As I said, im more interested in a proof-of-concept at this stage. However, the Namera comes with a pricetag of merely 700K $. Granted, with the modifications i prosed so far that price would quickly jump up, but still stay within an acceptable price-range (at least for me ).Those being:
- price
- weight
- size
- difficult weapon mounts
Thats really nice that you and Waylander have cleared your mis communication issue Heres a little tid bit for you, the M1A2 SEP Tusk weighs in alot heavier than what you have stated. Stock M1A2 SEP is at 69 tons.Miscommunications solved. Back on topic
As I said, im more interested in a proof-of-concept at this stage. However, the Namera comes with a pricetag of merely 700K $. Granted, with the modifications i prosed so far that price would quickly jump up, but still stay within an acceptable price-range (at least for me ).
The weight wouldnt be that high. A Puma "C" weighs in at 42t, A M-1A2 SEP TUSK at 69t. The propsed vehicle would come in somewhere between these. Since it mainly would be used in MOUT and thereby mainly be used on roads or hard-packed surfaces i dont see a direct problem there either. Of course, traversing bridges and similar would be a problem on most occasions, but same goes for tanks and to a lesser extent a Puma "C".
The width of the vehicles are similar as goes hight of them. Both the Puma "C" and Leo 2A4 are 3,7m wide and the Namera is 3,72. Height is a mere 2,35 for the namera, and 3m for both Puma "A" and Leopard 2A5 (turretroof on all). So size wouldnt be an issue when comparing these vehicles in their current version. Granted, a Namera with proper weaponry would be higher.
Weapons mounts.Yes i understand your position on this, and it is indeed a tricky one. But as i said earlier: if one would use the turret of the Puma and then mount the AGL in a tightly designed RWS and place it on the foredeck (on the engine basicly) this would still allow the mainturret to traverse 360 degrees with lesser downward angle at 12 o'clock, at the same time allowing the AGL to bear fire at about 140-190 degrees to the front. A much smaller RWS with a MG (like the KMW FWT100 on the ARV Büffel) on the back would cover the rear area in a nice way without restricting the mainturret too much. Or as you mentioned waylander, fire it thru a backdoor firingport.
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And yes, i really really want more armour than Puma "C" gives. What if one would encounter a S-60 mounted on a truck, that would ruin the Puma-crews day pretty much.
I mean we all know (or should know) why MBTs arent prefered in Urban warfare, yet the israelis and russians both came to the conclusion that you need MBT-level armour in MOUT. Arguebly these nations have the most experience of MOUT presently. I think its important to explore further the reasons and solutions they had instead of rely on expreinces gained long ago. Battlefields change over time after all. And while its true that one shouldnt disregard old truths, one shouldnt be hesistant to explore new angles either.
Also, while you are quite right that the proposed vehicle is a can-do-all-but-fly like the original Marder, the Israelis have had mutliple RWS on several vehicles for quite some time now. Obviously they came to a different conclusion based on their experiences in the 80s and 90s, than the germans did in the 60s. What are the differences made that so drastically changed the two solutions?
Ask yourself just how likely that is though - that would be a big truck (a S-60 weighs 4.6 tons dry), and your forces should have at least enough in previous intelligence reports to make this a prime artillery/airstrike target.And yes, i really really want more armour than Puma "C" gives. What if one would encounter a S-60 mounted on a truck, that would ruin the Puma-crews day pretty much.
Err, depends on the tons.Stock M1A2 SEP is at 69 tons.
Err - that would depend on the combat load layout, the amount of heat rds versus sabot. M1A1 would weigh in at 67 (metric) tons with traditional combat load layout.Err, depends on the tons.
Stock M1A2 SEP weighs 69.54 short tons, ie ~139,000 lbs, ie 63.1 metric tons.
... and no, that's not the M1A1, before anyone starts. The baseline M1A1 weighed 130,800 lbs.
Add 2 metric tons, if going with the belly armor package then you need to add 1.5 additional metric tons on top of the 2 metric tons.got a wight on the TUSK?
Streets tend to be not that stable when one has to deal with streets in less developed countries. And one of the reasons why traditional tanks are not that well liked in urban warfare scenarios is not only because of their focussing on frontal armor, comparable small gun elevation and less usefull weapons package but also because they tend to have problems with streets and bridges. Raising the weight above MLC50 (With the proposed armor even more) is not going to solve these problems. The Puma is already a heavy beast.The weight wouldnt be that high. A Puma "C" weighs in at 42t, A M-1A2 SEP TUSK at 69t. The propsed vehicle would come in somewhere between these. Since it mainly would be used in MOUT and thereby mainly be used on roads or hard-packed surfaces i dont see a direct problem there either. Of course, traversing bridges and similar would be a problem on most occasions, but same goes for tanks and to a lesser extent a Puma "C".
The width of the vehicles are similar as goes hight of them. Both the Puma "C" and Leo 2A4 are 3,7m wide and the Namera is 3,72. Height is a mere 2,35 for the namera, and 3m for both Puma "A" and Leopard 2A5 (turretroof on all). So size wouldnt be an issue when comparing these vehicles in their current version. Granted, a Namera with proper weaponry would be higher.
Nobody wants to put a RWS in front of the turret. The resulting restriction in downward angle is going to bite you in the a** when you are in a hull down position.Weapons mounts.Yes i understand your position on this, and it is indeed a tricky one. But as i said earlier: if one would use the turret of the Puma and then mount the AGL in a tightly designed RWS and place it on the foredeck (on the engine basicly) this would still allow the mainturret to traverse 360 degrees with lesser downward angle at 12 o'clock, at the same time allowing the AGL to bear fire at about 140-190 degrees to the front. A much smaller RWS with a MG (like the KMW FWT100 on the ARV Büffel) on the back would cover the rear area in a nice way without restricting the mainturret too much. Or as you mentioned waylander, fire it thru a backdoor firingport.
The Israelis also use modified M113s. One can hardly name this MBT like protection.I mean we all know (or should know) why MBTs arent prefered in Urban warfare, yet the israelis and russians both came to the conclusion that you need MBT-level armour in MOUT. Arguebly these nations have the most experience of MOUT presently. I think its important to explore further the reasons and solutions they had instead of rely on expreinces gained long ago. Battlefields change over time after all. And while its true that one shouldnt disregard old truths, one shouldnt be hesistant to explore new angles either.
Also, while you are quite right that the proposed vehicle is a can-do-all-but-fly like the original Marder, the Israelis have had mutliple RWS on several vehicles for quite some time now. Obviously they came to a different conclusion based on their experiences in the 80s and 90s, than the germans did in the 60s. What are the differences made that so drastically changed the two solutions?
Just the wrong smiley or was this ironic?Thats really nice that you and Waylander have cleared your mis communication issue
Wrong smiley, motor skills suck without that first cup of java.Just the wrong smiley or was this ironic?