Modern Main Battle Tanks ( MBT )

Biscuits

Major
Registered Member
Stop setting up straw men.

How much weight a tank has vs how many crew it needs to protect is obviously not the sole factor behind protection level. I’ve never claimed that, that’s your BS. It’s just one of many factors.

An underweight tank risks having to rely more on soft protection and ERA, which can compensate in the right circumstances, but come with it’s own drawbacks.

It doesn’t automatically mean a tank is flawed, just like not having a 4th crew member makes a tank flawed.
 
D

Deleted member 13312

Guest
I am requesting that posts starting with
https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/new-type98-99-mbt-thread.t851/page-281#post-569782

https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/new-type98-99-mbt-thread.t851/page-281#post-569803

https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/new-type98-99-mbt-thread.t851/page-281#post-569813

https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/new-type98-99-mbt-thread.t851/page-281#post-569821

https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/new-type98-99-mbt-thread.t851/page-281#post-570015

https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/new-type98-99-mbt-thread.t851/page-281#post-570034

And

https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/new-type98-99-mbt-thread.t851/page-281#post-570040
Be moved here, they are more general MBT than about the type 99 series of tanks

I am going to recover this post as I am not satisfied with what I said earlier.



The main gun can go down for any number of reasons the least likely being that the gun has been destroyed. It is a mechanical system like any other and it can fail for any number of reasons. Remedial actions are not a case where in the gun has been destroyed. They are the situation where in the breach fails to close the trigger fails to engage, ammo not seating failure to eject and more. These situations are not the norm and automatic loader systems are not designed to correct them. In that situation a crewman has to get behind the breach and start troubleshooting. That is where the loader with a wrench comes in.

First this isn’t the first time. In the late 1980s early 1990s the US, Germany, France even Israel were working on new Very high caliber tank guns to counter the perception that then Soviet tanks would render 120mm smoothbore guns obsolete. Of course what played out was the collapse of the Soviet empire. The super tanks didn’t happen, the Russian military fell apart. The funds didn’t go to a super tank but updates of the existing tank the T72 spawned the T90.
The whole push for bigger guns wasn’t started by T14 reaction but restarted. The 130mm 140mm guns date back that far. The Leclerc 140mm demonstrator was built in 1996, the US had a 140mm Abrams demonstrator in about 1990. Israel and the Swiss armed a Leopard 2 with a 140mm gun for demonstrations. The K2 Black Panther tank from South Korea designed from 1995-2008 was built to drop in a 140mm gun.
The Russian claim of a 152mm dates back to the same era.
So when you say T14 is making “existing guns performance doubtful” welcome back to the late Cold War.
What happened was that after the end of the USSR; the “Peace Dividend” meant it was more practical from a cost perspective to sell off older tanks to lesser allies and make enhancements to the existing 120mm smooth bore. This is why there is the L55 main gun. Because it was more cost effective to put a bigger barrel on the gun.


No kicking and screaming needed. Abrams was used as a base for two vehicles of interest here. First the M1 Armata.... I mean M1 TTB View attachment 53890
It’s built like T14 encapsulated crew in the front unmanned turret with Carousel style loader. The rounds were 120mm Unitary stored tip down.
But wait there’s more.
View attachment 53891
Stryker MGS unmanned automatic loader turret.
View attachment 53892
M1 CATTB
Bustle mounted automatic loader, 120mm lightweight gun or 140mm gun, active suspension.

Basically the US knew from 1988 on that it’s next tank would have an automatic loader. The US flirted with an unmanned turret like Armata, Low profile turrets and more. They even offered a low profile turret like this Centurion upgrade demonstrator that was built in the US.
View attachment 53893
The CATTB had a Automatic loader like the K2 and Leclerc but more ammo. Because the Bustle of the Abrams is larger than that of either tank.
If an extra pair of eyes was so important, then MBT designs would have retained the Radio Operator's position solely for that purpose. We are arriving back at the earlier point wherein passive advantages are ever diminishing against active advantages. To keep focusing on the narrow view range of the gunner's sight is to forget the fact that the gunner has way more better equipment that more than makes up for it, this is not WW2 where a gunners sight is basically a x3 or 6 magnification scope and in an age where MBTs and anti tank weapons can engage a MBT beyond human eye sight and perception it is highly doubful that a loader even with binoculars can make much of a difference and again, why can't the extra person removed from the loader's position be assigned as a scout unit? The extra man isn't dead or gone.
Also a gunner can also attend to fixing the gun in case if there is any marginal errors that occurs, what I find frustrating is the idea that people seem to think that the designers of autoloaders are so daft as to not design them to be accessible in the case emergency repairs or maintenance are needed, that the idea that once a round is loaded there is no way to remove it other than firing the gun. Just because we have not seen it happening does not mean it does not exist. Since the gun is non functional there is no reason for the gunner to be at his post, besides the TC can pick up where the gunner left off.
I know that the late cold war period saw the design and plans for many uprated tank guns and I also know that the end of the cold war shelved these plans. But I consider the T14 and the new 130mm Rhm tank gun to be the start of a new thread in the 20th century.
And while the T-14 has weaker side armor and rear, it is not as if the Abrams is expected to be executing cunning and stealth flanking maneuvers on a regular basis. If that be the case then the 105mm royal ordanance would still be the premier tank gun of NATO as it can still pen the sides and rear of existing Russian tanks just fine.
The T-14's turret is as you say a weakspot but since no crew member is going to be killed in the event of its destruction it is not so great an issue.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Stop setting up straw men.

