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Throw on L55 tubes, optimize FCS for said tubes. Problem solved. From what I hear, your tankers love their M1's. The no DU thing is retarded, I get the crying about the ammo to an extent, but the armor package? Talk about stupid... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You realize of course, they were neutered on request of your government. Australia was one of only countries offered the full package Abrams. Throw on L55 tubes, optimize FCS for said tubes. Problem solved. From what I hear, your tankers love their M1's. The no DU thing is retarded, I get the crying about the ammo to an extent, but the armor package? Talk about stupid... pretend for a moment that the aussies are really going to do some tank on tank action either independently or in support of US forces. what ammo do you think they will have then? |
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We already did this. Just fucking order the M8 Armored Gun System already. http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/m8ags-001.jpg http://olive-drab.com/images/id_m8ags_10_600.jpg View Quote Yesssss |
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pretend for a moment that the aussies are really going to do some tank on tank action either independently or in support of US forces. what ammo do you think they will have then? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You realize of course, they were neutered on request of your government. Australia was one of only countries offered the full package Abrams. Throw on L55 tubes, optimize FCS for said tubes. Problem solved. From what I hear, your tankers love their M1's. The no DU thing is retarded, I get the crying about the ammo to an extent, but the armor package? Talk about stupid... pretend for a moment that the aussies are really going to do some tank on tank action either independently or in support of US forces. what ammo do you think they will have then? Touche' Sir, touche'. |
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Battle of 73 eastings. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_73_Easting 2ACR kicked major ass and didn't know it until the dust settled. Some guys here have pics from that little get together. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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An up armored Bradley wont fill this roll?? I though that I read that Brads were taking out Iraqi tanks in GW1. This is going to be a trillion dollar black hole. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_73_Easting 2ACR kicked major ass and didn't know it until the dust settled. Some guys here have pics from that little get together. TOWs were taking out tanks. They happen to have been launched from Bradleys. If they try that stunt against decent tanks with competent (read: non-Arab) crews, it won't be near so lop-sided. If you want something to deploy with airborne and to fight tanks you want something with a very low profile (not a Bradley), that doesn't waste scarce space on a chain gun, its turret, ammo , & FCS (again, not a Bradley) or a troop-carrying capacity (again, not a Bradley) Some sort of short tank-destroyer type vehicle. |
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I can't help but think of the Striker with a 105mm cannon. LAV III but with a cannon. It's already here. I can understanding upgrading the systems and all, just don't go nutz. View Quote Hmm. Something like this maybe. My guess is that maybe it's not armored enough or too heavy or big for the Airborne role. |
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Throw on L55 tubes, optimize FCS for said tubes. Problem solved. From what I hear, your tankers love their M1's. The no DU thing is retarded, I get the crying about the ammo to an extent, but the armor package? Talk about stupid... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You realize of course, they were neutered on request of your government. Australia was one of only countries offered the full package Abrams. Throw on L55 tubes, optimize FCS for said tubes. Problem solved. From what I hear, your tankers love their M1's. The no DU thing is retarded, I get the crying about the ammo to an extent, but the armor package? Talk about stupid... I wouldn't really call it an issue of "optimization". If you look at penetration guesstimates for the latest German Tungsten KE ammo (DM53) fired out of an L/44 and the latest M829A3 rounds, the difference is 10 or 20mm in favor of the DU round. It's almost the same, penetration wise, but the DU would have better behind armor effects because it burns. The L/55 gives a little bit more power to KE rounds. It might also be less accurate when firing on the move, and perhaps have some other qualities that make it less desirable than you might think. Again, I'd like to point out than many Leopard 2 users are quite happy with the L/44 main guns...Like Canada, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and so on. In terms of interoperability, although the Aussies might not currently be using DU rounds, nothing prevents them from storing the data in their fire control computers so that they could easily load up with them and shoot them in a wartime scenario. The armor package is the part that I can't wrap my head around. I REALLY hope that they found an alternative material (like Tungsten) and built them up with that instead of plain old A1 armor. |
