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2 men crew with autoloader
Russian tanks always had autoloader
that means no more tank commanders? I wonder what type of difference that would make
I flew an aircraft before, does that make me an authority on the F-22?
lol a lot of hype on both side, maybe we should talk to someone who actually drove tank for a living
@Davos what do you think
G'day Mate
Don't know much about the Armata I am afraid, in fact, I don't think anyone beside the people who build them know what's inside an Armata, we can guess how good it is or how bad it is but I don't think I can find a way to compare the Armata to other Modern Main Battle Tank like the Abrams, Leopard II or Leclerc
I can, however, comment on the issue we already known and how the Russian took advantage or being in disadvantage compare to Western Tank
First of all, Armata is the base chassis for all Future Russian Armoured Vehicle, the base, as we all known will be of the same design, so you can almost certainly knows the chassis would be a modular chassis, otherwise it cannot function as an universal platform it said it could.
Modular chassis is not a new concept, the Israeli uses the same idea on their Merkava, while the concept was good, but there are a few flaw, such as crew system, transmission and load/weight distribution, those are the problem that plague the Israeli Merkava series.
However, the Merkava design was originally to include troop transport capability, so basically it already double as a troop carrier, even so, the weight distribution have seriously impeded the capability of Merkava as a SP Howitzer, and if I remembered correctly, I don't believe it was fixed even today.
Another problem with the Armata is that it uses an autoloader with remote unmanned turret. Basically, it fixed the issue basically associated with autoloader tank the Russian used before, which is to protect the crew from munitions cook off, however, with a remote unmanned automated turret, one very big problem I can think of is what if the tank gun misfired??
Now, I don't know if the autoloader system have been improved to a point it can handle misfire situation. Traditional Autoloader cannot take out the round already loaded in chamber, let alone deal with a jammed round. When this happened, the gunner would need to have access to the gun, and the one thing being remote operation is it tend to be hard to gain access to the breech, especially when you are using an Autoloader, which in the old days involved disassemble the autoloader assembly and then take care of the round inside the breech.
On the back of that issue, one can also imagine what could happen when the system broke down altogether mid fight. Unless there is a way the Armata can switch from Automatic Loading to Manual Loading, the unmanned turret would increase work load for the gunner or the crew when it suffer some malfunction.
Another issue I can think of is being a 3 man crew in tank configuration, and with a automatic turret, if one man is down, then the whole tank would have to be written out. Where in a 4 men tank, we have a Gunner, Loader, Driver and Commander, which one position is always redundant. And with a 3 men crew, you only have a Driver, Commander/Communication and a Gunner. Which mean if one of them were hit and incapacitated, the tank have to either go on either can shoot but cannot spot target, or can spot target but cannot run or can run and spot but cannot shoot.
Another problem related to a 3 men crew would be the maintenance issue, each crew maintain their own tank, with a more complicated tank and you have less crew member to perform daily maintenance on it, either they would have to drive to an assigned spot for unit maintenance everyday after action, which waste time, or they would have to have more man hour to tank providing field maintenance. Which would draw away man power because you will need to provide security to the tank while they are undergone surgery.
But to conclude, I will have to say, if all of the issue above have been fixed for Armata and that does not affect much of the operational status of the tank, then this would be a good place to start the new generation, it minimize the logtrain, basic maintenance and also crew training to a very great deal, but as I said, this would be a very big gamble and currently, we only know that much to comment on whether or not the Armata is a success or failure.
Davos
Another problem with the Armata is that it uses an autoloader with remote unmanned turret. Basically, it fixed the issue basically associated with autoloader tank the Russian used before, which is to protect the crew from munitions cook off, however, with a remote unmanned automated turret, one very big problem I can think of is what if the tank gun misfired??
Another issue I can think of is being a 3 man crew in tank configuration, and with a automatic turret, if one man is down, then the whole tank would have to be written out. Where in a 4 men tank, we have a Gunner, Loader, Driver and Commander, which one position is always redundant. And with a 3 men crew, you only have a Driver, Commander/Communication and a Gunner. Which mean if one of them were hit and incapacitated, the tank have to either go on either can shoot but cannot spot target, or can spot target but cannot run or can run and spot but cannot shoot.
Another problem related to a 3 men crew would be the maintenance issue, each crew maintain their own tank, with a more complicated tank and you have less crew member to perform daily maintenance on it, either they would have to drive to an assigned spot for unit maintenance everyday after action, which waste time, or they would have to have more man hour to tank providing field maintenance. Which would draw away man power because you will need to provide security to the tank while they are undergone surgery.