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  #451  
Old 05-27-2022, 08:32 PM
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For a late Soviet supertank, there's Object 195 (sometimes referred to as T-95, but that was never an actual designation). This was Uralvagonzavod's competitor against the Black Eagle for post-T-90 tank development, and probably a direct ancestor of the T-14. Even though it started development in 1988 and was canceled for the last time in 2010, details are still sketchy, but here's what I've been able to pick up:

Mass: somewhere around 55 tonnes
Crew: 2. Uncrewed turret, hull has just driver and gunner/commander
Armament: 152mm L/55 2A83, coaxial 30mm 2A42, and Kord 12.7mm
Engine: 1500+ horsepower
Estimated top speed: 80 km/h
Defenses: Relikt ERA, Shtora-2 jammer, Standard* active protection system
Sensors: thermal, infrared, laser designator**, radar gunsight for use with HE-Frag rounds


*This might be Arena, or it might have changed to Arena at some point. Pictures imply four or five launchers on each side of the turret, mounted just above the ring. No ability to engage Tank Breaker/Javelin.
**There was consideration that it could fire laser-guided shells developed for the 152mm Msta SPG, and even if it couldn't, it could guide them on target.
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  #452  
Old 09-26-2022, 03:45 PM
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Once again I'm introducing something that was closer to the worst that ever was, but it's a system whose promise looked good until the contractor couldn't deliver on those promises.

During the Vietnam War, the US Army was impressed by the RPG-7 and Army Missile Command was ordered to reverse-engineer it and see if the LAW could be improved. Fast-forward a number of years, and General Dynamics received a contract to build an improved version, the FGR-17 Viper, at a price of $78 a pop. At that price, the Army expected to buy 1.7 million launchers and issue them widely, with "as common as hand grenades" being mentioned in some proposals.

Then reality set in. Between the technical requirements for it to be light and low-noise (relatively - < 180 dB launch, which is still pretty damn loud), and some utterly baffling decisions to use water-soluble propellant and a magneforming process that had failed previously in the LAW's development, the Viper quickly became a boondoggle. By the time it was canceled in 1983, tens of millions of dollars had been spent on R&D and the per-unit cost had ballooned from $78 to $1,310. When the Office of the Secretary of Defense issued an ultimatum to get the unit price down to $400, GD balked and Congress canceled the program, then ordered the Army to test off-the-shelf systems, leading to the adoption of the AT4.

If it had seen service, the Viper would have been somewhere around these stats:
Wt 4 kg, ROF 1, Rld *, Rng 60, Round HEAT, Damage C:4 B:5, Pen 60C

It's not a terribly good system even with fairly optimistic stats, being twice the weight of a LAW for an extra 10 meters of range and 5 points of Pen. The big advantage would have been the price if it could have been made at the original $78 each, and a universe where that happened likely would see extremely widespread deployment of the weapon, even if it was mostly useful against light armored vehicles and unlikely to do much more than piss off a tank (as the USMC used as justification for backing out of the program).
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  #453  
Old 10-25-2022, 06:03 PM
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I think I have managed to work out information for most of the Soviet missile tanks that pre-date the dual-use gun-missile launchers of the mid-70s and later. I still need to work out the exact stats, but here's the history I've found for the ones that actually had prototypes built as opposed to just being paper designs.

The development of missile tanks came around for a few reasons. Krushchev was opposed to heavy tanks and there were concerns that the D-10T on the T-54/55 couldn't penetrate the M60 from the front at reasonable combat ranges. So, various attempts were made to create a tank with missiles as the primary weapon.

The first of these was Object 757, a Chelyabinsk project in 1958 or 1959. It used the hull from a T-10M, with the engine upgraded to 850 horsepower and crew reduced from 4 to 3. The removal of the turret and replacement with a missile launcher reduced the mass to 44 tonnes. The original armament was a launcher for the KL-8 Sprut. This was a long (1.7 meter) 130mm missile with a 5 kilometer range. It was radio-guided until its IR seeker picked up the target for terminal maneuvers. 18 missiles were carried along with a coaxial PKVT and a SGMT. Around 1963 this would be refitted with the turret from Object 775, which is how it has been preserved to this day. The failure of the original version is the same problem that bedeviled pretty much all of these - the missile technology was insufficiently mature.

Next was Object 282, which also used a T-10M hull, but managed to fit a 1000 horsepower engine while also lightening the frontal armor since it was intended to fight at range. The intended armament was a 170mm Salamandra launcher with 16 missiles and a range of 3 kilometers. Salamandra failed quickly and the vehicle was modified to Object 282T.

Object 282T replaced the Salamandra with a pair of pop-up unguided anti-tank rocket launchers, one at each rear corner of the hull. There were two choices of rocket, the 132mm TRS-132 or the 152mm TRS-152. Each launcher could have either 15 of the former or 11 of the latter, for a total of 30 or 22 (or one launcher with each).

