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Arjun Mk.II Tank Clears All Army Trials, Service Next Year

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Arjun Mk II Tank Clears All Army Trials Service Next Year - SP's Land Forces

The Arjun Mk.II main battle tank has cleared all user trials with the Indian Army successfully and now awaits a maintenance evaluation by the Army and, crucially, a detailed evaluation by the Director General of Quality Assurance (DGQA). The Army has on order 118 tanks that will begin delivery once these two final evaluation processes are complete, likely by mid-2015. The Phase IV user trials demonstrated trench crossing and step climbing capabilities of the Mk.II tank starting in September 2014. Last year, dynamic trials of 120 mm penetration-cum-blast (PCB) ammunition for MBT Arjun Mk II were conducted successfully at PXE, Chandipur.
The Arjun Mk.II will conceivably begin entering service in 2016. With the already inducted fleet of 124 Arjun Mk.I tanks in two regiments in Rajasthan, the Army will be set to operate a total of four Arjun regiments. But the good news for the Arjun programme potentially ends right here. As SP's reported earlier, there are unlikely to be further orders for the Arjun tank of any type. The total number (242 tanks) on order is far from good news: The DRDO has said that any order below 500 tanks (in a mix of Mk.I and Mk.II) makes Project Arjun a dead loss. This is precisely what it is likely to be, which is why products based on the Arjun chassis (bridge-layer tank, self-propelled artillery) or Arjun turret (Tank-X) are being pushed too. But for the Arjun tank itself, the fresh order could be a death knell. The Army is keen that the DRDO focuses on a futuristic main battle tank. Of couse, this Army-DRDO conversation continues at a time when the very efficacy of armoured land force is being questioned at the macro war-fighting level in the region.

The Army has shown markedly more confidence in the Arjun Mk.II than it did in the original tank. At Defexpo last year, the Arjun Mk.II was on public display for the first time, following its participation in the Republic Day Parade. It underwent two more critical trial phases supervised by the Indian Army, pertaining to mobility in water (medium fording), mobility across obstacles, missile firing and fresh regular ammunition firing routines. These rounds were undertaken with during the summer months, with a handful of test points completed by November last year, with final reports being compiled and completed in January 2015. Full user trials began in May 2012. The Indian Army had indented for 124 of the Mk.2 for two tank regiments, but has now committed to inducting 118 tanks. The DRDO had been pushing for an order of at least 300 Arjun Mk.IIs to shore up the programme and speed up production at the Heavy Vehicles Factory adjoining the CVRDE in Avadi. It's almost certain that won't happen. The Army simply has no more armoured appetite for more tanks.

Sadly, the economics of the programme lie in tatters. In 2008, the DRDO wrote to the MoD saying, "The DRDO is working on the development of the futuristic Mark II MBT with suitable technological upgrades, which can be introduced later after completion of production of at least 500 tanks of the present version. DRDO has tacit knowledge in this area of Combat Vehicle Engineering and possesses full competence in developing futuristic combat vehicles. Any battle tank has a service life of 30 years and goes through technology up gradation progressively. Since MBT-Arjun is an indigenous tank it is all the more easier to bring upgrades and in our opinion the MBT-Arjun will be a viable platform for the futuristic use as well."

For the Army, its internal planning compulsions have weighed heavy. It has refused to comply with an additional order, given that its resources had been committed to purchasing more T-90S Bhishma tanks from Russia for license production at Avadi. What the DRDO has managed in the meanwhile is to meet the Army's requirements with the Arjun Mk.II. The tank now incorporates enhanced firepower with Automated Target Tracking and greater variety of ammunition including gun-fired anti-tank missile, thermobaric ammunition; enhanced protection that include Explosive Reactive Armor, laser warning and countermeasure System, a mine plough, a remotely operable anti-aircraft weapon, a roof mounted driving seat; advanced land navigation system and enhanced night vision capabilities. As things turn out, the main missile to be fired from the 120mm main gun may not be Israeli after all. Sources suggest a new weapon being developed at the ARDE may be the fit.