How much weight a tank has vs how many crew it needs to protect is obviously not the sole factor behind protection level. I’ve never claimed that, that’s your BS. It’s just one of many factors.

An underweight tank risks having to rely more on soft protection and ERA, which can compensate in the right circumstances, but come with it’s own drawbacks.

It doesn’t automatically mean a tank is flawed, just like not having a 4th crew member makes a tank flawed.
Your own words “an Underweight tank risks...”
Weight is a factor not the only one.
You may not mean it that way but that’s what you said just now.
 

Biscuits

Major
Registered Member
Your own words “an Underweight tank risks...”
Weight is a factor not the only one.
You may not mean it that way but that’s what you said just now.

It’s just one of many factors.

Reading comprehension is important

What are you even trying to argue? You’re saying that having a loader provides an advantage, all I’m saying is that there’s a trade off in weight needed to achieve the same protection when you add an extra guy. Are you denying that?
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
If an extra pair of eyes was so important, then MBT designs would have retained the Radio Operator's position solely for that purpose.
Except that in that case that crew member was in the worst position to observe the battle or surroundings. The hull. And had no other real function depending on National Army they were the BOG, Radioman or assistant driver. The position that they had in the hull was generally lost in the first generation MBT for ammunition. As the assistant driver or BOG already had a poor visibility point they really couldn’t navigate the tank and as the radio became more easily operated from the turret.
We are arriving back at the earlier point wherein passive advantages are ever diminishing against active advantages. To keep focusing on the narrow view range of the gunner's sight is to forget the fact that the gunner has way more better equipment that more than makes up for it, this is not WW2 where a gunners sight is basically a x3 or 6 magnification scope and in an age where MBTs and anti tank weapons can engage a MBT beyond human eye sight and perception it is highly doubful that a loader even with binoculars can make much of a difference and again, why can't the extra person removed from the loader's position be assigned as a scout unit? The extra man isn't dead or gone.
It seems like I have to point this out but I am
Not actually a proponent of the extra man theory as much. Having that individual assigned to an APC makes a lot of sense to me.

the function of the gunner is to engage the target not find them. Originally. This is the soda straw I keep pointing to. The gunner operates with the weapons sights. That limits his frame of reference to what he is able to see though the optics available he is isolated to those. They are excellent make no mistake far superior to those that came before but limited like wearing blinders.
Having that second extra set of eyes can help maintain situational awareness. But in combat that individual is not involved in sighting it’s mostly in patrol. In this way the extra eyes of the loader are more for navigation or spotting potential trouble. If in battle the loader is servicing the weapons as job one.
Also a gunner can also attend to fixing the gun in case if there is any marginal errors that occurs, what I find frustrating is the idea that people seem to think that the designers of autoloaders are so daft as to not design them to be accessible in the case emergency repairs or maintenance are needed,
All machines need repairs and maintenance those who make the pro four man crew argument however do have a point. The automatic loader system is another complex machine in a complex of complex machines. The crew of the tank has to do most of the repairs and maintenance of the tank. You can’t go calling on the Recovery vehicle for every issue. Tanks are built heavy and a lot of the maintenance is heavy labor having a extra set of biceps around makes it a little easier. This is one of the lessons of German tanks in world war 2 by the way.

that the idea that once a round is loaded there is no way to remove it other than firing the gun. Just because we have not seen it happening does not mean it does not exist. Since the gun is non functional there is no reason for the gunner to be at his post, besides the TC can pick up where the gunner left off.
It can be done in most tanks but for T14 which you pointed to a number of times it’s more of an issue.
Because the turret is unmanned and the crew are encapsulated. Getting to the breach to clear an issue becomes a problem.
However you did forget something here.
If the main gun is down for whatever reason the TC has there commanders weapon usually a 50 cal. The Gunner has the coaxial normally a 30 cal.
If you have infantry in the mix it’s hard to pull one of those two off to try and clear an issue if they are both now fighting. The Coaxial is the second weapon under the control of the gunner, although the gunner’s station can be slaved by the TC he can only attack one target at a time.

