T-90 in Comparison to Western Armour

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eckherl

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
No, it is extremely difficult to change armour configuration on short run production lines. I suspect this is the reason Indians will do their own production for 1000 or so units.

The Russian Army has T-90C also, and this is where the confusion comes from. The original T-90C was developed for the Iranians, but that never went through, and the production went to the Russian Army instead, and as demonstrators for Indians.

Cheers
Greg
Is the Iranian deal completely off the books now, or is there still a glimmer of hope that they may purchase knock off kits.
 

XaNDeR

New Member
Well russian tanks have been using special cloaking to reduce their RCS for some time already , thats nothing new
 

Chrom

New Member
So how effective are the Russians finding out that this paint is, I assume that they are using it on all their armored vehicles now.
I dont know anything exact about paint except what it "reduces radar, laser and thermal signatures". Guess it is classiffied...
 

eckherl

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
I dont know anything exact about paint except what it "reduces radar, laser and thermal signatures". Guess it is classiffied...
Ahh - I wouldn`t place too much stock in it for more modern FCU compenents, this is why they are testing a new Gilee suite out that will cover the vehicles, the only benefits we get from our paint jobs is resistance to chemicals that may be thrown at us.
 

FutureTank

Banned Member
Is the Iranian deal completely off the books now, or is there still a glimmer of hope that they may purchase knock off kits.
It is completely off the books. There are several factors, one of which was transfer of technology illegally to Pakistan which would have put unwanted stress on a much larger and complex Indian procurement relationship. It was also suspected that Iran were going to start producing their own counterfeit T-90s as a 'domestic initiative', where as Indians are actually playing it according to rules.
Then there was pressure from US to curtail all defence sales to Iran, and from Israel who feared the T-90s eventually finding their way to Syria.
It didn't help that Russians keep catching Iranian citizens in the Caucasus.

Cheers
Greg
 

FutureTank

Banned Member
So how effective are the Russians finding out that this paint is, I assume that they are using it on all their armored vehicles now.
Special paints have been in use for some time, and they are supposed to be used on all vehicles to various degree. There has never been adequate production availability in the paints, but the tanks always got the coats from manufacturer. The problem is that with time the paints degrade, and I'm not sure how effective the coats would be on some of the older models that have not been repainted during upgrades. I have no idea what the durability of the paints is, but usually 3-6 years is considered average. Considering these are armoured vehicles that experience all sorts of environmental effects on their surfaces, this may be less.

Of course the introduction of Nakidka recently has somewhat made the paint issue academic, at least of the newer production and modernization programs.

Cheers
Greg
 

FutureTank

Banned Member
I dont know anything exact about paint except what it "reduces radar, laser and thermal signatures". Guess it is classiffied...
There are actually three coats.
The undercoat has remained fairly standard since the 50s.
The next coat is the thermal suppressant which is a very difficult coat to apply due to its density. I'm not quite sure how it works, but essentially it would add to the thermal plume while reducing overall signature.
The third coat is a special coat that disperses the laser beam on contact so the designators can't get a good enough point for the seeker. I was told the last coat is very effective against all types of lasers currently in use by military applications, but have no specific source or data to confirm this.

Cheers
Greg
 

eckherl

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
It is completely off the books. There are several factors, one of which was transfer of technology illegally to Pakistan which would have put unwanted stress on a much larger and complex Indian procurement relationship. It was also suspected that Iran were going to start producing their own counterfeit T-90s as a 'domestic initiative', where as Indians are actually playing it according to rules.
Then there was pressure from US to curtail all defence sales to Iran, and from Israel who feared the T-90s eventually finding their way to Syria.
It didn't help that Russians keep catching Iranian citizens in the Caucasus.

Cheers
Greg
Which technology did Iran give to Pakistan, Pakistan pretty much leaned on Ukraine and China for their tank project, Al Khalid. Israel was really freaked out over this possible upgrade sale out of South Africa that came really close to going to Syria.
 