But for Project Arjun, the implications of the end of trials are greater. In 2008, the DRDO had also noted, "The major imported systems in the tank are the powerpack and gun control system from Germany and Delft-SAGEM gunner’s main sight from OIP Belgium. The percentage of import content is 60% in the first lot of 124 tanks to be productionised, which will be reduced to under 45% with the manufacture of first 200 tanks and under 30% with the manufacture of about 500 tanks." This indicates that the Arjun tank, ironically, remains largely a foreign product, both in terms of value as well as critical systems. This, despite the DRDO promising to totally turn the tables with greater order numbers.

Original problems with the Arjun Mk.I rose with the Mk.II too, though the capabilities of the new tank have silenced critics and test personnel. Weight was an issue with the Arjun Mk.II, significantly heavier than the Arjun Mk.I, though the DRDO has dispelled comparisons with the T-90S. "T-90S and MBT Arjun tanks are of different class. Both the tanks have their own special features. In MBT Arjun, we have more power to weight ratio, hydro-pneumatic suspension for better ride comfort and a stable platform to fire on the move, better quality class of Gun Control System and Fire Control System etc. Missile firing capability of Arjun was demonstrated. T-90S tank has missile firing capability and lower silhouette. Tanks of both the class are required by the Indian Army," the DRDO had said in 2008 during the big T-90S push.

On the DRDO's part, fighting for the programme will remain a priority, given the enormous skill investment it has taken to put the tank together and meet all of the Army's many demands. "Teething problems during the process of productionisation are inevitable. The process of TOT for the MBT will mature and stabilize only after 200 to 300 tanks have been actually produced by the production agency. Hence, we need to have patronage from the government and Army in terms of more orders for our indigenous MBT-Arjun. If the army does not place further orders for Arjun we cannot even amortize the infrastructural investments made by the government for its productionisation, thereby resulting in wasteful expenditure. The Army should place orders for additional 300 tanks before we can break even," said the DRDO six years ago in its most direct appeal to the government to intervene and force the Army to support the Arjun in a bigger manner. The DRDO believes Prime Minister Modi's 'Make in India' philosophy may help the Arjun programme get more aggressive orders from the customer, though the fact that the T-90S is license built in country goes against any perceived advantage in terms of economics. The DRDO still plans to revive its plans to push the Arjun project with the new government in order to amortize investment and perhaps allow for future versions of the tank.
 
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124 Mk1 + 118 MK2 total 242 not bad and more mk2 orders to follow not bad correct me if i am wrong with the numbers
 
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Just like you have not sold your F16s to replace them with Thunders. Different tools have different roles to play. One size does not fit all
Beause F-16 is different and JF-17 is different plane but your Tanks are third generation Tank and you are blaming your own Army of betraying country and choosing inferior Tank T-90 over great Arjun
 
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Beause F-16 is different and JF-17 is different plane but your Tanks are third generation Tank and you are blaming your own Army of betraying country and choosing inferior Tank T-90 over great Arjun
Nonsense. Read the difference in specifications between Arjun and T-90. Also, only an idiot would recommend instantly replacing an inventory of tried and tested tools with a brand new one that has been just launched, without giving it time to mature in real life environment. Thankfully, policy planners in India are not as immature as some of the Pakistani armchair generals on this forum :)
 
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Nonsense. Read the difference in specifications between Arjun and T-90. Also, only an idiot would recommend instantly replacing an inventory of tried and tested tools with a brand new one that has been just launched, without giving it time to mature in real life environment. Thankfully, policy planners in India are not as immature as some of the Pakistani armchair generals on this forum :)
Your own members are claiming to be Arjun better than T-90
 
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Only 118 that tells a lot
Do not go Gentle in that Good Night ,,
Do not go gentle in that Good Night ,,
with all the accusations this will go along the same line ,
Acquire less, Try Tested , Evaluate it more, then Acquire More. Esp In DAC, things go this way only
nd about MK2 vs T90 ,, others will clear your doubt.
 
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Before starting induction we said we would go for 200 of these but your Army ia trying its best to avoid this crap known as Arjun Tank

Let me tell you the reason -

1- Indian army have options and money, so unless and until they believe they are getting the best, they will restrict themselves ordering big. Even when we do buy foreign equipments, we buy small number first and then go for bigger chunk.

