Two crew members only. If there was a third one, he should have stuck his head out like the driver.
Two crew members only. If there was a third one, he should have stuck his head out like the driver.
In T-14 also only two have hatches. Still for the moment I believe the Chinese tank has only 2 crewmembers.Two crew members only. If there was a third one, he should have stuck his head out like the driver.
3 periscopes though... unlikely.In T-14 also only two have hatches. Still for the moment I believe the Chinese tank has only 2 crewmembers.
Now that you mentioned it, how would the empty cases be ejected out of the tank, assuming there is a case to be ejected? Or is it some new black technology like caseless ammunition?
That is not "black technology" it's already standard.Now that you mentioned it, how would the empty cases be ejected out of the tank, assuming there is a case to be ejected? Or is it some new black technology like caseless ammunition?
Still the remains have to go somewhere, you can't just keep it in the vehicle. It's red hot.That is not "black technology" it's already standard.
Here you can see only the bottom cap remains after firing.
You can, that is literally what most western tanks do.Still the remains have to go somewhere, you can't just keep it in the vehicle. It's red hot.
Thanks. I do not recall though, of any 105mm caseless ammunition being developed by users of the calibre, granted the technology may exist in 120mm form.That is not "black technology" it's already standard.
Here you can see only the bottom cap remains after firing.