#31
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Those were rhetorical questions you understand. Meant to give the modellers insight into why the veterans keep telling them that WW2 tanks are dead meat and scrap metal in any T2K environment.
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#32
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and again the T-54 and T-55, M47, M48, M60, Leopard I, AMX-30, etc.. are still seen on Twilight battlefields, are still in forward deployed divisions and are still effective - all of those can kick a Sherman's butt any day of the week -but all of them basically have the same armor type and many of them very similar layouts to the WWII tanks you say would be dead meat in ten minutes - they have better guns and ammo and thicker armor but M1's and Challengers they arent
but they are better than the alternative - which is no tank at all |
#33
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And if you looked at Littlefield's collection, let alone at most museums, you see that we arent talking about WWII tanks -yes he has tanks from WWII - but the vast majority of what he has with working barrels and in operable condition, as well as other museums, are M47/M48/M60/M103/Centurions - i.e. Korean War and Vietnam War tanks
so while for some reason people keep fixating on WWII tanks the reality is that most of what will come out of museums to be used on the battlefield are the same tanks that we already see in the Twilight War - i.e. the second and third line older tanks that countries like Turkey had to use or that the UK pulled out of storage in 1998 or that National Guard units were equipped with when they get sent over so if you run into a T-55 in Poland or Iran and its a handful to go up against because you dont have any anti-armor weapons then why isnt an M48 or M60 pulled out of a museum in California a similar handful to either oppose or have on your side |
#34
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You can take on tanks in any environment. Forest preferably, urban is second best. Turrets can only engage targets to their relative front. When the turret is facing away from you sprint for the tank. The -10 depression of the gun applies to the coaxial too. In close and a tank has to rely on infantry or another tank to protect it from sappers. Tankers opening the roof hatches to engage infantry with the TC or loaders machineguns? Let them. Their dead very fast from massed small arms fire and then the hatches are open. Yes, please do that. That TC hatch or loader hatch coming open is exactly what the infantry want. The massed fired on all the periscopes and gunner sights is to blind them and force them to open up. Let your tank sit out in the open…… That just calls down artillery or mortar fire. Roof hit and it is toast. Smoke mission and it cannot engage targets. Bundle of C4 and WP grenades on a pole….. Slip that under the tank from up close…. If you don’t blast through the belly armor the WP is going to heat it up quick. Quote:
RPGS most of all, then systems that need a more sophisticated launcher like LAWS or AT4. Recoilless rifles are going to have a huge resurgence…. If you can make mortar and artillery fuzes you can make these. You can even mount a TVS-5 on an M40A1 recoilless and give it passive night fighting capability to 1000 meters. Quote:
Any smart commander would refuse this tank as the waste of resources it is. |
#35
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Ammunition compatibility.... They use the same MG ammo as the rest of the forces. Lastly, they have the capability to train crews. There isn't a M4 Sherman or Panzer 4 school about to train some drivers and gunners. |
#36
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I give the same odds to the rest as I do a littlefield M4 or Panzer. |
#37
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#38
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And you have a shop with all those parts in abundance ready to support the tanks that they put back in the field - remember its the fact that he has trained techs and equipment and facilities that most dont have - and also the fact that the days of massed armor are over - thus his shop cant support divisions with hundreds of tanks - but the reality is that those divisions dont exist - and adding six to seven tanks, in 2001, is the equivalent of adding a hundred a few years earlier
and marauders are not highly trained forces - maybe in Europe or Korea or Iran - but not in the US - basically you are looking at gangs of thugs and survivalists, most of whom the only military training they ever had was watching old episodes of Combat on TV the logistics train you need to support a half dozen tanks is alot less than what you need to support hundreds - and thats basically what a force with tanks has nowadays in the US - so again a place like Littefields is exactly what a T2K armored force would need in 2001 to keep going - and his guys can service an M1 tank just as easily as they can an M48 in 1997, 1998, even into 1999 the Army wouldnt want older tanks now, as per canon, they will take anything with a turret and a main gun for a tank - and thats what an old M47/M48/M41/T55 fits to a T oh as for mortar and artillery fire called down on the hypothetical Sherman tank sitting in a field in the US - sounds like a great idea- most Mexican forces have a max of 1-2 artillery pieces and limited ammo and mortars wont do squat to a tank, not the typical 60mm and 81mm mortars that are left - and getting a hit with an unguided artillery shell on a tank with your one or two guns is basically impossible - again this is 2001 not 1997 as for RPG's - look at the Texas module - they are describing combat Mexican forces and what they are armed with - and what they dont have is anti-tank weapons - here and there but most units dont have any - so if they dont how do a bunch of marauders who raided a gun store have RPG's? as for massed fired on periscopes - lets see marauders using hunting rifles and shotguns - again good luck getting even close enough to make a hit on a periscope or vision block let alone taking one out while the coax turns you into swiss cheese - and unless the tank is the one from Fury I dont see it just sitting there as it takes a hell of a lot of fire or waits for the artillery to get lucky and hit the roof thats the difference between a pillbox and a tank -a tank moves Last edited by Olefin; 09-09-2015 at 02:37 PM. |