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I wouldn't really call it an issue of "optimization". If you look at penetration guesstimates for the latest German Tungsten KE ammo (DM53) fired out of an L/44 and the latest M829A3 rounds, the difference is 10 or 20mm in favor of the DU round. It's almost the same, penetration wise, but the DU would have better behind armor effects because it burns. The L/55 gives a little bit more power to KE rounds. It might also be less accurate when firing on the move, and perhaps have some other qualities that make it less desirable than you might think. Again, I'd like to point out than many Leopard 2 users are quite happy with the L/44 main guns...Like Canada, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and so on. In terms of interoperability, although the Aussies might not currently be using DU rounds, nothing prevents them from storing the data in their fire control computers so that they could easily load up with them and shoot them in a wartime scenario. The armor package is the part that I can't wrap my head around. I REALLY hope that they found an alternative material (like Tungsten) and built them up with that instead of plain old A1 armor. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You realize of course, they were neutered on request of your government. Australia was one of only countries offered the full package Abrams. Throw on L55 tubes, optimize FCS for said tubes. Problem solved. From what I hear, your tankers love their M1's. The no DU thing is retarded, I get the crying about the ammo to an extent, but the armor package? Talk about stupid... I wouldn't really call it an issue of "optimization". If you look at penetration guesstimates for the latest German Tungsten KE ammo (DM53) fired out of an L/44 and the latest M829A3 rounds, the difference is 10 or 20mm in favor of the DU round. It's almost the same, penetration wise, but the DU would have better behind armor effects because it burns. The L/55 gives a little bit more power to KE rounds. It might also be less accurate when firing on the move, and perhaps have some other qualities that make it less desirable than you might think. Again, I'd like to point out than many Leopard 2 users are quite happy with the L/44 main guns...Like Canada, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and so on. In terms of interoperability, although the Aussies might not currently be using DU rounds, nothing prevents them from storing the data in their fire control computers so that they could easily load up with them and shoot them in a wartime scenario. The armor package is the part that I can't wrap my head around. I REALLY hope that they found an alternative material (like Tungsten) and built them up with that instead of plain old A1 armor. Going back a few years, I had a friend who was a Dutch tank commander, he loved the Leopard 2A5's but disliked the 2A6's due to the larger dispersion and accuracy issues the longer tubes brought. I had forgotten about that. |
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...until those tanks stand off just outside javelin range and start peppering your postition with HE .... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. ...until those tanks stand off just outside javelin range and start peppering your postition with HE .... I was under the impression modern ATGMs had superior standoff to tank guns. |
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... because our friends, the French or the Russians themselves would NEVER sell upgrades to Soviet FCS that include good thermals and optics - right? http://defense-update.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/t90ms_gunner-300x253.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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A light tank in the model of a CV90120 with rubber tracks would be especially useful in the desert because you don't need armor to stop a threat vehicles gun round because it will be engaging from ranges a T-72 can't even see them at. ... because our friends, the French or the Russians themselves would NEVER sell upgrades to Soviet FCS that include good thermals and optics - right? http://defense-update.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/t90ms_gunner-300x253.jpg Yup, look for even more French optics and other systems to start showing up in Russian systems. I was talking with Steve Zaloga last week and he had just returned from the big air show in Russia and we discussed how the Russians and French are building a major relationship in regards to defense tech these days. One need only look as far as the new Russian 8 wheeled APC they unveiled. He also said their new MBT is going to be incorporating a lot of western features. They have learned that in order to compete on the moderns arms market, the old ways just don't work anymore when the world is awash in surplus Leopard 2A4s and M1's and the T series tanks have abysmal reputations in combat. |
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I was under the impression modern ATGMs had superior standoff to tank guns. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. ...until those tanks stand off just outside javelin range and start peppering your postition with HE .... I was under the impression modern ATGMs had superior standoff to tank guns. Not Javelins. Plus some Sov tanks can fire indirect fire, like ours used to. Plus modern Sov tanks have gun launched ATGMs that have 4 - 5 km ranges. Tanks are soclial critters - they come in packs, with friends. So say you take one out at 4 km with a TOW - what do you think the reaction of the rest of the tank company will be? Do you suppose they might take some action to discourage asecond shot? |
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As long as that enemy hasn't mastered tube artillery. Which is in fact every Soviet template adversary in the solar system. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. As long as that enemy hasn't mastered tube artillery. Which is in fact every Soviet template adversary in the solar system. As well as rocket artillery that blankets entire grid squares. |
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The M8 AGS is ready to go. It can be dropped from a C-130, armor can be added once on the ground, and it can fire 105mm DU KE rounds which are still effective against older MBTs that remain in large numbers around the world by nations that we could find ourselves fighting.
