According to a Russian-language article I saw, the new 125mm 2A82 is only 52 calibers (the old 125mm was 51), but it has a longer breech to allow larger shells to be used. The T-14 Armata carries 45 rounds (32 in the autoloader, 13 others somewhere - I would assume somewhere else in the turret, based on the design philosophy, but I haven't seen confirmation of that). The Malachit ERA is allegedly a new type that uses a very tiny amount of explosive to vibrate the armor plate instead of projecting it at the incoming round, with the goal of breaking up HEAT jets or rod penetrators. It's said it still has the capability to fire AT-11 missiles, and there's talk of up-gunning it to a 152mm 2A83 cannon. That version would have much less ammunition (my estimate is around 16-18 in the autoloader and 10-12 spare), and there's very little information on the gun, but it's likely around 45 calibers in length. The active protection system consists of 10 hard-kill projectiles mounted under the turret facing forwardwith a 60 degree arc of fire and 48 soft-kill projectiles mounted on the turret, with 24 aimed outward and 24 aimed upward, which use multi-spectral smoke to cause laser or infrared guided missiles to lose track of the tank. Secondary armament is supposed to be a PKT with 1,000 rounds and a Kord 12.7mm with 300 rounds.
The T-15 Armata IFV has a turret with a 2A42 30mm cannon (500 rounds - 160 AP and 340 HE is standard load), a 7.62mm coaxial MG (2000 rounds), and 4 Kornet-EM (AT-14 Spriggan) missiles. It has the same hard-kill missiles as the T-14, mounted along the hull in a 60 degree arc, but doesn't appear to have any soft-kill launchers.
The Kurganets IFV (B-11) has the same turret as the T-15, appears to carry 20 hard-kill missiles (4 forward, 4 aft, and 6 on each side), along with 12 soft-kill smoke launchers on the turret and 6 or 7 infantry. The APC version (B-10) has only a 12.7mm Kord for armament, with no hard-kill launchers and 16 soft-kill launchers on the turret, and carries 8 infantry. Mass for the Kurganets is around 25 tonnes, with a top claimed speed of 80 kilometers per hour.
Now, these are all based on photographs from Victory Day parades, so it's entirely possible the deployed vehicles will be different, since the parade vehicles have not been combat-ready. All of the turrets mentioned are unmanned
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