#39
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as for the rest that you mentioned as non-survivable - they must be surviveable because the M48 has been fighting in Turkey, the AMX in Germany, Africa and the US (its probably the tank the Mexicans would have), the Leopard I (the original version without the improved armor) in Europe, the M60 in a bunch of US divisions in Korea, Iran, Europe and the US - otherwise they wouldnt be in the various canon books showing them as still on the equipment rosters of those forces |
#40
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I’ll take that bet. Quote:
Infantry units world wide practice anti tank tactics without AT rockets or ATGMs as core infantry skills. Quote:
Read the “Siege of Grozny” and how the Chechens stopped Russian armor attacks cold. No, a tank CAN move if not disabled……. Which isn’t impossible for infantry supported by artillery. Most importantly all of these have unstabilized sights and have to stop to move..... the M60A3 being an exception with the Leopard I Last edited by ArmySGT.; 09-09-2015 at 03:25 PM. |
#41
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As for the rest.... the authors made a lot of interesting and imaginative but, sadly now canon choices....... like the Navies for example. If those are around, functional, with trained crews, fuel, and ammunition then they must be part of Division and Corps reserved in case the other guy commits his armor to a massed attack to achieve a break through and deep battle. This and many WW2, Korea, and Viet Nam fighting vehicles were repaired and returned to service even after entire crews have been killed more than once..... if it wasn't fire or a catastrophic ammo detonation repair was probable given trained maintenance personnel and new or cannibalized parts. |
#42
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Sgt - I go by canon - in canon the armored units that are left have very few tanks left - so what is a platoon today is basically everything they have left in the whole division by 2001 - so that waste of combat power and resources isnt happening because they are the British or French in 1940 - its because thats all there is left
thats why what Littlefield has would be a big deal - if all you have left is seven tanks and suddenly you can have that number doubled to 14 by adding seven of his tanks you now have an actual tank company and go back to doctrine - even if they have old style armor - its a real tank company again and you really need to read up on what Littlefield had and what the auction had as to parts - he had a pretty good amount of spare parts for his collection - if he found six spare parts for an M48 he didnt buy one -he bought them all - and if his guys made a part because there werent any left they made a few spares while they were at it Think of why tanks and APC's are getting rare - lack of skilled techs and equipment - he has both - meaning now those 7 tanks you have left get repaired and those six "pillboxes" you have back at base get to be operational again - thats what he has to offer - its great if you have all these spare parts (which by 2000 no one has) - you still need a place to use them, the right equipment to use them and men who know how to use it and your idea of marauders in the US is way off - I agree totally with you in the combat zones in Europe or Alaska or Iran or Korea or China - but here in most of the US they are made up of desperate refugees, criminals, biker gangs, survivalists and anyone else who had a gun and needed food - read the US modules and you dont see large numbers of deserters and veterans - that happened more in places like Europe and Iran sure some of them have old half remembered military training but not the vast majority of them - one read of the NYC module shows you what you are looking at - and most of them wouldnt have the first idea on how to take on a tank as for artillery and mortars - the chance of hitting a moving tank with an unguided mortar round or artillery round fired from a group of three or four weapons is basically nil and while the books made up a lot of excuses thats the scenario we have to work with - and its why tank graveyards in T2K are potential supply depots and not just wastes of good tanks like they are here in our world |
#43
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and I never said he could make live barrels - the vehicles with those either had them to begin with or he bought them when they were available and had them in storage waiting to refit the vehicles - not everything he had was live - but there were enough to form a nice composite mech battalion when you add in the APC's and SPG's that worked and were functional as well - and none of them were Panzers and live barrels are out there - Auction hunters found one in a storage bin for a M3 Stuart in Mass |
#44
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When you are in agreement with canon material. However, when you are not such as the discussion on Naval units, Division Cuba, the Mexican campaigns, Howling Wilderness, Armies of the Night, Red star Lonestar, or Urban Guerilla you will depart fast.