The Army had already incorporated the M8 into it's doctrine when it was stupidly cancelled. Just fucking buy it. It's better than the M551 could ever have hoped to be with its lousy FCS and the problems associated with it. |
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Nazis did this, saw a WWII documentary about it. One officer was quite proud of his little tank. http://www.windofkeltia.com/allo/grubertank.jpg View Quote Is this before or after blowing up the rail car containing the picture of the fallen Madonna with the big boobies? |
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There aren't a whole lot of things which are 100% interoperable with the US. The main shared components are ammunition, and that's the same with the Leo2. If you were aiming for a completely interoperable force with the US, then the Tiger and MRH would not have been selected. Again, it was a political decision coupled with the good deal we got. View Quote The ADF wants interoperability. The Labor government wants putative "independence" and to be able to call the Liberals American Puppets. There is no such thing as a good dead on Euro sourced arms. Even the Leo2s were a loss-leader. |
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Let's not forget, this is awesome, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/ff/Army-fgm148.jpg/1280px-Army-fgm148.jpg Until it meets this... http://media.moddb.com/images/groups/1/3/2074/x_9f5f50ed.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. ...until those tanks stand off just outside javelin range and start peppering your postition with HE .... Let's not forget, this is awesome, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/ff/Army-fgm148.jpg/1280px-Army-fgm148.jpg Until it meets this... http://media.moddb.com/images/groups/1/3/2074/x_9f5f50ed.jpg Smoke screens wont help them |
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iirc, the Army was running some tests with the CV90120 not too long ago... http://www.military-today.com/tanks/cv90120t_l3.jpg http://www.military-today.com/tanks/cv90120t_l8.jpg not sure about the weight but its low profile, has a 120mm cannon and armor that protects against 30mm rounds View Quote That's an attractive option if it meets the criteria for being able to be dropped from a C-130. The 120mm main gun would make it more competitive against modern armor, and the engine located in the front of the hull would add mass against penetration by HEAT and some KE rounds. The layout makes more sense actually, given the limitations of weight imposed upon the design due to tactical requirements. |
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I think it's also important to remember that for airborne troops, tanks provide far more than just anti tank capability. Javelins work great for anti tank work in 99% of situations, but what happens if you need to break down a wall, or reduce an obstacle? Sure you have things like SMAW-D's and AT4's and maybe if they stick around Carl Gustav's, but that still requires a guy to bring it into action. I think an airborne force with limited tanks would work quite well simply because unlike mech heavy forces, both sides, the DAT's and the crunchies need eachother to survive.
The biggest problem I see is that we've become to risk averse that the idea of a light tank that can't withstand RPG-29's, Konkurs missiles, and giant IED's will be laughed away. Here's a question for the paratroopers and tankers in the group. In WWII we found that M22's and Tetrach airborne tanks had big issues when their running gear got entangled in parachute lines rendering them immobile on the drop zones. Something like an M8 AGS would have to be LAPES'ed or quickly deployed from an dirt strip, would this be an issue anymore? We are also talking much more powerful vehicles, I've personally worked on the restoration of an M22 and it was god damned tiny and not all that powerful so I can see that being an issue with them but is that an issue with larger tracked vehicles? |
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. ...until those tanks stand off just outside javelin range and start peppering your postition with HE .... Let's not forget, this is awesome, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/ff/Army-fgm148.jpg/1280px-Army-fgm148.jpg Until it meets this... http://media.moddb.com/images/groups/1/3/2074/x_9f5f50ed.jpg Smoke screens wont help them That's not smoke, it's a Shotra Active Defense System. |
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iirc, the Army was running some tests with the CV90120 not too long ago... http://www.military-today.com/tanks/cv90120t_l3.jpg http://www.military-today.com/tanks/cv90120t_l8.jpg not sure about the weight but its low profile, has a 120mm cannon and armor that protects against 30mm rounds View Quote I do believe it was the Sweede's who trialed rubber band tracks on their CV9040's in Afghanistan with positive results. Personally I'd love to see the CV9030 in US service but that's not happening any time soon. |
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How many Firescouts can you get in a C-130? When you look at this set of requirements:
C-130 droppable Offroad mobility Ability to destroy emplacements and LAVs Survivability against anti-armor weapons That's a tall order... I don't know if a ground vehicle can realistically be expected to fulfill them. A small swarm of semi-autonomous (robot doing the flying, person doing the shooting) armed helicopters buzzing around a battlefield might be the closest fit. |
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That would also be a great option
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iirc, the Army was running some tests with the CV90120 not too long ago... http://www.military-today.com/tanks/cv90120t_l3.jpg http://www.military-today.com/tanks/cv90120t_l8.jpg not sure about the weight but its low profile, has a 120mm cannon and armor that protects against 30mm rounds View Quote |
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I can't find any specs for C-130, but the CV90120-T is air portable via A400, not sure how that translates to C-130.
