Water Car Engineer
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2010
- Messages
- 13,313
- Reaction score
- 8
- Country
- Location
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
No, its rifled. Had a good discussion with the guy there. I was telling my friends that Army calls this tank MK1a while DRDO calls it MK2, hearing this the DRDO fellow called me up, rather angrily and told me i was wrong. When i asked him why they used rifled instead of smoothbore, he told me that it packs more punch and how they make it so that the tank column can sustain itself even when not under a armed helicopter umbrella cause of its LAHAT.
haha...I knew that..it was a poor attempt at humour on my part. I have a genuine doubt though. Can't they fit actual ERA over the IRCM module and leave only the IR sensor in the open?
well, if they fit ERA over it and a shell hit the ERA, the whole guidance unit may blow up due to the reactive explosion.
Can you stop whining?
Actually, I precisely asked him this and the answer was the same, all of them at the DRDO were in favour of rifled not smoothbore. He was even explaining it to me, but we were interrupted by a captain from the mechanised infantry from Ahmednagar. The fellow was more interested in talking to him than me.Very nice pics (y)
Regarding your question, either the DRDO fellow didnt know the drawbacks of a rifled gun or he was playing innocent, planning a gun around an atgm round is not a wise thing to do. Worst, making complete line of effective ammo for an obselete technology is one heck of a task, ask OFB.
There is NO advantage a 120 mm rifled gun enjoys over a modern 125mm or 120mm smoothbore gun. It has no long rod penetrators, no appropriate heat round (LAHAT is a 105mm round modified for 120mm).
If you go to the expo again, can you ask why they are insisting with rifled tech when the world has moved on to smoothbore, including the pioneers planning to follow suit i.e. the Brits provided their budget allows them to.
Sorry cant do that. I myself could love to go one more time, but the expo was open for civvies only on its last day. I had to run all over the place just to see everything before it closed.If you go to the expo again, can you ask why they are insisting with rifled tech when the world has moved on to smoothbore, including the pioneers planning to follow suit i.e. the Brits provided their budget allows them to.
That thing looks more like a testbed for something else in the future. It was put together rather quickly, so never expected much from it.
Rafael - Pip Vav Collaboration
The companies jointly offer the Indian Navy a weapon system for the medium and large ships called the "Typhoon", as well as a smaller system suitable for patrol boats - the "Mini Typhoon"
What does Rafael’s "Typhoon" cannon do at the Indian company’s Pip Vav exhibition booth? It turns out that the two companies are collaborating on the sale of systems for the Indian Navy.
Pip Vav is considered the largest private Indian defense company (most of the defense companies in India are governmental) and its owner also owns a large shipyard in Mumbai. At the company booth at the large defense exhibition in New Delhi, it presented systems which had developed jointly by the Indian company and several world leading companies - including collaboration with Rafael...
Israel and India to Jointly Develop Anti-Missile System
According the website defensenews, negotiations were held for over six months, and the plan was approved by the Indian defense ministry. The Indian system will be developed in cooperation with Rafael and IAI
India and Israel will jointly build an integrated anti-missile system to be deployed against Chinese nuclear and conventional missiles, according a report on defensenews.
The new program, which does not yet have a name, has been approved by the Indian Defence Ministry, with a contract expected to be signed in the next six months, according to a scientist with the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) at Defexpo.
The missile defense program will include the participation of Rafael and Israel Aircraft Industries, in partnership with DRDO and state-owned Bharat Dynamics Limited (BDL) and Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL)...
Since the explosion is directed outwards, there's some chance that it may survive, as against a hit without any protection. In any case, such weaknesses are part of every modern tank.
ok, a slightly offtopic questionguidance unit is sensitive equipment, a slight jitter or spall may cause havoc for it since ERA explosion works both ways.
ok, a slightly offtopic question
Incase of a nuclear detonation, the overpressure if not powerfull enough to destroy the tank will definately destroy and damage sensitive equipment mounted on the tank.? and render the tank useless in battle