreled MK 108 cannon. Only four or five hits with 20 mm calibre cannon were needed for frontal attacks on heavy bombers (Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and Consolidated B-24 Liberator) but such attacks were difficult to execute. The 30 mm MK 108 cannon thus replaced the MG 151/20 as the standard, engine-mount Motorkanone centre-line armament starting with the Bf 109 K-4 and was also retrofitted to some of the G-series.
Eight hundred MG 151/20 were exported to Japan aboard the Italian submarine Comandante Cappellini in August 1943 and used to equip 388 Japanese Kawasaki Ki-61-I Hei fighters. The 20 mm MG 151/20 was also fitted on the Macchi C.205, the Fiat G.55 and Reggiane Re.2005 of the Italian Regia Aeronautica and IAR 81B and 81C of the Romanian Royal Air Force.
An unknown number of cannons were converted for usage in the ground use role in early 1945, predominantly within Volkssturm units serving in the Posen area. Its effectiveness in this role are unknown but it was photographed on parade in Posen November 1944 with the Wartheland Volkssturm units.
= Postwar use
=After World War II, numbers of ex-Luftwaffe MG 151/20 cannon were removed from inventory and from scrapped aircraft and used by various nations in their own aircraft. The French Armée de l'air (AdA) and French Army aviation arm (Aviation légère de l'armée de Terre ,ALAT) used MG 151/20 cannon as fixed and flexible armament in various aircraft, including helicopters. The AdA and ALAT jointly developed a rubber-insulated flexible mount for the MG 151/20 for use as a door gun, which was later used in combat in Algeria aboard several FAF/ALAT Piasecki H-21C assault transport helicopters and on Sikorsky H-34 gunship helicopters. French Matra MG 151 20 mm cannons were used by Portugal and Rhodesia fitted to their Alouette III helicopters, while Denel designed its own variant for the South African Air Force.
MG 151 applications
= Aircraft
== Armoured fighting vehicles
=AMX-13t (SAMM S232 AA-turret)
AMX-50t (SAMM S36Z AA-gun mount)
FCM 12t (SAMM S232 AA-turret)
Lorraine 155 mm
SdKfz 251/21 Schützenpanzerwagen Drilling
= Helicopters
=Aérospatiale Alouette III SA-3160 – as gunships
Aérospatiale Alouette III SA-3164 – single prototype, also known as "Alouette-Canon"
Sikorsky H-34 Choctaw – as gunships
Sikorsky H-34A Pirate – gunship variant
MG 151/15 specifications
Barrel length: 1254 mm (L/83 caliber length)
Rifling: 8 grooves, right hand twist, 1 turn in 16"
Muzzle velocity:
850 m/s (AP-T)
960 m/s (HE-T, HEI-T)
1030 m/s AP(WC)
Projectile types:
AP-T weighing 72 g
HE weighing 57 g. HE filler: 2.8 g
AP(WC) weighing 52 g
= 15×96mm cartridge specifications
=MG 151/20 specifications
Two versions of the 20 mm MG 151 were built. Early guns used a percussion priming system, and later E-models used electrical priming. Some rounds were available with a timer self-destruct and/or tracer (or glowtracer). There were also different types of high-explosive shell fillings with either standard Pentrit A which was pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN) and aluminium, HA 41 (RDX mixed with Aluminium powder which had a 40 percent increased high explosive and incendiary effect), and a compressed version where more explosives (HA 41) were compressed into same space using large pressures (MX).
Rifling: 1 turn in 23 calibers
Effective range:800 m
Muzzle velocity was 805 m/s (HEI-HC (M)) and 705 m/s (HE-Tracer, armor piercing)
Ammunition types:
Tracer ammo
I-T – Incendiary, Tracer
API-T – Armour-Piercing Incendiary, Tracer
APHEF-T – Armour-Piercing High-Explosive Fragmentation, Tracer
HEF-T – High-Explosive Fragmentation, Tracer
HEFI-T – High-Explosive Fragmentation, Tracer
AP-T – Armour-Piercing, Tracer
Tracerless ammo
I – Incendiary
API – Armour-Piercing Incendiary
APHEF – Armour-Piercing High-Explosive Fragmentation
HEI-HC (M) – High-Explosive Incendiary, High Capacity
= 20×82mm cartridge specifications
=US derivatives (T17, T39, T51)
During World War II the US Army produced the 0.60-caliber T17, a reverse-engineered copy of the German MG 151 chambered for an experimental anti-tank rifle round. A speculative order of 5,000 T17 guns was placed, but only around 300 of them were built. However, none saw service despite the availability of 6 million rounds of .60 caliber ammunition. Almost one million rounds were fired during the T17 testing program. The main US version produced, the T17E3, was made by Frigidaire; it weighed 134 lb (61 kg) and had a rate of fire of only 600 rounds per minute. Further refinements led to the T39 and T51 versions, but these also did not enter service.
