![]() To overcome this potential difficulty, the US Army began to favor high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT), or shaped charge rounds in the 1950s. A new generation of guns, notably the British 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7, were able to cope with newer tanks, but it appeared that in another generation the guns needed would be too large to be practical. With the rapid increase in armor thickness during World War II, tanks were becoming increasingly able to survive rounds fired from even the largest of World War II-era anti-tank guns. The name of the system is that of a traditional wooden club from Ireland. Western forces largely gave up on the gun launched missile concept, although it remains in use on former Soviet Union designs. Ultimately, very few of the 88,000 rounds produced were ever fired in combat, and the system was largely succeeded by the later BGM-71 TOW wire-guided missile, which was first produced in 1970. It was also used on the M60A2 "Starship", which was phased out by 1981. ![]() It was originally developed for the experimental but never produced MBT-70 tank and served most notably as a primary weapon of the M551 Sheridan light tank, but the missile system was not issued to units serving in Vietnam and was retired in 1996. Developing a system that could fire both shells and missiles reliably proved complex and largely unworkable. It was originally intended to be the medium-range portion of a short, medium, and long-range system for armored fighting vehicles in the 1960s and '70s to defeat future armor without an excessively large gun. The Ford MGM-51 Shillelagh (pronounced / ʃ ɪ ˈ l eɪ l i/ shil- AY-lee) was an American anti-tank guided missile designed to be launched from a conventional gun (cannon). Tank ( M551 Sheridan, MBT/KPz-70, and M60A2)
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