2- Pakistan forces have no option other than chini maal - cheap and handy.
 
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If this would have been that great your Army would have ordered 400 at least but they know what it is ?

As I have always said, the infratructure around LoC and in both Punjabs along with Rajasthan is more suited for tank weighing 45 to 50 tons. There is a reason IA kept weight limit of FMBT to 50 tons.

Besides, IA has built their doctrine around T 72 and T 55 for years. Inducting Arjun in massive numbers will require new policies and doctrine, which will be time consuming.

Arjun is very god but it is costly tank. The above decsion of IA could be partly due to this too. USSR too inducted High quality T 80s in less numbers, while T 72 became workhorse tank. The idea is to use a low high end mix of tanks, which gives maximum advantage and at same time, keeps operating costs in control.

Also we dont need thousands of Arjuns (IA may order 150 to 220 more).

Arjun can be only used along LoC and not along chinese border, which means we do need only 300 to 450 Arjuns.

Hope I have made myself clear.

@sancho @jagjitnatt @Capt.Popeye

You have no idea what you are talking about. The Arjun (Mk.1) whooped the T-90S in pretty much every parameter, the issues holding back more orders lay in the infrastructure and support side as is natural with an all new product designed around a new ethos (more Western than Russian) and thus it will take time for the IA to create the requisite infrastructure to support these beasts.

Thats what I said, but deducing, reasoning, comprehension skills of some members, it appears, are .....................hmm.................
 
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the infratructure around LoC and in both Punjabs along with Rajasthan is more suited for tank weighing 45 to 50 tons. There is a reason IA kept weight limit of FMBT to 50 tons.

Arjun can be only used along LoC and not along chinese border


So the question remains why didn't DRDO developed 45 ton MBT so as to replace old tanks in numbers
 
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Story of MBT 80- Arjun

Besides the news of Pakistan's supposed aquisition of M 1 Abrams, had impact on the MBT 80 Arjun Project too.

Nice post and explains the addition in capabilities however, Arjun should be made to replace old Indian tanks in numbers which are lighter and later enhancements could be done.

As a thought, is it possible to downgrade Arjun to T-72 level so as the weight,size and cost can be reduced and India can produce it in masses?
 
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When you buy a new chair for your house, do you throw out all the existing ones just because the new one is better. What a bunch of fanbouys do we have here :lol:
Well if my limit is 600 than I will sell older ones and replace them with new ones
 
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Thats what I said, but deducing, reasoning, comprehension skills of some members, it appears, are .....................hmm.................

That's the problem, although that goes for many Indian members too who just claim about Arjun is better lets induct it in numbers. The important point as you pointed out is, the operational requirements of IA and how the tanks suits them. Arjun is better than the T90 in some areas, the MK2 upgrade has closed several performance weakpoints of the MK1, but the 68t weight will be a big operational problem and as shown in the Arjun thread ( Arjun-II MBT development l Updates & discussion. | Page 36 ), even CVRDE officials admit that. So it's good that the MK2 is much better than the MK1 in certain fields, but that doesn't mean it can be operated wherever the army wants to use MBT's. Arjun will have it's place within their doctrine, but the number of orders is not dependent on how many older tanks are there to replace, but on how many are needed for the operational needs.

On a side note, besides the Arjun vs T90 dicussions. The MK2 upgrade as said was meant to fix problems of the MK1 and logically the 124 MK1s should be upgraded to MK2 level. That however will increase their weight roughly about 10ts and they would face the same operartional limitations. That makes it rather interesting to see what IA decides now, if they upgrade them fully to MK2 standard or just take certain upgrades to limit the weight and keep them more variable than new MK2s.

As a thought, is it possible to downgrade Arjun to T-72 level so as the weight,size and cost can be reduced and India can produce it in masses?

That's what the Tank Ex offer was:

Tank Ex Prototype Main Battle Tank | Military-Today.com


I still think that they should consider a new offer, based on the T90 chassis and Arjun MK2 turret.
 
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