The inescapable as I see it is this,
Abrams, Challenger 2, Ariete, Altay, Leopard 2, Merkava IV are never going to change from crews of 4 to crews of 3 as standard.
It would take far to much of a system change and resources. The tanks that follow them may drop to crews of 3, the Israelis Carmel and US FCS have even looked at crews of 2 using AI and computers to take the place of the gunner. But that’s still some time off.
I know that the late cold war period saw the design and plans for many uprated tank guns and I also know that the end of the cold war shelved these plans.
Shelves but they have been dusted off.
K2 is what I consider a roadmap to the Abrams successor and its built to convert to 140mm by dropping in the tube and the ammo.
Farther more despite having been “Shelved” of late a number of similar products have come back the 40CT gun of the British French, the US 50mm are both systems form IFV programs that began that same time.
But I consider the T14 and the new 130mm Rhm tank gun to be the start of a new thread in the 20th century.
21st century?
L51 is an interesting gun but is it all it’s cracked up as? First it’s actually a compromise between the 120mm and 140mm. That said where the performance increase is coming from isn’t the that 10mm increased diameter but the length. A very long rod penetrator. The aim being to increase pressure and length of penetrator. It’s the second most simple form of upgrade a tank gun can get. After the L55 which was basically the same compromise.
The 130mm was developed by Rheinmetall as a product seeking a costumer not by NATO or any National Army. It’s also very heavy the L55 barrel weighs 3 tons the L51 weighs 3.5 tons. That’s a huge mass to be pointing at targets. The reason the US never adopted the L55 was during testing of it the gun showed a considerable oscillation and stabilization issues. The large weight demanded a heavier mount. A larger round even heavier loader and magazine demanding a larger heavier turret meaning a larger heavier... you get where this is going.

The US was looking at off and on a lightweight gun the XM360 that had similar caliber and could fire the same rounds as the M256 variant of the L44 but only weighed a little over 2 tons.
That gun by the way was last seen on the MPF Griffin Light tank in September 2016 at AUSA. Yet still got increased performance because of the materials used allowed higher pressures than the L44.

There are still other potential means. South Korea was said to be looking at a Electrochemical technology gun. It was also looked into among the technologies trailed off and on since those 90s programs. The aim being to achieve a more controlled propellant burn by electrical ignition with plasma. It achieved in tests an increased impact performance from 120mm guns in demonstrations almost equal to 140mm guns.

As to T14, the numbers don’t pan. This seems like another T64. It will be small numbers for very elite units. Unless something changes like a major export buy. The main Russian tanks will likely remain those we know improved T72, updated T80, and T90 for a considerable time period. They may acquire more of the secondary vehicles but T14 is the unicorn.
And while the T-14 has weaker side armor and rear, it is not as if the Abrams is expected to be executing cunning and stealth flanking maneuvers on a regular basis. If that be the case then the 105mm royal ordanance would still be the premier tank gun of NATO as it can still pen the sides and rear of existing Russian tanks just fine.
The 120mm should be able to engage the turret and knock that out and there goes the tank as a weapon. Again impressive frontal armor on the hull but thiner on the turret. 120mm isn’t dead yet just as neither is the 125mm used by Russia and China. It’s only a question of upgrades.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Reading comprehension is important

What are you even trying to argue? You’re saying that having a loader provides an advantage, all I’m saying is that there’s a trade off in weight needed to achieve the same protection when you add an extra guy. Are you denying that?
But not as much as you are making out to be. Let’s take two tanks that are very comparable for example.
T62 was manually loaded.
T64 had an automatic loader.
T62 weighted in at 41 tons
T64 42 tons. When you consider the 115mm vs 125mm they might as well have weighed the same.
How did they do that? Because the magazine for the loader of the T62 was the walls of the turret the space he had was tiny. Not even a platform to stand on.
Abrams, and Merkava two of the heavyweight tanks have huge magazines of ammo. The M1A2 holds 42 rounds in the Bustle racks. The Merkava IV holds 48 rounds with 10 in the turret the rest are in the armored compartment behind the turret and door. T90, T72 and Type 99 have only 22 ready rounds in the automatic loader the rest of its 42 rounds are in the Bustle rack outside the tank. Being outside the tank if they are hit it’s no big whoop.
 
