100 mm/55 MLE model 53 (100 mm)
Contents
Description
Write an introduction to the article in 2-3 small paragraphs. Briefly tell us about the history of the development and combat using the weaponry and also about its features. Compile a list of air, ground, or naval vehicles that feature this weapon system in the game.
Vehicles equipped with this weapon
General info
Tell us about the tactical and technical characteristics of the cannon or machine gun.
Available ammunition
Describe the shells that are available for the weapon and their features and purpose. If it concerns autocannons or machine guns, write about different ammo belts and what is inside (which types of shells).
Comparison with analogues
Give a comparative description of cannons/machine guns that have firepower equal to this weapon.
Usage in battles
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Pros and cons
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Pros:
Cons:
History
The 10mm/55 MLE 53 is a French naval cannon developed in 1953. As France found their interwar and World War II era arsenal of naval guns was obsolete when the war ended, they began developed a new multi-role weapon. The result became the MLE 53 a 100mm cannon that replaced the 127mm and 57mm cannons service and optimized to serve as an anti-ship, anti-aircraft and shore bombardment weapon. The MLE 53 version of the design is an automatic weapon, but the first round is manually loaded with the remaining rounds loaded from the recoil operation. Alongside France, the guns are used by Argentina, Belgium, China, Portugal, Turkey, Brazil, Saudi-Arabia, and the focus of this article, Germany.
Germany mounts the MLE 53 on two class of ships. These ships are the Köln-class frigates, such as the Köln and Lübeck, and the Hamburg-class destroyers. Both classes have been retired, but the MLE 53 and its variants remain in service with France and other nations around the world.
Media
Excellent additions to the article would be video guides, screenshots from the game, and photos.
See also
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- reference to the article about the variant of the cannon/machine gun;
- references to approximate analogues by other nations and research trees.
External links
Germany naval cannons | |
---|---|
15 mm | MG 151 |
20 mm | 2 cm/65 C/30 · 2 cm/65 C/38 · 2 cm/65 Flakzwilling 38 · 2 cm/65 Flakvierling 38 · MG 151/20 |
30 mm | MK103/38 |
37 mm | FlaK-Lafette C/36 · 3.7 cm FlaK-Lafette LM/42 · SK C/30 · FlaK.36 · FlaK43 |
40 mm | 40 mm/70 MEL58 · Bofors Flak 28 · Bofors L/70 model 1948 |
52 mm | 52 mm/55 SK L/55 |
88 mm | 8.8 cm/76 SK C/32 · S.K.C/35 · FlaK.18 · Flak.36 · 88 mm/45 AA SK L/45 · 88 mm/45 casemate SK L/45 |
100 mm | 100 mm/55 MLE model 53 |
105 mm | SK C/32 · SK C/33 AA |
120 mm | L45 |
128 mm | 12.8 cm/45 SK C/34 · 12.8 cm SK C/41 |
150 mm | 150 mm/45 SK L/45 · 15 cm/48 KC/36 · 15 cm/55 SK C/28 · 15 cm/60 SK C/25 |
203 mm | 20.3 cm/60 SK C/34 |
283 mm | 283 mm/45 SK L/45 · 283 mm/52 SK C/28 · 283 mm/54,5 SK C/34 |
305 mm | 305 mm/50 SK L/50 |
380 mm | 38 cm SK L/45 |
Foreign: | |
23 mm | ZU-23 (USSR) |
25 mm | 2M-3 (USSR) |
30 mm | AK-230 (USSR) |
37 mm | V-11 (USSR) |
76 mm | 76 mm/62 OTO-Melara Compact (Italy) |
100 mm | 100 mm/56 B-34 (USSR) |