2022/05/14

On tanks as part of a unit

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This is a drawing of the A1E1 "Independent" heavy tank design. It was a spectacular prototype in the 1920's, back when "heavy" tanks were called so becuase of their relatively weight without expecting thick armour or big guns.
It was heavy not becuase of thick armour (it was merely bulletproofed), but because of its big crew. Four dedicated machinegunners were needed to operate the four small machinegun turrets.The tank was means to be able to fight infantry all-round on its own. This design philosophy was not very successful commercially during the Interwar Years in part becuase it made the machines very expensive, and it was incompatible with the later adoption of shellproofing armour. The area to protect was simply too large with such a large vehicle, any shellproofing (60 mm and more steel plate thickness) armour would make immobilise the tank by breakdowns and sinking into soft soil.

more importantly, the whole idea of what a tank should be was wrong. A tank does NOT need to be able to fight in many directions simultaneously, for a tank is not alone on the battlefield. Infantry to the left or right or in the back can and should be dealt with by allies, such as infantry and other tanks. A tank needs a main weapon (which can even be casemated with limited traverse, but is usually in a 360° traverse turret) and one low effort all-round machinegun, which would actually rarely be used to shoot sidewards. A machinegun coaxial tot he main gun has become customary as well, as it offers much for little effort and can easily be reloaded under armour.

That's the typical main battle tank today; 105...125 mm main gun in 360° traverse turret with coaxial machinegun, one all-round machinegun on top of the turret. The hardware follows reason, but the idea of a tank as a force of one, capable to fight on its own, that one is too enticing. People still fall for it, especially laymen. 

The Russian tanks (which are near-identical to the Ukrainian ones) get destroyed in quantity, even with anti-tank weapons that should not be considered anti-MBT assets. This is possible because a shot from the flank can penetrate without a very powerful warhead and cause a catastrophic detonation of the main gun's munition. 
Yet this is unlike the tank defeats by Javelin and NLAW (which exploit the weakness of the topside) not so much a problem of lacking a hard kill active protection system (=shooting down the incoming warhead) upgrade. Sure, it could be addressed with a hard kill APS, but the vulnerability was already existing in the 1970's, unlike the top attack problem. Even very well-protected tanks of the Second World War were vulnerable to flank shots. 
 
Panther tank armour thicknesses, image by Valera Potapov
 
The side armour is rather meant to protect against powerful weapons from the frontal 45...60°, not from the flank itself. The angle of impact adds to the armour's effectiveness.
 
The forces in the field were and are supposed to mitigate this problem of flank vulnerability, not the tank designers. The tank crew of a lead tan should be able to rely on infantry and/or fellow tank crews to secure its left and right flank, so it itself can focus on the front and orient its best protection forward.
 
A hard kill active protection system may reduce the need for such cooperative tactics, but only so as long as it works as advertised. Hard kill APS will likely tempt even the professionals to think of a tank as all-round fighting machine, conceptually taking the place of the four machinegun turrets of the "Independent" tank prototype.


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5 comments:

  1. I imagine the future tank as a easily deplorable 40 tons machine ,that could resist to a 80mm ap round , because above 80mm the rapid fire become something very difficult and require a giant rapid loading mechanism. The tracks will be replaced by 10 or more small wheels on each side. Each wheel will contain an electric engine . This arrangement will allow every wheel to rotate 360degrees around it axis,making possible the lateral movement of the tank. I imagine a active protection system that will recognize a big apfds round coming towards it and will automatically move the tank wheels lateral dodging the round by moving away from the trajectory.
    This will be of little use against guided rounds or hypersonic missiles.
    The weapon module will be in front ,the engine in the middle back,while the crew will be in the back ,protected in a module.

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    1. Electric engines built into wheels are very heavy and have much inertia. This is terrible for fast offroad driving on uneven ground (huge load on springs, dampening develops much heat) and makes any rapid reaction movement to shots physically dubious to say the least (in addition to the friction of the ground).
      Furthermore, the ground pressure becomes very troublesome at 15+ tons even for a 8x8, 30 tons like Boxer is very limited offroad-capable, and 40 tons would not have relevant offroad capability on anything but hard surfaces, even with 10x10.

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  2. I think it possible that infantry will be reduced thru the integration of autonomous systems. Would it be possible to get a configuration where most of these systems are based on the tank and maybe a few drones flying around and recharging on the tank?

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  3. "the vulnerability was already existing in the 1970's"

    For sure. The IDF lost 400 tanks destroyed and another 600 damaged or captured in the Yom Kippur War. Most to Sagger ATGMs. We kind of ignored it because Israel 'won' that war.

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    1. That's a different issue. AT-2 Sagger was able to penetrate the frontal armour of relatively heavy Centurion tanks, an issue that was corrected with better frontal 60° armour around 1980 (Leopard 2, Abrams, Challenger, Merkava tank generation).

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