Avimimus
ACCESS: Top Secret
- Joined
- 15 December 2007
- Messages
- 2,345
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Hello,
I agree with the arguments put forward as to why claims about the 'death of the tank' are, once again, unreasonable.
However, life is clearly getting harder for tanks:
- The overall PHit/Pk of anti-tank missile systems have increased dramatically, flight times have reduced, and they have become less dependent on operators. Costs for things like fire-and-forget capabilities and top-attack capabilities keep reducing.
- This results in greater effective ranges for man-portable anti-tank munitions, making it harder for infantry to protectively screen tanks, and allowing anti-tank teams to cover a larger area of the front and more easily support each other.
- The continued development of guided indirect fire rounds, as well as loitering munitions, means that fire can be concentrated on tanks (as relatively high value targets) from further away.
So, what does a world look like where guided artillery, loitering munitions, and top-attack precise concealable anti-tank missiles become affordable? What pressures will this produce?
My own thoughts would lean towards a heavily armoured reconnaissance and fire-support tank... favouring soft-kill and hard-kill active-protection, armour (including armour against top-attack munitions), and sensors (e.g. at least two panoramic sights, augmented by a 360 degree MWS and back-up sighting systems, and possibly radar), and sacrifice firepower to achieve this. The overall doctrinal role would be to replace the IFV with a more survivable platform that could also provide a relatively secure position to identify targets for indirect fire.
Medium calibre main-guns:
Such a vehicle could be armed with a ~70mm cannon with a reasonably deep magazine (e.g. 100-150 rnds), have a remote weapon station for a second machine gun and a cannister carrying 2-4 anti-tank/demolition missiles for high value targets that the main gun can't defeat.
The smaller calibre main gun would save weight, but could also have superior amounts of ammunition available for suppression, be very effective against exposed targets, and carry specialised guided/fused ammunition to deal with drones/helicopters. It could also achieve >300mm RHA with APFSDS. When enemy armour out-matches it, it could still be used to strip reactive armour off of an enemy tank and/or damage optics and systems through vibration while an anti-tank missile is enroute to the target (and have the kinetic performance to do so, as such a large weapon would have similar ranges to an anti-tank missile).
P.S. Before someone starts with 'It isn't a tank if its main gun isn't intended to defeat the frontal armour of enemy main battle tanks'... I'll point out that such an argument means that interwar tanks, the original Panzer IV, and any tank which doctrinally is mainly to be used against infantry and artillery (rather than tanks) isn't considered a 'tank'... which is very silly. Yes, under some modern doctrines almost no interwar tank is a tank - but that is only under some modern doctrines - the idea of the tank is older than your perspective and the tank will be around (in some form) long after as well (albeit potentially with new doctrinal roles).
I agree with the arguments put forward as to why claims about the 'death of the tank' are, once again, unreasonable.
However, life is clearly getting harder for tanks:
- The overall PHit/Pk of anti-tank missile systems have increased dramatically, flight times have reduced, and they have become less dependent on operators. Costs for things like fire-and-forget capabilities and top-attack capabilities keep reducing.
- This results in greater effective ranges for man-portable anti-tank munitions, making it harder for infantry to protectively screen tanks, and allowing anti-tank teams to cover a larger area of the front and more easily support each other.
- The continued development of guided indirect fire rounds, as well as loitering munitions, means that fire can be concentrated on tanks (as relatively high value targets) from further away.
So, what does a world look like where guided artillery, loitering munitions, and top-attack precise concealable anti-tank missiles become affordable? What pressures will this produce?
My own thoughts would lean towards a heavily armoured reconnaissance and fire-support tank... favouring soft-kill and hard-kill active-protection, armour (including armour against top-attack munitions), and sensors (e.g. at least two panoramic sights, augmented by a 360 degree MWS and back-up sighting systems, and possibly radar), and sacrifice firepower to achieve this. The overall doctrinal role would be to replace the IFV with a more survivable platform that could also provide a relatively secure position to identify targets for indirect fire.
Medium calibre main-guns:
Such a vehicle could be armed with a ~70mm cannon with a reasonably deep magazine (e.g. 100-150 rnds), have a remote weapon station for a second machine gun and a cannister carrying 2-4 anti-tank/demolition missiles for high value targets that the main gun can't defeat.
The smaller calibre main gun would save weight, but could also have superior amounts of ammunition available for suppression, be very effective against exposed targets, and carry specialised guided/fused ammunition to deal with drones/helicopters. It could also achieve >300mm RHA with APFSDS. When enemy armour out-matches it, it could still be used to strip reactive armour off of an enemy tank and/or damage optics and systems through vibration while an anti-tank missile is enroute to the target (and have the kinetic performance to do so, as such a large weapon would have similar ranges to an anti-tank missile).
P.S. Before someone starts with 'It isn't a tank if its main gun isn't intended to defeat the frontal armour of enemy main battle tanks'... I'll point out that such an argument means that interwar tanks, the original Panzer IV, and any tank which doctrinally is mainly to be used against infantry and artillery (rather than tanks) isn't considered a 'tank'... which is very silly. Yes, under some modern doctrines almost no interwar tank is a tank - but that is only under some modern doctrines - the idea of the tank is older than your perspective and the tank will be around (in some form) long after as well (albeit potentially with new doctrinal roles).