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The Division Commander will hold that small number of tanks to counter an enemy armor break through or to exploit a gap made by his own infantry with artillery support to free those tanks to get into the enemy rear and kill the enemy logistics train or support troops. Quote:
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This is even assuming,,,,, it is a huge assumption that all these technicians who are retirees and such are have survive the TDM, famines, and plagues. Then to come to work at what has become in your vision a militarily significant target. I posit that they are dead or have departed to care for their families as best they can just like any other civilians. Dollars don’t mean much in T2K. Quote:
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Which is why the article and the title are a misnomer….. Those are Depots. Those are undamaged, nearly complete vehicles. A tank graveyard is filled with battle damaged vehicles to difficult for company and battalion assets to return to service. A graveyard like that is a Corps collection point far, far, far to the rear. These would be wrecks with a very low probability of any serviceable parts. |
#45
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The Sovereign Citizen movement is comprised of at least 50% veterans and the movement has a "basic training" program for new members. The KKK also has a "basic training" program run by former vets. The various "Militias" throughout the north east and the south are usually headed by vets. There was even a report by the Feds about various gangs in CA and TX joining the Army and then going AWOL after basic. These "bangers" would then come home to their fellow gangsters bragging about "infiltrating" the Army and getting "trained to kill." This doesn't even cover private citizens who attend classes at places like Thunder Ranch, Gunsite, Tactical Response, Valor Ridge, or DTI; Many of these "paramilitary" by nature. |
#46
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Even in the aftermath of an Exchange; It would be possible to equip a forward observer with a civilian laser rangefinder (the kind you find at gun shops) and a GPS. These devices used together (if GPS signal is present) will give even an average Forward Observer a pinpoint CEP (1 to 3 meters). We have the advantage of Hindsight, unlike the Devs. We should use our hindsight to improve the game. The devs believed that M48s and M60s would "soldier on" in mothballs. We know that they did not. This doesn't change the premise of the game; We should strive to "modernize" Twilight with our 20/20 view of the last years depicted in the game. |
#47
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The Leo 1 Predates the MBT70 program, where as the Leo 2 program was built off of the German successor to the failed MBT70. So, no, the Leo 1 has no composite armour as originally built (later marks did on the turret, after a fashion).
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Member of the Bofors fan club! The M1911 of automatic cannon. Proud fan(atic) of the CV90 Series. |
#48
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*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IDF_Achzarit
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Author of Twilight 2000 adventure modules, Rook's Gambit and The Poisoned Chalice, the campaign sourcebook, Korean Peninsula, the gear-book, Baltic Boats, and the co-author of Tara Romaneasca, a campaign sourcebook for Romania, all available for purchase on DriveThruRPG: https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...--Rooks-Gambit https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...ula-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...nia-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...liate_id=61048 https://preview.drivethrurpg.com/en/...-waters-module |
#49
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#50
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That said, the Namer looks badass. I'd take a Namer over an Achzarit any day. It was evaluated by the U.S. as a Bradley replacement. I kind of wish it'd won.
__________________
Author of Twilight 2000 adventure modules, Rook's Gambit and The Poisoned Chalice, the campaign sourcebook, Korean Peninsula, the gear-book, Baltic Boats, and the co-author of Tara Romaneasca, a campaign sourcebook for Romania, all available for purchase on DriveThruRPG: https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...--Rooks-Gambit https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...ula-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...nia-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...liate_id=61048 https://preview.drivethrurpg.com/en/...-waters-module |
#51
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An HE or WP 81mm mortar round can take out even the most modern MBTs. A direct hit on the engine deck can cause a total mobility kill. A hit close enough to the wheels/track/track return can cause a temporary mobility kill.
__________________
Author of Twilight 2000 adventure modules, Rook's Gambit and The Poisoned Chalice, the campaign sourcebook, Korean Peninsula, the gear-book, Baltic Boats, and the co-author of Tara Romaneasca, a campaign sourcebook for Romania, all available for purchase on DriveThruRPG: https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...--Rooks-Gambit https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...ula-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...nia-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...liate_id=61048 https://preview.drivethrurpg.com/en/...-waters-module |
#52
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#53
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__________________
THIS IS MY SIG, HERE IT IS. |
#54
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I see such places as the Littlefield collection as a great resource but for their workshops, not so much for the vehicles.
