For an offensive strike against an enemy army, tracked heavy armored is the way to go as roads can easily be destroyed, mined, blocked. However our contemporary conflicts do not provide an enemy using heavy vehicles and frontline tactics. The enemy can jump out of some bush, shoot at you and doesn’t really plan this engagement further than the first shot, usually losing the battle but by killing a soldier here and there they keep the morale and moral homeland support low. These countries have bad roads and bad roads get worse using tracked vehicles, not really because of weight alone but because of the steering mechanism being very abrasive.
My answer to that is band tracks.
mond you band tracks top out at about 30 tons so unless there is another tech break through there is a issue but then again there may be room to play
Vibration levels reduced by 50-65%. British MOD study on CVR(T) with band tracks provided 50% reduction.(5)
Noise levels reduced by 6-10 decibels (dB). TACOM/TARDEC study on band tracks for M113's showed the internal noise levels reducing to heavy truck cabin noise levels.( little known fact the vibration form conventional tracks mess with crew and electronics)
Band tracks being around 30% lighter than steel tracks.
More durable then steel tracks. M113 study has shown the life time doubling of the T130 steel tracks.
They can provide better traction by being wider than steel tracks thanks to their weight advantage.
Ground pressure levels reduced by the wider tracks.
Band tracks are more friendly to the road surfaces causing no significant damage to road surfaces.
Provide better fuel economy with their reduced rolling resistance. M113A3 with band tracks had 67% less rolling resistance than the T130 tracks.
Lower rolling resistance equals better fuel economy.
No corrosion to speak of with the band tracks.
I think leaving a country with destroyed roads after eventually sometime getting rid of the regime is not really the way to go. You need a vehicle able to carry about 10 soldiers, with little width, protection all around against 14.5 (would 7.62 be enough?), designed for (N) ERA tiles covering most of the flank and mine protection. A low center of gravity would also be nice but doesn’t really add to mine protection.
for mine and IED in wheeled or tracked your going to face damage the question is mitigation. a Decoupled chassis with a boat shaped hull is possible on a tracked vehicle in fact is has been done before the
Maybe you could swap the era tiles with AMAP-ADS, which I think is the only aps suited for these kinds of conflicts, would give 2 or 3 tones.
an Active defence system is good option but my aim is not a force dedicated just to asymmetric fights. I feel you need to have defensive protection against 30mm cannon or better.
I do not know what these protection levels need in weight, maybe it’s possible with under 20 tones, the problem is the defense against MG calibers, is 14.5 really used often by the Taliban or other guerrilla groups?
14.5mm MG's are the base threat for Asymmetric war but over specialize and you breed in weakness.
check this out the Anzio 20mm sniper rifle.
[video=youtube_share;7ft2j6J4NcY]http://youtu.be/7ft2j6J4NcY[/video]
look at this thread
http://www.sinodefenceforum.com/army/chinese-atgm-discussion-6468.html
ATGM's are now widely available, and in Iraq and the Ukraine you have asymmetric Opfor employing manufactured and captured IFV's In Libya they manufactured there own IFV's.
This is the Classic "Fighting vehicle" Of Asymmetric forces that comes to mind.
Okay this Mad max Reject is probably not, More like this
This CG Helix is armed with a 50 cal. but that's not the only gun they have mounted on such.
dual 20mm-25mm triple A cannons. the traversion can be used to lower them to level against vehicles. If they had a larger calibre cannon they would happily use it and APS don't protect against that as the rounds are to fast and rate of fire saturation to high.
The Problem is that there is no vehicle built with these speciation’s, the Stryker is based on piranha, which itself is not that new of design and integration of modern defense solutions, modular armor and mine protection should be done from scratch not afterwards.
I agree. but one must also factor thaat just because your fighting insurgency today does not mean you will be tomorrow.
The only vehicle easily adaptable for this protection is the Boxer, but 33 tones is overkill as much as its size, the 4.5 tones is not really a lot of payload for modules either. (AND the price …Wow!)
I disagree 33 tons is a fair point of start, the weakness is the ability to transport the vehicle. under 20 tons and the vehicle can be easily moved but is easily killed, move to 60 tons and it's impossible to transport but protects. 30 tons is the middle ground if you have a transport in the A400M class you can move it if it gets hit by a IFV cannon it can take as good as it gives.
the next generation of armored vehicle needs to be able to be transported to the AOR with in 72 hours. it needs to offer protection equal to a MRAP against blast threats, needs to offer IFV protection against heavier threats.