D

Deleted member 13312

Guest
Except that in that case that crew member was in the worst position to observe the battle or surroundings. The hull. And had no other real function depending on National Army they were the BOG, Radioman or assistant driver. The position that they had in the hull was generally lost in the first generation MBT for ammunition. As the assistant driver or BOG already had a poor visibility point they really couldn’t navigate the tank and as the radio became more easily operated from the turret.

It seems like I have to point this out but I am
Not actually a proponent of the extra man theory as much. Having that individual assigned to an APC makes a lot of sense to me.

the function of the gunner is to engage the target not find them. Originally. This is the soda straw I keep pointing to. The gunner operates with the weapons sights. That limits his frame of reference to what he is able to see though the optics available he is isolated to those. They are excellent make no mistake far superior to those that came before but limited like wearing blinders.
Having that second extra set of eyes can help maintain situational awareness. But in combat that individual is not involved in sighting it’s mostly in patrol. In this way the extra eyes of the loader are more for navigation or spotting potential trouble. If in battle the loader is servicing the weapons as job one.

All machines need repairs and maintenance those who make the pro four man crew argument however do have a point. The automatic loader system is another complex machine in a complex of complex machines. The crew of the tank has to do most of the repairs and maintenance of the tank. You can’t go calling on the Recovery vehicle for every issue. Tanks are built heavy and a lot of the maintenance is heavy labor having a extra set of biceps around makes it a little easier. This is one of the lessons of German tanks in world war 2 by the way.


It can be done in most tanks but for T14 which you pointed to a number of times it’s more of an issue.
Because the turret is unmanned and the crew are encapsulated. Getting to the breach to clear an issue becomes a problem.
However you did forget something here.
If the main gun is down for whatever reason the TC has there commanders weapon usually a 50 cal. The Gunner has the coaxial normally a 30 cal.
If you have infantry in the mix it’s hard to pull one of those two off to try and clear an issue if they are both now fighting. The Coaxial is the second weapon under the control of the gunner, although the gunner’s station can be slaved by the TC he can only attack one target at a time.

The inescapable as I see it is this,
Abrams, Challenger 2, Ariete, Altay, Leopard 2, Merkava IV are never going to change from crews of 4 to crews of 3 as standard.
It would take far to much of a system change and resources. The tanks that follow them may drop to crews of 3, the Israelis Carmel and US FCS have even looked at crews of 2 using AI and computers to take the place of the gunner. But that’s still some time off.

Shelves but they have been dusted off.
K2 is what I consider a roadmap to the Abrams successor and its built to convert to 140mm by dropping in the tube and the ammo.
Farther more despite having been “Shelved” of late a number of similar products have come back the 40CT gun of the British French, the US 50mm are both systems form IFV programs that began that same time.
21st century?
L51 is an interesting gun but is it all it’s cracked up as? First it’s actually a compromise between the 120mm and 140mm. That said where the performance increase is coming from isn’t the that 10mm increased diameter but the length. A very long rod penetrator. The aim being to increase pressure and length of penetrator. It’s the second most simple form of upgrade a tank gun can get. After the L55 which was basically the same compromise.
The 130mm was developed by Rheinmetall as a product seeking a costumer not by NATO or any National Army. It’s also very heavy the L55 barrel weighs 3 tons the L51 weighs 3.5 tons. That’s a huge mass to be pointing at targets. The reason the US never adopted the L55 was during testing of it the gun showed a considerable oscillation and stabilization issues. The large weight demanded a heavier mount. A larger round even heavier loader and magazine demanding a larger heavier turret meaning a larger heavier... you get where this is going.

The US was looking at off and on a lightweight gun the XM360 that had similar caliber and could fire the same rounds as the M256 variant of the L44 but only weighed a little over 2 tons.
That gun by the way was last seen on the MPF Griffin Light tank in September 2016 at AUSA. Yet still got increased performance because of the materials used allowed higher pressures than the L44.

There are still other potential means. South Korea was said to be looking at a Electrochemical technology gun. It was also looked into among the technologies trailed off and on since those 90s programs. The aim being to achieve a more controlled propellant burn by electrical ignition with plasma. It achieved in tests an increased impact performance from 120mm guns in demonstrations almost equal to 140mm guns.