In 1964, Object 287 was introduced on a T-64 hull. This has one of the more interesting weapons layouts. In the center of the very flat turret is a pop-up launcher for the 9M15 Taifun radio-guided ATGM, with 15 of the missiles in the hull. On either side of the launcher is a weapons station, each of which has a 73mm 2A25 Molniya with 16 rounds and a PKT with 1500 rounds. The Molniya is similar to the 2A28 Grom on the BMP-1, possibly with a slightly shorter barrel. The Taifun was intended to have a 4 kilometer range but, once again, lack of maturity in missile technology left this as just a prototype.

Also in 1964, Chelyabinsk got back into the missile tank business with Object 775, also on a T-64 hull. Much like the MBT-70, this put the crew in the turret, with a driver/commander in a counter-rotating cupola to always face forward, with just a gunner for company. It had a fairly stubby 125mm rifled tube rocket launcher and the ability to carry 24 Rubin ATGMs, 48 Bur rockets, or 15 Rubin and 22 Bur. Rubin was another radio-guided missile with a 5 kilometer range, while Bur was a high explosive (not HEAT) rocket with a 9 kilometer range and higher speed (650 to 750 m/s compared to Rubin's 550 m/s). The turret also had a PKT coaxially mounted. This turret would be trialed on Object 757 as well. This apparently did not enter service because Rubin underperformed on armor penetration.

1968 would see the only missile tank to enter production, the Object 150/IT-1, which was built on a T-62 hull and used the 3M7 Drakon missile and a coaxial PKT.
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  #454  
Old 11-22-2022, 12:39 PM
ToughOmbres ToughOmbres is offline
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Default LAV 75

I know this is a somewhat older thread; however my vote today is my favorite from when the game was originally published: The LAV-75.
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  #455  
Old 11-24-2022, 09:54 AM
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Default LAV-75 FTW

Quote:
Originally Posted by ToughOmbres View Post
I know this is a somewhat older thread; however my vote today is my favorite from when the game was originally published: The LAV-75.
Right there with you, TO. This thread might be of interest,

https://forum.juhlin.com/showthread....light=Ridgeway

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  #456  
Old 11-24-2022, 05:23 PM
ToughOmbres ToughOmbres is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Raellus View Post
Right there with you, TO. This thread might be of interest,

https://forum.juhlin.com/showthread....light=Ridgeway

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Thank you. Absolutely-most of the observations were spot on. Great concept and just plain neat.
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  #457  
Old 11-25-2022, 05:53 AM
shrike6 shrike6 is offline
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Cheetah/Hum-Vee prototype
https://tanks-encyclopedia.com/coldw...mwv-prototype/
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  #458  
Old 12-08-2022, 03:30 PM
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As far as I know, this gun never received an actual name, but in the 1950s Winchester was working on a cheap and simple submachine gun in 9mm Parabellum. It fired from an open bolt, and had a folding stock that could be used as a forward handgrip in its stowed position, clipping to a bolt under the muzzle. It used leftover MP 40 magazines, although I imagine if it had been adopted an early update would have seen it adapted for use with Uzi magazines. The Armourer's Bench noted it has a 7.5" barrel, which is the only measurement I could find for the gun, so everything else is calculated by FF&S based on being a light automatic firearm using 9mm Para from a 7.5" barrel.

Winchester "Burp Gun"
Wt 1.85 kg, ROF 5, Mag 32, Dam 2, Pen 1-Nil, Bulk 4, SS 2, Burst 5, Range 70

I'd probably adjust the range down to around 50 or so, since FF&S is very enthusiastic about the range of pistol-caliber firearms with shoulder stocks. As a one-handed weapon range would drop to 21, which I'd increase to 25 considering the availability of the front grip.
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  #459  
Old 12-23-2022, 03:59 AM
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Default The military aircraft America *almost* bought iceberg chart

https://www.sandboxx.us/blog/the-mil...ought-iceberg/
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  #460  
Old 01-13-2023, 10:32 AM
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I was Googling "Abrams 140mm"... I know... and found this:

https://mil.in.ua/en/news/abramsx-ge...spective-tank/

Is it the 140mm version? Unusual 'camo'/

Still, could be found in warehouse somewhere and put into use...



Edit: It seems to be the "General Dynamics AbramsX".
No. 3 of this site:
https://www.tanknology.co.uk/post/ta...ogs-new-tricks
120mm main gun...

Last edited by Brit; 01-13-2023 at 10:40 AM. Reason: Edited as I opened the next site and...
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  #461  
Old 01-13-2023, 11:27 AM
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I have a 140mm-armed Abrams on my Best Tanks that Never Were page, as the GDLS M1A4 Abrams V:

https://www.pmulcahy.com/best_stuff_...never_were.htm

The gun is here under 140mm NATO:

https://www.pmulcahy.com/misc_pages/lgcal_guns.htm
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  #462  
Old 01-13-2023, 03:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brit View Post
I was Googling "Abrams 140mm"... I know... and found this:

https://mil.in.ua/en/news/abramsx-ge...spective-tank/

Is it the 140mm version? Unusual 'camo'/

Still, could be found in warehouse somewhere and put into use...



