#31
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They love to say Monococque like every soccer mom and joe bob uses this daily.
So I looked it up to be sure I knew what this mean. Ok, it literally means single shell. In armor parlance, this means an armored hull to which components are attached versus a hull or frame to which armor is added as part of the components. Monocoque |
#32
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I like it. Unlike the last offering, this is being marketed towards a military market which suggests that it is better suited to the Morrow mission. The only problem I would have with this beasty would be coming up with a cover story for why you are transporting hundreds or thousands of these around the US pre-war.
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#33
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If you are looking at something like that, I'd be more inclined to look at one of the following;
Oshkosh Defense : L-ATV or M-ATV Extended family Navistar Defence : MXT family AM General : BRV-O (more information required, but an interesting vehicle) |
#34
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Another perfectly reasonable choice, but I think a bit bigger than the rest. I think you would need to an actual trade study to pick the best option. |
#35
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Moved some of the posts from here to
How dark is the future of the Morrow Project as we had drifted from to original topic of vehicles. |
#36
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The fact that it kinda looks like a cousin of Batman's Tumbler doesn't hurt either.
http://the-eyeontheworld.blogspot.co...test-mine.html |
#37
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Last edited by cosmicfish; 04-04-2015 at 01:17 AM. |
#38
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#39
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On LAV IIIs (Stryker for one) have protection to 14.5, and this is with add on. All APCs are proofed against 7.62N/7.62Bloc armor piercing, antipersonnel mines, and 155mm shell splinters with detonation at more than 50 meters. 1980s and newer will save the crew but loose the vehicle to an anti armor mine. I don't give PCs a 6x6 or an 8x8. I want them lean and hungry so they will get out of the vehicle. Don't need a winnebago to be effective. |
#40
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Look at this..... The V-150 lives on in a 21st century Canadian version.
http://www.defensenews.com/story/def...army/28729137/ |
#41
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http://oshkoshdefense.com/jltv/
I missed the announcement, but apparently these are going into production with an initial run of 17,000 units. |
#42
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Here is the Brochure from the linked page. Personally, I say wait five years, let the flaws from the first generation stuff get rectified. The contractors that deal mostly with SOCOM (with their limitless budget) will be turning out the better C2 models with better radio suites anyway.
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#43
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#45
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So if I was setting the last gear up for a few years from now, I might put some JLTV's slipped quietly off the production line into the hands of MARS and Recon, and give the Ag and Psych teams surplus hummers. |
#46
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MGM-134_Midgetman http://www.hill.af.mil/library/facts...et.asp?id=5717 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T80V5rbfZ6o https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sy4J-ZZ7MPo I change the trailer to lab space and give a walk through from cab to trailer. I also make the trailer the expandable type where the walls fold down into a larger volume space like an RV |
#47
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I would probably use this as the base instead:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_...Tactical_Truck A little more modern, a little more rugged, etc. Personal preference, really. But I would probably still build from scratch for Science 1, I think it would be worthwhile. |
#48
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I don't think the Hemmet is more rugged than the Hardened Mobile Launcher. Hemmets aren't designed to survive the sorts of blast over pressure the HML was
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#49
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Here are pics of the Hard Mobile Launcher
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#50
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From what I can find (in particular the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists), the HML was designed to survive specific hazards and operate only on military bases and very flat areas. I don't think it was able to operate anywhere that was not pretty flat and gentle, and not especially quickly either. And while it could survive a high-pressure wave it was not seemingly intended to survive ground combat - I can find no reference to any protection against anything other than a somewhat distant nuclear weapon, and that is not very good protection against anything else. In short, while it is an interesting vehicle, it was designed for a very specialized mission that does not line up well with Project requirements. You could up-armor it, but there is nothing to be done about the terrible mobility. |
#51
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The Hemmet is a truck, to the best of my recollection it doesn't have any armor at all. It is reasonably mobile, for a truck, but once you load it down with a whole lot of armor and mission required equipment and such it is going to have mobility issues as well
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#52
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The HML is cool, but it is a very specialized vehicle designed for a very narrow mission, and outside that mission it is completely impractical. |
#53
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#54
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I thought the armor kit effected the center of gravity badly and lead to the vehicle becoming even more role prone that it was originally (Which I don't think was nearly as bad at Hummers). I never drove a Hemmet, but did drive the BIDS version of the Hummer, which had a huge laboratory box on the back and those things were bears.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_...Tactical_Truck I think a lab version of the Hemmet is going to have some issues. The vehicle is a ten ton truck but I think the armor kit only covers the cab, not the payload area. I have seen some gun trucks that have armor on the payload areas but that basically takes up the whole weight of the payload and doesn't leave much for anything else. In adddition the Hemmet isn't NBC sealed. The HML is all about surviving in a post strike environment. It will certainly have a harder time climbing hills but a lot depends upon the trailer. The HML trailer is designed to house, protect from a nearby nuclear strike and then launch a 30,000 pound ICBM. With either the Hemmet or the HML the payload will need to be fully custom. I think that a lab doesn't need to be as long or as heavy as the missile trailer was. YMMV |
#55
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Ah but, Hemmets sport the palletized loading system.
Well later A4 models do. M977 Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck.pdf Last edited by ArmySGT.; 09-13-2015 at 10:59 PM. |
#56
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#57
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Just as a data point the Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck (HEMTT) has a 515 Hp power plant, eight wheel drive and a total all up weight with the B armor kit of 109.000 pounds. The HML has 1,200 horses and also eight wheel drive and an all up weight of 239,000 pounds or 211 pounds per horse power for the HEMTT and 115 pounds per horse power for the HML. I would say that while towing a ICBM the HML is probably pretty limited but I can't see why the tractor alone would be less mobile than a HEMTT. Also sealing a vehicle against NBC threats requires a lot of work. The system must not only be sealed but it must also be equipped with an air cleaning and handling system that will ensure that contaminants are filtered out and the air is usually at overpressure to assist in keeping the bad stuff on the outside. |
#58
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Remember, the challenge for this technology was getting something that would haul around the missile at all. One of the first things sacrificed was "go anywhere" mobility. They didn't need that, this was always intended to operate in the same kinds of places missiles were already based, and those places by and large had lots of flat land and often roads. Quote:
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#59
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Can you link to those sources? I'd like to have them for my reference. Thanks!
The biggest issue might be the trailer. The MP trailer will be a home-brew design for certain, but it could certainly be much shorter and weigh less then the missile transporter/erector/launcher. The tractor itself, with a different trailer may well have much better mobility |
#60
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http://www.gao.gov/assets/150/142998.pdf http://digitalcollections.library.cm...le&item=712384 Remember that details on this kind of thing are not going to be found on unclassified sites even now. Quote:
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