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PLA working to develop unmanned armored vehicles

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The Chinese military is researching converting its armored fighting vehicles into unmanned ones, according to a senior officer of the People's Liberation Army.

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A tank is driven down a slope during an organized media tour at a People's Liberation Army engineering academy in Beijing on Tuesday. China is now making efforts to develop unmanned ground vehicles. [Photo/Agencies]


"Unmanned ground vehicles will play a very important role in future ground combat. Realizing that, we have begun to explore how to refit our armored vehicles into unmanned ones," said Major General Xu Hang, president of the PLA Academy of Armored Forces Engineering in Beijing.

"Though we have yet to develop unmanned tanks, I think it is an irreversible trend that computers will gradually replace humans to control those fighting machines."

Xu made his remarks during an open house event for domestic and overseas reporters on Tuesday that displayed the achievements of China's military buildup and showed the PLA's transparency.

In June, China North Industries Group Corp, one of the nation's major defense technology and equipment contractors, founded China's first research center dedicated to the development of unmanned ground vehicles in Beijing.

According to Meng Hong, deputy director of the center, the United States has invented a series of unmanned ground vehicles and put them to use in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They enable military personnel to investigate suspicious objects or perform other tasks in dangerous scenarios from a safe distance.

She noted that Chinese engineers have developed some unmanned military vehicles, but they have not been widely used by the PLA.

China has a full product chain of tanks and armored fighting vehicles, boasting domestically developed engines and weapons that are as advanced as those used by Western militaries, said a publicity officer with the contractor who declined to be named, citing company policy.

His words were echoed by Colonel Yu Kuilong, a senior tank researcher at the academy.

"Our ground forces have been upgrading their tanks and armored vehicles over the past years," he said. "Their new tanks are way better than what they had used since the 1960s in terms of maneuverability, firepower, control systems and users' comfort."

The academy has made huge strides in technological innovation, according to Senior Colonel Li Shengli, chief of the academy's training department.

Researchers at the academy developed cutting-edge driving and shooting simulators, which have enabled junior-grade students to gain experience of what it's like to operate a tank or armored fighting vehicle before they touch real ones, he said.

Xu, the general, said that the academy spends at least 200 million yuan ($32 million) a year on the research and development of new armaments.
 
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The Chinese military is researching converting its armored fighting vehicles into unmanned ones, .

"Unmanned ground vehicles will play a very important role in future ground combat. Realizing that, we have begun to explore how to refit our armored vehicles into unmanned ones,"

Well that can work but if you think about it most of the armor and the size is not needed if there are no passengers.
As long as something is big enough to carry a gun that's all you need. They need to be light enough to be airdropped.
 
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The PLA have converted many J-6s and J-7s into unmanned aircrafts。

Now they are about to do the same to its huge stockpile of armoured vehicles?

Very industrious and thrifty?:enjoy:
 
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The PLA have converted many J-6s and J-7s into unmanned aircrafts。

Now they are about to do the same to its huge stockpile of armoured vehicles?

Very industrious and thrifty?:enjoy:

Having no pilot in the vehicle makes a lot of sense. :tup:

Especially with drones. Since the pilots are not endangered, and we are limited only by the number of drones and missiles that we can produce with our manufacturing base. Which is a LOT.

The pilots can sit back in comfort, while we pump out endless numbers of drones and unmanned vehicles for them to control.
 
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Having no pilot in the vehicle makes a lot of sense. :tup:

Especially with drones. Since the pilots are not endangered, and we are limited only by the number of drones and missiles that we can produce with our manufacturing base. Which is a LOT.

The pilots can sit back in comfort, while we pump out endless numbers of drones and unmanned vehicles for them to control.

I think as targets would be better, realistic combat situation to the max.
 
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Technically speaking this is going to be a bit more difficult to achieve than UAVs/UCAVs, because of the variety of the terrain and the combat coordination and handling of several hundreds of tanks. The Task seems enormous, not of making the unmanned tanks which will be the "easiest" part, but to make them as efficient as the manned ones in battle. Just think about who will be remote piloting these tanks and from where? Are these stations (control vehicles) going to be as vulnerable -if not more- as the manned tanks?
These questions and many others should be answered before we can replace the manned tanks in their main task.
Although, It should be easier if applied for specific tasks as in urban warfare, where one can control them from buildings through GPS. As well as in many other specific situations..
 
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You mean like robots who act without being directly controlled?

Yep, already happening. Northrop Grumman RQ-4 Global Hawk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia has been flying on its own since 1998. Takes off by itself, flies to GPS waypoints, and lands by itself.

Technically speaking this is going to be a bit more difficult to achieve than UAVs/UCAVs, because of the variety of the terrain and the combat coordination and handling of several hundreds of tanks.
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It's already been done. They can be autonomous.
 
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Sorry, but Google and Volvo beat you guys to it.
 
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