Edit: It seems to be the "General Dynamics AbramsX".
No. 3 of this site:
https://www.tanknology.co.uk/post/ta...ogs-new-tricks
120mm main gun...
The real-world 140mm Abrams was the CATTB (Component Advanced Technology Test Bed), which was fitted with the XM291 Advanced Tank Cannon. Its special deal was that the caliber could be changed in the field in an hour by swapping barrels, being either a 120mm L/55 or a 140mm L/47. There were 17 rounds in the turret either way, with the hull carrying either 22 of the 140mm rounds or 33 of the 120mm rounds. A bustle-mounted autoloader gave the tank an 8-10 round per minute fire rate. Armor was upgraded as well so that the turret front was 1250-1300mm RHAe and the turret sides were around 520mm RHAe.

The gun was tested in 1987-88, the overall tank (fitted with a Cummins diesel) was tested in 1990, and the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 killed the project.
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  #463  
Old 01-13-2023, 07:32 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brit View Post

Edit: It seems to be the "General Dynamics AbramsX".
No. 3 of this site:
https://www.tanknology.co.uk/post/ta...ogs-new-tricks
120mm main gun...
Thanks for turning me on to that site!
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  #464  
Old 01-15-2023, 06:24 AM
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Paul, that's OK. Certainly seeing how your site has helped me over the years.
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  #465  
Old 03-11-2023, 04:02 AM
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One interesting concept that was trialed but never entered service was the US Army's siliceous cored armor. It was a sandwich with two layers of steel around a layer of fused silica. Now-declassified reports state that it replaced an inch of steel in the original armor layout with four inches of silica. A four inch thick plate of silica was the same weight as a one inch plate of steel, so the only weight growth was because thicker armor meant slightly larger plates were needed. Against kinetic rounds, the silica was roughly equal to steel on a mass basis, so the four inches of silica were equal to the one inch of steel they replaced. Conversely, silica was about 50% more effective against chemical warheads (HE/HEAT) on a thickness basis, so the four inches of silica were equivalent to replacing one inch of steel with six inches.

The siliceous cored armor was trialed on the T95 medium tank of 1955 and the XM60 prototypes. The XM60's glacis and turret front were found to be completely immune to 120mm HEAT rounds.

However, there were downsides. The armor was expensive and difficult to produce, although that likely could have been improved over time - experimental armors are nearly always expensive and difficult to produce at first. More concerningly, an AP round that struck the armor but didn't penetrate could still pulverize the silica core, leaving the tank vulnerable to follow-up shots from either AP or HE/HEAT rounds. This did not hold for HE or HEAT rounds, where the silica's "elastic rebound" meant that armor would expand back into the hole made by the explosive (this would also happen as the HEAT jet was penetrating, which was the source of its ability to smother HEAT attacks). Unless perfectly aligned to fire down the same path as the first shell, a second chemical warhead hitting the armor would have no penetration advantage.

The easiest way to simulate an M60 with this armor is probably just to add Cp to the armor figures for HF and TF, and add some weight to account for the increased volume of armor. I haven't seen any estimates of how much weight the armor added, but 0.5 tonnes seems reasonable. This ignores the pulverization issue and simplifies the effect against HE/HEAT, but has the upside of being easy to implement.
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  #466  
Old 04-05-2023, 07:36 PM
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Default 10 Weirdest Top Secret Soviet Military Vehicles That We Know About

https://www.hotcars.com/weirdest-top...t-55-progrev-t

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  #467  
Old 06-01-2023, 12:26 PM
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Default Project Lantan

Just when I think that I've discovered every exotic Cold War-era Polish weapon system, I stumble upon something new.

Apparently, the Poles were working on a modular rifle system. It would have been able to fire multiple calibers (but mainly a proprietary 7x41mm round) with a few parts swaps, and could be configured as an assault rifle, mag-fed SAW, carbine, and battle rifle. The Soviets put the kabash on it, as they wanted the Poles to pay for the AK-74 license. Those clever Poles still figured out a way to do their own thing, developing, adopting, and producing the just-different-enough wz. 88 Tantal instead.

https://www.forgottenweapons.com/pro...-ak-in-7x41mm/

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Last edited by Raellus; 06-01-2023 at 03:12 PM.
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  #468  
Old 06-01-2023, 02:58 PM
Ursus Maior Ursus Maior is offline
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Many envision the Warsaw Pact to be to monolithic entity the Soviets always wanted and claimed it to be. In fact, the Poles and Czechoslovakians used their increasing strength in domestic industry to develop as much as they could for themselves, the Romanians did so too and had essentially left the Pact during the 1970s. Meanwhile, the Hungarians and Bulgarians barely fielded effective armies, the former were even more an occupied country then the rest and didn't move without order and consent of their Kremlin masters. Bulgaria had active T-34 regiments (as did Romania) in its hardly mechanized army.

The Polish had really amazing projects during the late days of the Cold War. No wonder the Soviets were relatively sure that, come push to shove, the Polish were likely not to follow orders to attack the West.
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