http://www.military-today.com/tanks/cv90120t.htm |
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We land C17s on dirt all the time at Bragg...used to have pics of the takeoff...the dust cloud was freaking awesome. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Anywhere you want a light tank is probably somewhere it is tough to bring a C-130 into. Advanced man portable air defense systems, advanced tactical SAMs, modernized air defense artillery, etc all pose significant threats, and any adversary that has those probably also has pretty decent anti-armor capabilities (mines, ATGMs, etc). So I kind of question the entire premise. If anything, light infantry need mobility, not protection, so that we can drop them close but just outside the heaviest air defenses and have them zip the last few klicks with some sort of transport, at least for logistics support. Also, designing for the C-130 seems like a significant self-imposed limitation. We have a substantial C-17 fleet, and the C-17 brings a lot more capability to the table. Land a C17 on a dirt strip and tell me how that works out for you. Hey, those are only 10 million a pop engines, so what? There's a reason the C17's never took over the 130's role. While capable, they're little more than a C5 that's a bit smaller and equipped with better avionics. Both suffer from the same critical failure: Being too damned big and fragile for what you think they should be used for. The newer SAM's are no match for modern countermeasures. OPSEC being what it is, you're just going to have to take my word for it when I say that MANPADs against the newer iterations of countermeasure onboard 130's are about as useful as a spitwad. Modern AAA being dangerous as fuck, is even more dangerous to a high flying C17 than a NOE flying 130. That dustcloud is the reason you'll be replacing engines, and the reason they don't do it unless it's a 100% exigency. It *IS* cool as hell to see that kind of thing in action, but doing it on that Bragg dirtstrip was fucking stupid maintenance and airframe longevity-wise. Especially when there's a perfectly good two mile paved strip less than a mile away at No-Hope-Pope. I think they were doing that crap during the trials. Jets and turbofans just don't do well in high FOD environments. C130's do dirt strip landings across the air force on literally a daily basis without any damage or lifespan degradation aside from a TACAN antenna or two. |
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I think it's also important to remember that for airborne troops, tanks provide far more than just anti tank capability. Javelins work great for anti tank work in 99% of situations, but what happens if you need to break down a wall, or reduce an obstacle? Sure you have things like SMAW-D's and AT4's and maybe if they stick around Carl Gustav's, but that still requires a guy to bring it into action. I think an airborne force with limited tanks would work quite well simply because unlike mech heavy forces, both sides, the DAT's and the crunchies need eachother to survive. The biggest problem I see is that we've become to risk averse that the idea of a light tank that can't withstand RPG-29's, Konkurs missiles, and giant IED's will be laughed away. Here's a question for the paratroopers and tankers in the group. In WWII we found that M22's and Tetrach airborne tanks had big issues when their running gear got entangled in parachute lines rendering them immobile on the drop zones. Something like an M8 AGS would have to be LAPES'ed or quickly deployed from an dirt strip, would this be an issue anymore? We are also talking much more powerful vehicles, I've personally worked on the restoration of an M22 and it was god damned tiny and not all that powerful so I can see that being an issue with them but is that an issue with larger tracked vehicles? View Quote When I was at MCAGCTC 29 Stumps CA, we were always on the lookout for comm wire spread across the desert floor. Get that tangled up in your tracks and we were told it would tear up the seals on our road wheel arms where the road wheels are bolted on-or something like that. In my mind, if a light tank is air dropped smack-dab into the middle of WWIII under fire, there's going to be problems while the crew assembles (if that's even possible), finds its tank, and preps it for operation. I would think the confusion in the LZ would be epic if things didn't go according to plan. D-Day at night all over again. If a tank suffered from a sudden stop like hitting the ground after being dropped from an airplane, the FCS is going to need to be updated with a new boresight if it's anything like the current Abrams MBT. Maybe we have technology to overcome that now. Anyway, my point is that any tank dropped into an LZ-whether under fire or not-is going to require some preparation before operation. Parachute lines are going to have to be policed up and put someplace out of the way so they don't damage any rolling stock or tracked vehicles moving out of the area to their objective, on top of other steps being taken to be able to put steel on steel when the moment of truth presents itself. |
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As long as that enemy hasn't mastered tube artillery. Which is in fact every Soviet template adversary in the solar system. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. As long as that enemy hasn't mastered tube artillery. Which is in fact every Soviet template adversary in the solar system. The soviet model has proved itself oh so effective against the us model... |