= US ammunition
=A cartridge originally based on an armor-piercing round designed in 1939 for use with the experimental T1 and T1E1 anti-tank rifles. It was cancelled in 1944 when it became clear that modern tanks had armor too thick to penetrate with a heavy rifle cartridge. Developments showed that shaped-charged rifle grenades and rocket launchers were the future of infantry anti-tank weapons, and the anti-tank rifle concept was abandoned.
Much like the British attempts to turn their stocks of obsolete .55 Boys anti-tank cartridges into a native-designed heavy machine gun cartridge, the .60-caliber cartridge was repurposed as an autocannon cartridge to succeed the older .50 Browning. The ammunition and the T17 cannon were produced from 1942 to 1946 but never proved a substantial improvement over the .50 Browning and the M2HB and M3 heavy machine guns. The cartridge was later shortened and necked up to produce the 20×102mm Vulcan autocannon round.
.60 Armor-Piercing [15.2×114mm T1 Rifle] - A 1180-grain (76.5-gram) kinetic penetrator projectile with a velocity of 3,600 feet per second (1,100 m/s) for a muzzle energy of over 34,000 ft./lbs. (46 kilojoules).
.60 T32 Ball [15.2×114mm T17 machine gun]
.60 T77 Ball [15.2×114mm T17 machine gun]
.60 T36 Incendiary [15.2×114mm T17 machine gun]
.60 T39 Armor-Piercing Incendiary [15.2×114mm T17 machine gun]
.60 T60 Armor-Piercing Incendiary [15.2×114mm T17 machine gun]
Users (MG 151/20)
Angola
Finland
France
Germany
Hungary
Italian Social Republic
Empire of Japan
Portugal
Rhodesia
Romania
South Africa
Wars
World War II
Algerian War
Portuguese Colonial War
Rhodesian Bush War
See also
List of weapons of military aircraft of Germany during World War II
MK 108 30 mm cannon
MG 131 13 mm heavy machine gun
MG 17 7.92 mm machine gun
Hispano-Suiza HS.404
20mm Type 99 cannon
Notes
References
= Bibliography
=Chinn, George M. (1951). "Chapter 4: Ordnance Corps Short-Recoil-Operated Automatic Machine Gun". The Machine Gun. Vol. III. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Publishing Office.
Fontanellaz, Adrien; Cooper, Tom; Matos, Jose Augusto (2020). War of Intervention in Angola, Volume 3: Angolan and Cuban Air Forces, 1975-1985. Warwick, UK: Helion & Company Publishing. ISBN 978-1-913118-61-7.
Johnson, Melvin M. Jr. (1944). Rifles and Machine Guns. New York: William Morrow & Company.
Petter-Bowyer, Peter J. H. (2005). Winds of Destruction: The Autobiography of a Rhodesian Combat Pilot. Johannesburg: 30° South. ISBN 0-9584890-3-3.
Williams, Anthony G. (2002). Rapid Fire: The Development of Automatic Cannon, Heavy Machine-Guns and Their Ammunition for Armies, Navies and Air Forces. Shrewsbury: Airlife. ISBN 978-1-84037-435-3.
Williams, Anthony G.; Gustin, Emmanuel (2003). Flying Guns WWII. Shrewsbury: Airlife. ISBN 978-1-84037-227-4.
Windrow, Martin (1997). The Algerian War, 1954-62. Men-at Arms (No.312). London: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85532-658-3.
Further reading
Lepage, Jean-Denis G. G. (23 March 2009). Aircraft of the Luftwaffe, 1935-1945: An Illustrated Guide. McFarland. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-7864-5280-4.
External links
"Type 151 20mm Cannon". SAAF: Unofficial Website of the South African Air Force.
"GA 1 20mm Cannon". SAAF: Unofficial Website of the South African Air Force.
"German MG-151 Type 15- and 20-mm Aircraft Weapons". Tactical and Technical Trends (30): 18–20. 29 July 1943 – via LoneSentry.com.
"20 mm MG 151". Museum für historische Wehrtechnik.
"Weapons and Tactics". PrinzEugen.com Schnellboot Archive. Archived from the original on 24 February 2020. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
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