FutureTank

Banned Member
Which technology did Iran give to Pakistan, Pakistan pretty much leaned on Ukraine and China for their tank project, Al Khalid. Israel was really freaked out over this possible upgrade sale out of South Africa that came really close to going to Syria.
You know, I think tanks when designed should not only be good, but look good also, and the South Africans just butchered the T-72 which als all Soviet tanks, has a certain nice ballistic shape. What the f....are those bird boxes all over?! Boooo! :nutkick

:D

Ukranians have very old technology, and almost all the senior designers have left Ukraine for Russia, Europe, Israel and the USA because the funding in Ukraine is 0. All Ukraine is selling now is 80s technology with some upgrades. Hence the desire from Iran for T-90s.
Cheers
Greg
 

FutureTank

Banned Member
Which technology did Iran give to Pakistan, Pakistan pretty much leaned on Ukraine and China for their tank project, Al Khalid. Israel was really freaked out over this possible upgrade sale out of South Africa that came really close to going to Syria.
I forgot to mention some Russians/Ukranians also working in Turkey and a number have been enticed to India to help with setup of their production in addition to the contracted Russian staff.
Cheers
Greg
 

Chrom

New Member
You know, I think tanks when designed should not only be good, but look good also, and the South Africans just butchered the T-72 which als all Soviet tanks, has a certain nice ballistic shape. What the f....are those bird boxes all over?! Boooo! :nutkick

:D

Ukranians have very old technology, and almost all the senior designers have left Ukraine for Russia, Europe, Israel and the USA because the funding in Ukraine is 0. All Ukraine is selling now is 80s technology with some upgrades. Hence the desire from Iran for T-90s.
Cheers
Greg
I wouldnt describe Ukrainian technology that bad. "All Ukraine is selling now is 80s technology with some upgrades. " - this is certainly also true for T-90, or M1A2 for that matter. Generally, Ukrainian T-84 design is on-par with T-90, but lack self-sufficiency. Too many systems are either imported from Russia / West Europe, or just plain inferior if domestically produced.
 

eckherl

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
You know, I think tanks when designed should not only be good, but look good also, and the South Africans just butchered the T-72 which als all Soviet tanks, has a certain nice ballistic shape. What the f....are those bird boxes all over?! Boooo! :nutkick

:D

Ukranians have very old technology, and almost all the senior designers have left Ukraine for Russia, Europe, Israel and the USA because the funding in Ukraine is 0. All Ukraine is selling now is 80s technology with some upgrades. Hence the desire from Iran for T-90s.
Cheers
Greg
Those will be the independant day/night sights for the TC and gunner, kinda weird setup isn`t it.:D


What - we have some their engineers:unknown
They did a really good job on the T-84 and I think that it may be about even or if not better than the T-90. The Russians even copied them by going to the welded turret design approach.
 

Yasin20

New Member
why dosnt the wholl world just there money in with the worlds biggest arenas with the thicked concreate and glass wall and put in all of the worlds mbts just to see which one is better
 

FutureTank

Banned Member
Those will be the independant day/night sights for the TC and gunner, kinda weird setup isn`t it.:D


What - we have some their engineers:unknown
They did a really good job on the T-84 and I think that it may be about even or if not better than the T-90. The Russians even copied them by going to the welded turret design approach.
If I was an grunt with an ATGM I would be itching to shoot that thing off the turret :)

Nah, the cast turret was just a left over stock, and the welded was always projected, but the money was short so the Army decided to use up the turrets since they were already paid for. It is a common misconception that the T-90 was just a renamed T-72 because of that.

Cheers
Greg
 

FutureTank

Banned Member
why dosnt the wholl world just there money in with the worlds biggest arenas with the thicked concreate and glass wall and put in all of the worlds mbts just to see which one is better
I think I already made this suggestion sometime ago and even pointed out the arena - Central Australia. No need for concrete walls....no one around to get hurt except the poor bastards that will be in the contest. It'll sure test the airconditioning systems out also :D
 

eckherl

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
If I was an grunt with an ATGM I would be itching to shoot that thing off the turret :)

Nah, the cast turret was just a left over stock, and the welded was always projected, but the money was short so the Army decided to use up the turrets since they were already paid for. It is a common misconception that the T-90 was just a renamed T-72 because of that.

Cheers
Greg
Yea, makes you wonder how well they would last during a artillery barrage while in the middle of a meeting engagement.

Now Greg - I always thought that the reason they changed the model designation to T-90 was due to bad survivabilty issues seen on the T-72 series during the Chechen conflicts and Iraqi war, it seems that Russia was concerned that alot of countries were doubting the capability of the tank and orders were shrinking. I must add that it was unfair rap placed on the T-72, no tank during that time frame was going to survive that type of urban environment, the world found out the hard way that their multi million dollar iron chariots are not safe to the average ground pounder in certain environments.:D
 

eckherl

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
I think I already made this suggestion sometime ago and even pointed out the arena - Central Australia. No need for concrete walls....no one around to get hurt except the poor bastards that will be in the contest. It'll sure test the airconditioning systems out also :D
But we would not be able to bring our best tank slayer to the show. M829A3:D
 
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