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Question for the Airborne types. Do we really need a 'light tank' or are you really looking for a highly portable heavy weapon (that can do AT/Anti-bunker/knock down walls)? http://www.williammaloney.com/Aviation/AAFTankMuseum/SelfPropelledGuns/Mule106mmRecoillessGun/images/Mule106mmRecoillessGun.jpg Mule with a 106, air-droppable - lots of bang; of course other weapons could be mounted. Like a TOW (or better yet why not a Hellfire?) http://www.transchool.lee.army.mil/museum/transportation%20museum/images/mule4.gif View Quote I think something like that with a developed shorter range/low pressure mortar capable of direct and indirect fires would be pretty well rounded. |
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I agree with having a light tank, but I don't see it having enough armor if it can be flown in by C-130. Set a weight limit of 30 tons, with the same gun and fire control as the Abrams. Do NOT make it turbine powered and NO aluminum armor. Has armor technology advanced enough to provide decent protection in that weight range? View Quote More like a tank destroyer role? Or tracked arty? Oddball voice:, a quartet of Shermans can be very useful. |
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The M8 would be a good one............unless they want a modern day Stug IV assault gun, or something like the SU-85. Why was the M-8 cancelled? View Quote Because Shinseki got stuck on stupid with everything HAD to be Strykers no tracks allowed. The biggest abomination and POS is the MGS platform the M8 was a far superior equivalent to the M1 and C130 capable from the ground up. Most Strykers are not, unless they are completely striped until till they are nothing but a glorified bus. |
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I think something like that with a developed shorter range/low pressure mortar capable of direct and indirect fires would be pretty well rounded. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Question for the Airborne types. Do we really need a 'light tank' or are you really looking for a highly portable heavy weapon (that can do AT/Anti-bunker/knock down walls)? http://www.williammaloney.com/Aviation/AAFTankMuseum/SelfPropelledGuns/Mule106mmRecoillessGun/images/Mule106mmRecoillessGun.jpg Mule with a 106, air-droppable - lots of bang; of course other weapons could be mounted. Like a TOW (or better yet why not a Hellfire?) http://www.transchool.lee.army.mil/museum/transportation%20museum/images/mule4.gif I think something like that with a developed shorter range/low pressure mortar capable of direct and indirect fires would be pretty well rounded. Spain did something like that (at least for indirect fire): |
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The soviet model has proved itself oh so effective against the us model... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. As long as that enemy hasn't mastered tube artillery. Which is in fact every Soviet template adversary in the solar system. The soviet model has proved itself oh so effective against the us model... And the reason why Sylvan's list of airborne landings was against third world gendarmeries, not military units. Airborne is a barely supported mission at this point, by both the USAF and the Army itself. As dodgy as amphibious operations are, airborne operations are doubly so because of a lack of sustainable organic fires. Together, they would be usable, but I hope the USN/USMC never get any farther in the sucker's bet marked "USAF support." |
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Hmm. Something like this maybe. My guess is that maybe it's not armored enough or too heavy or big for the Airborne role. http://www.military-today.com/artillery/stryker_mgs.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I can't help but think of the Striker with a 105mm cannon. LAV III but with a cannon. It's already here. I can understanding upgrading the systems and all, just don't go nutz. Hmm. Something like this maybe. My guess is that maybe it's not armored enough or too heavy or big for the Airborne role. http://www.military-today.com/artillery/stryker_mgs.jpg and usually found broke in the motor pool... |
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Because it takes forever and a day to send a cargo ship full of M1 Abrams someplace. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Why in gods name are we still hung up on the C130 requirement? Because it takes forever and a day to send a cargo ship full of M1 Abrams someplace. No, it actually doesn't. The MPS squadrons are usually sailing within 72 hours, and our MEUs are usually with 96 hours of any place on the planet. |
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The soviet model has proved itself oh so effective against the us model... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Armor is dumb. Javelins and really angry paratroopers are the solution to any problem you can come up with. As long as that enemy hasn't mastered tube artillery. Which is in fact every Soviet template adversary in the solar system. The soviet model has proved itself oh so effective against the us model... Yeah - remember those huge victory parades we had in Hanoi and Pyongyang? Neither do I .... |
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