As to T14, the numbers don’t pan. This seems like another T64. It will be small numbers for very elite units. Unless something changes like a major export buy. The main Russian tanks will likely remain those we know improved T72, updated T80, and T90 for a considerable time period. They may acquire more of the secondary vehicles but T14 is the unicorn.

The 120mm should be able to engage the turret and knock that out and there goes the tank as a weapon. Again impressive frontal armor on the hull but thiner on the turret. 120mm isn’t dead yet just as neither is the 125mm used by Russia and China. It’s only a question of upgrades.

I will disagree on the point of the autoloader being as complex and maintence demanding as you will claim. Russia and to a lesser extend France and Japan autoloader systems has gone through tens of thousands if not thousands of cycles during their lifetime and they have had time to perfect and improve the system. And autoloading tanks have been used by armies ranging from well equipped to downright ragtag and had proven themselves to be no more complex and demanding than the rest of the tank itself.

The T-14 gun will be hard to access in the event of a malfunction but it is the only tank with an autoader and an unmanned turret, it cannot be the the bench mark to grad all the other tanks out there. Will Russia get more ? It is hard to say but they are committed for the time being to buy it is manageable batches in order to improve on the design. Other that the T-14 all other autoloading tanks's gun are easily accessible from the gunners side. Nor it is the only new tank that is sporting heavier armor in significant numbers (ztz-99a).

And to be frank the it will be the most dire of situations wherein a tank with a malfunctioning gun will stay and fight with its MGs instead of retreating and addressing the problem at hand. It is possible yes, but a very remote scenario that is hard to justify having another person on the tank at all times. And then the whole "extra biceps for maintence" issue, why can't the extra person pulled out of the tank be assign to a team specifically for that purpose ? There is no law or rule against that ? Any intensive repairs will most assuredly be done in a more secure and safe environment will any more marginal repairs can be done on site with the gunner himself.

And I think we will have to agree to disagree on the whole gunner soda straw sight thing, for I believe that while it will never be the 360 degrees view that a loader would enjoy it will still be great enough for the job.


And until South Korea or any other nation can make a workable prototype of whatever new gun designs they have, propellant based shells are still going to be the basis of MBT main gun designs with all the weight and size issues.

I will agree that all current human loader MBTs will not be retro fitted with a autoloader, the cost and effort would be too prohibitive. But I do believe that any new MBTs will have an autoloader system as standard.
 
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Hence my statement complex machines inside a complex of complex machines.

Correct, other than T14 other tanks have either been conventional with an automatic loader either cassette or carousel or some other form or a low profile Turret.

First this again comes back to the situation.

That’s actually what Nicholas Moran said. Move the extra crewmen to a support APC. And there is a logic to it. However bean counters come in and would as you had already said move them to scouts or infantry.

The aim is situational awareness. The gunner doesn’t have it and can’t help with it. Hence the soda straw. The TC can have it but only so far as what he can see.

The XM360 I mentioned is conventional in operation but not materials and shows that the L51 may not be the best course.

Just to point this out but one of the newest MBT the Altay despite having help from South Korea lacks an automatic loader.
 
D

Deleted member 13312

Guest
Hence my statement complex machines inside a complex of complex machines.

Correct, other than T14 other tanks have either been conventional with an automatic loader either cassette or carousel or some other form or a low profile Turret.

First this again comes back to the situation.

That’s actually what Nicholas Moran said. Move the extra crewmen to a support APC. And there is a logic to it. However bean counters come in and would as you had already said move them to scouts or infantry.

The aim is situational awareness. The gunner doesn’t have it and can’t help with it. Hence the soda straw. The TC can have it but only so far as what he can see.

The XM360 I mentioned is conventional in operation but not materials and shows that the L51 may not be the best course.

Just to point this out but one of the newest MBT the Altay despite having help from South Korea lacks an automatic loader.
Seeing as the TC also have imagine magnification and IR I did say he can see far more than what the loader possibly can.
And since this is Turkey's first serious attempt at a domestic MBT design I don't blame them for erring on the side of caution. Even the first batch have a rather anemic 1500 hp engine as its powerpack.
 
D

Deleted member 13312

Guest
P.S: and seeing as how even less then amply supplied armies have no trouble in maintaining the autoloaders I did say that they are working just fine.
Edit: Also it seems that the Atlay will also feature a variant that has an autoloader. A tech demonstration vehicle is slated to be built to try out the system.
 
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