with a turret-mounted gun, coaxial machine gun, pintle-mounted loader's machine gun and commander's remote weapon station. A
static mount is a non-portable weapon support component either mounted directly to the ground, on a fortification, or as part of a vehicle.
Turret A
gun turret protects the crew or mechanism of a weapon and at the same time lets the weapon be aimed and fired in many directions. A turret is a rotating weapon platform, strictly one that crosses the armour of whatever it is mounted on with a structure called a barbette (on ships) or basket (on tanks) and has a protective structure on top (gunhouse). If it has no gunhouse it is a barbette, if it has no barbette (i.e., it is mounted to the outside of the vehicle's armour) it is an installation. Turrets are typically used to mount
machine guns,
autocannons or large-
calibre guns. They may be human operated or remotely controlled. A small turret, or sub-turret on a larger one, is called a
cupola. The term
cupola also describes rotating turrets that carry no weapons but instead are sighting devices, as in the case of
tank commanders. A
finial is an extremely small sub-turret or sub-sub-turret mounted on a cupola turret. Typically the gun is fixed on its horizontal axis and rotated by turning the turret, with
trunnions on the gun used to allow it to elevate. Alternatively, in an
oscillating turret the entire upper section of the turret moves to elevate and depress the gun.
Casemate A casemate is an armoured structure consisting of a static primary surface incorporating a limited-traverse gun mount: typically, this takes the form of either a gun mounted through a fixed armour plate (typically seen on
tank destroyers and
assault guns) or a mount consisting of a partial cylinder of armour "sandwiched" between plates at the top and bottom (as with the sponson guns of early tanks and the secondary armament of Dreadnought-era battleships).
Coaxial A
coaxial mount, pioneered on the
T1 Light Tank in the late 1920s and widely adopted by the late 1930s, is mounted beside or above the primary weapon and thus points in the same general direction as the main armament, relying on the host weapon's ability to traverse in order to change arc. The term
coaxial is something of a
misnomer as the arrangement is strictly speaking
paraxial (i.e., parallel axes, as opposed to
the same axis), though for ballistic purposes their
sight axes are effectively the same in practical terms. Nearly all
main battle tanks and most
infantry fighting vehicles have a coaxial
machine gun mounted to fire along a parallel axis to the main gun. Coaxial weapons are usually aimed by use of the main gun control. It is usually used to engage
infantry or other "soft" targets where use of shots from the main gun would be dangerous, ineffective or wasteful. Some weapons such as the
M40 recoilless rifle and the
Mk 153 Shoulder-Launched Multipurpose Assault Weapon have a smaller caliber
spotting rifle mounted in
coaxial fashion to the barrel or launch tube. These weapons fire special cartridges designed to mimic the ballistic arc of the host weapon's ammunition, using tracer or point-detonating rounds so that a gunner can easily determine where a shot will land in order to place fire accurately. Due to the adoption of more advanced systems such as laser rangefinders, they are rarely used on modern weapons.
Ground mount Fixed A
fixed mount is incapable of horizontal movement (traverse), though not necessarily incapable of vertical movement (elevation). The entire mounting must be moved in order to change direction of fire. Fully fixed mounts (no traverse
or elevation) are most commonly found on aircraft, and most commonly direct the weapon forward, along the aircraft's vector of movement, so that a pilot can aim by pointing the nose of the aircraft at the target. Some aircraft designs used different concept of fixed mounts, as found in
Schräge Musik or
AC-47 Spooky. The
Stridsvagn 103 is an unusual turretless main battle tank with a fixed main gun that is aimed using the tank's tracks and suspension. Military aircraft also often used fixed mounts called
hardpoints or
weapon stations to attach disposable stores such as missiles, bombs and external fuel tanks: these devices mount a standardised set of locking lugs to which many different types of armament can be affixed. Fixed traverse mounts capable of only elevation are common on larger self-propelled guns, as well being the mounting method used by virtually all railroad guns.
Pintle ''. A
pintle mount is a
swiveling mount that allows the gun to be freely traversed or elevated, while the base of the mount is still fixed keeping the whole system in one stable position: typically the mounting is either a rod on the underside of the gun (a
pintle rod) that mates with a
socket mechanism, or an intermediary cradle that mounts to the sides of the weapon's barrel or receiver. Due to the stability offered by the mount, the gun typically does not need a
shoulder stock, with many modern examples using two-handed spade grips. It is most commonly found on
armoured vehicles,
improvised fighting vehicles such as
technicals, side gun stations on
WW2 and earlier-era
bomber aircraft, and the door guns of
armed transport helicopters. Early single-shot examples referred to as
swivel guns were commonly mounted on the deck rails of
naval vessels in the
Age of Sail to deter
boarders at close range. Larger guns require a heavier mounting referred to as a
pedestal, and even larger guns a
turntable platform: a pedestal mount may be directly manipulated, but larger guns typically require the use of mechanical handwheels or
hydraulic/
electric actuator assistance for traversing and elevation adjustments. Very large mounts might also include seats for the crew fixed to the gun cradle or the floor of the turntable. Unlike a turret, this type of mount typically has little or no armour protection, usually at most a frontal
gun shield.
Remote weapon station/installation This is a power-assisted mounting on the outside of whatever it is mounted on, usually bolted down to the surface and with only the control wires crossing the armour. Such mountings are typically used on armoured fighting vehicles for anti-personnel weapons to avoid exposing a crewmen to return fire, and on naval vessels for self-contained
CIWS systems.
Swing arm mount type PS-31 from pillbox No. 186 of the
Kiev Fortified Region. The mount includes elements of the machine gun cooling system. A
swing mount is a fixed mount that allows a far greater and more flexible
arc of fire than the simple pintle mount system. Utilising a system of one or two articulated arms the gunner can swing the weapon through a wide arc even though the gunner's position is fixed relative to the mount. These systems vary in complexity from a simple arm, to a double arm with the ability to lock the weapon in any firing position. ==Non-static mount==