I think this because I see the major issue with trying to bring older armoured vehicles back to life is simple economics - how many resources are you going to consume to bring back a very mixed fleet of vehicles with limited potential? I think the newer vehicles might be brought back for direct combat and the older vehicles for recce work depending on the perceived threat but they all will be subject to the economics - is it really worth pouring all these resources into a vehicle that could be fuel hungry, has no ammo, has limited spares, is a maintenance hog etc. etc. I think the answer can be yes but on a very limited scale. If not, they're going to be destroyed so the enemy can't get them. These places simply don't have the resources that a proper vehicle maintenance facility has access to. If you end up committing serious quantities of materiel on a vehicle or three that you are a bit nervous of sending into combat for any of the reasons mentioned above - then yes, sometimes no vehicle is better than any vehicle. Plus any armoured vehicle recovered from a museum/collector's fleet may not be as armoured as it looks. There's no telling how much damage the armour took before it was restored because these places want a vehicle that looks as though it's working, they don't need to replace damaged armour plates with new armour plates. In most cases it would either be too expensive or they simply wouldn't be allowed to buy armour plate - if you want it, you cut up a donor vehicle for it. Like I say, I think the workshops are the real treasure in these places, all those tools and POL stores, stocks of basic metal and various fasteners (rivets, bolts etc. etc.) They'll be worth more for keeping current vehicles running than they will be for resurrecting older types. |
#55
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As already covered WP does not really affect the tanks, C4 you are going to have to spend some time placing it if you want it to do more than just mess up the paint. Good luck with that if you have a half way competent tank section. Last edited by CDAT; 09-09-2015 at 10:14 PM. |
#56
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Now where is that can of fuel....... |
#57
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What the heck
Here goes...
Thermite, I can make it right here in my little shop. I am near 67 years old but I can get close enough to a tank in this part of the world to use said thermite in one of perhaps a dozen locations on any armor. Now is that just wishful thinking? I think not but then I have been in the field for a week or two at a time, I got tired. How many hours do you think anyone will sit in our presumed world of 2000 to 2013 in a tank? If you separate the foot soldier from armor even in our modern tech world it is a target for a number of tactics to render it ineffective. I can also make a claymore, now said separation is a fact. What personnel are still around will be buttoned up. I know what they taught us a long time ago about staying buttoned up without infantry support. They taught us the positon we were to assume was our head between our legs and kissing our well you should say a prayer cause your goin to judgment soon. A note on who will or will not be roaming around in the States. Just because a person has taken an oath to defend this country against all enemies foreign and domestic does not mean that person will not take whatever he can. I have spent a good deal of time in study and observation of organized crime and served with two states taskforces related to them. Those being California and Colorado and they were related to drug trafficking. The major players were Motorcycle outlaw groups and Latin and Hispanic groups IE MS13 etc. Weapons; way more than any prepper groups I ran across and the outlaws have the willingness to use them. Training; both groups had a large number of prior service personnel and they worked at training others in the “clubs”. Money; or the means to procure needed equipment, that goes without question. My take is the threat posed by such groups is perhaps more serious than ANY other and more so her in the States than any other area of the World (except down under, I had to put that in!!)
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Tis better to do than to do not. Tis better to act than react. Tis better to have a battery of 105's than not. Tis better to see them afor they see you. |
#58
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We only have to worry about the wildlife down here. Anyone you meet is more likely to call you a dick head and then hand you a beer (a real one, not that weak arse camel piss you've got in the US).
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#59
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Oh the “What if” game. This is when “discussion” spirals into the ground.
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ATGMs are like a crescent wrench in an overflowing tool box. Quote:
Now those are valid defenses…… But they are also one shots….. You are not going to get many properly using the terrain. Quote:
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AP mines sure. They have a charge measured in ounces. Not going to affect a tank tread by itself. I did the hole deeper, cluster there 81mm HE rounds, remove the fuzes, pack the wells with C4, add a blasting cap just to be redundant, then cap it with the AP mine and weather proof….. I have a mobility kill. Then I wait to engage the recovery team from long range with MG fire and mortars. I want to kill those mechanics and their M88 as badly or more than one line tank. I separate the tanks from infantry, I separate the tanks from mutual support, then destroy them in detail, usually when and where I can get them to dismount. Spread out around the tank, sure. Detonated beneath the hull where the affect is contained another crispy, smoky story. A 8, 10, 15 kilo charge in a satchel under the belly is going to do a lot. Placed against the last road wheel and the belly, the road wheel and torsion bars are coming off. I also have time to make shaped charges or use the cratering charges used to destroy roads, bridges, and bunkers. All depends on what can be carried or what it tanks to lure the tank right up onto it. |
#60
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Here is how you do it. Quote:
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