The MO-120 RT or MO-120-RT is a heavy mortar mortar of French origin. The RT in the designator stands for rayé, tracté, which means rifled, towed. The MO-120-RT is currently used by the French Army, and has also been sold to more than 24 foreign countries or is produced under licence in various countries. The MO-120 RT is issued by artillery units, where it augments the 155 mm artillery, or infantry units in some countries.
Design
The MO-120 RT uses standard NATO rounds with a range of 8,2 km and the PRPA with a range of 13 km. The weapon can be fired either by dropping the round down the tube resulting in an automatic firing once the bomb hits the tube base, or by a controlled firing by dropping the bomb down the tube and pulling on a lanyard that will in turn set off the triggering mechanism in the base of the tube. Rounds fired from the mortar can reach as high as about 4,000 m and hit the ground with an effective kill radius of nearly.
Service
In French service, this weapon is normally towed by the VTM 120, a wheeled armored vehicle that is a derivative of the VAB 4×4 series of armored personnel carrier. Towing is accomplished by a towing hitch that is screwed onto the muzzle of the weapon. The VTM 120 also carries 70 rounds for the mortar and offers basic ballistic protection from small arms fire and shrapnel for the crew. The RT-61 can also be towed by the AMX-10 TM, which is a version of the AMX-10P tracked APC or the future French Scorpion SERVAL Vehicle. In France, the mortars which originally equipped infantry regiments, have now all been transferred to the artillery regiments, where they augment the 155 mm towed artillery. Manufacturers other than Thomson-Brandt as mentioned above include Thomson-CSF/Daimler Benz Aerospace, Hotchkiss Brandt as the "HB Rayé".
Variants
Turkish copy
It was copied without license in Turkey and manufactured by MKEK as the HY 12 mortar.
The 2R2M is a derivative of the MO-120-RT-61 designed to be carried on light armoured vehicles, with a semi-automatic loading. The system has also been modified by the USMC as the Dragon Fire. It is in service in 5 armies and is currently being integrated in the new French Scorpion GRIFFON wheeled vehicle.
Expeditionary Fire Support System
The United States Marine Corps began looking for an Expeditionary Fire Support System in 2001 after the start of operations in Afghanistan exposed their lack of expeditionary artillery lighter than a 155 mm howitzer but heavier than a 60 mm mortar. Early on, the weapon became tied to the development of the MV-22 Osprey, which would contain a Growler ITV jeep that would tow it; both efforts were troubled and experienced delays. The EFSS was first used operationally in Afghanistan in February 2011, firing an M1105 illumination projectile. The full EFSS was introduced in 2009, consisting of two light vehicles, one towing the mortar and the other an ammunition trailer, that fit inside an MV-22 or CH-53E Super Stallion; an EFSS battery is made up of roughly 50 Marines. From 2011 to 2015, the Marines and Raytheon developed the precision extended range munition for the EFSS, a GPS-guided round that delivers greater range and better accuracy. The round increased range from to, falling within 10 meters of the target and as close as two meters, costing $18,000 each, and having 2.5–3 times more lethality. The extra range came from tail fins for stabilization and canards near the nose to make in-flight adjustments and make it glide as it descends, and the greater lethality was a result of this flight path; normal artillery rounds impact at a 45 degree angle, which blows the top half of the round straight up into the air, but descending at a sharp angle places more energy and fragmentation directly on a target. It was even capable of hitting reverse slope positions by shaping its trajectory. Greater accuracy also reduces logistical burdens, as using fewer rounds to destroy one target means a unit can last longer without needing resupply. The PERM was to begin fielding in 2018. Raytheon planned to add semi-active laser guidance to PERM rounds to enable them to hit moving targets. By December 2017, the U.S. Marines had divested the EFSS. With the Marines working to extend the range of their artillery arsenal, the EFSS' limited range was not seen as well suited for future missions, so it was chosen for divestment in favor of moving more resources for precision fires.
Operators
:
: 52 delivered in 1965–1966.
: 16 delivered in 1973.
: 38 Turkish HY1-12 delivered in 2009.
: 114 delivered in 1990–1991, 112 in service in 2016.
: 20 delivered in 1981.
: 4 delivered in 1986.
: 128 in 2016.
: 139 delivered between 2000 and 2004. The Military Balance gives 142 in service as of 2016.
: 462 delivered between 1990 and 2017.
: ~12 in service.
: 32 delivered in 1988, still in service.
: 145 delivered in 1966–1968
: 200 in service
: 200 delivered in 1990–1991 and 25 2R2M in 2009–2010, both used by the National Guard.