Rubbish, for someone with your lack of credentials to make that comment is absolutely bunk.
And of course you know my credentials perfectly. Not that this forum has given me any reason to even state any credentials.
And the question i believe was about under "normal" conditions and regarding the turret, and unless i completely misrecall something my reply should be correct.
If you KNOW otherwise then i suggest you actually say so rather than simply claim that it cant be true because you dont have a clue who i am. Thats a complete failure in logic.
Its just as realistic to say as "i have an orange, ergo its my destiny to rule the world". Logical disconnect doesnt make a debate.
In this case? Not really no. You can find enough rumours about it online. And there´s no guarantee that it will ever go beyond prototype anyway.
Then you shouldn't, because you and a bunch of other opinionated folks out there have really over hyped short comings of the U.S Army logistical footprint issue, it works just fine and has proven to be able to get the job done.
In the relevant case here, this was due to comparing the M1 and the Leo 2.
Simple fact of the matter is that my own country(like most others) could never afford the kind of supply structure USA is running, which means that the ability of USAs supply chain becomes a completely irrelevant argument for claiming that the M1 being "fuel hungry" doesnt matter.
And in reply to "works just fine", well sure it does but to take an extreme counterpoint my own country at one time managed to keep a PK mission in Africa supplied at less than 1/10 of the cost per soldier "on the spot" than what is normal for USA.
And yes, that IS a very extreme case, but the normal is still less than 1/2 the cost.
Works fine is great as long as you can afford to pay for it at that rate.
And to do a little quoteslinging myself, "amateurs discuss strategy, professionals discuss supplies", well paraphrased at least IIRC.
So what, it is just as big as a diesel power pack heat signature not alot bigger. For target observation the turbine rules over the diesel. Your arguments are baseless and come from no real life experience.
I suggest you first start off by not quoting yourself and attributing it to me.
Following that i dont have a clue what you mean with the above as its selfcontradicting.
And then i just want to add that your arguments are baseless and come from no real life experience.
Obviously...
Hate to inform you of this but your glorified tank gillie technology isn't worth using when facing a modern opponent, its all in the modern cat eyes and and the way we roll.
gillie?
I dont think you´re talking about the same thing as i am. Not much resemblence in any way at all to a Ghillie suit. The closest thing to that would be modern camouflage nets, which also include thermal and radar reduction, but those reduce useful mobility severely and isnt nearly as useful as the stealth kit, which only adds a bit of maintenance cost and lowers top speed a bit.
Either that or you havent actually seen the drastic effect it has through a thermal imager(or on a radar).
Ha ha ha, you threw that one out there without doing your homework, what a load of crap.
Noone has still answered why Russia started switching turbine engines for diesels.
And nothing i said was specifically AS STATED incorrect even if its interpretation may very well be a bit on the less than great side.
And well, i can add this at least, my own country quit using the Strv-103 in part because the turbines wasnt a happy thing on a tank. Although in this case because the tank ALSO had a diesel for all but battlefield maneuvers, the reasons for this wasnt quite the same(in short, having 2 engines to service gets expensive even if it saved alot of fuel).
I dont know if i care to bother.
No one is making a stand that a turbine is not fuel thirsty and runs hot, but to state that this is a major short coming of this type of engine for tactical vehicles is what we are debating, diesel engines for example purposes run hot also and can be detected just as fast on the modern battle field as a turbine powered vehicle
Whats relevant is that the turbine engine gives a small advantage and that very few involved in tank design thinks this advantage is worth the disadvantages any more.
You get a small weight and size saving and more usefully you get a slightly more "oomph" while driving around...
However, the improvements in the diesels for tanks has shrunk those advantages quite alot since the M1 was designed (and for that matter, even more so since the Strv-103 was designed with both diesel and turbine engines).
More importantly is that you NEED an extreme supply chain to keep ground vehicles with turbine engines running, and with oil inevitably getting more scarce and more expensive its a matter of the disadvantages overtaking the advantages.
My own experience in testing thermal imagers is that an M1 can be seen at longer range than a Leo 2(or other dieselpowered tank, the Leo 2 in original isnt exactly the least visible one), this is the opinion of myself and others based on real world conditions, you can disagree as much as you care but i simply dont have a clue how you can do that.
However, if then you strap on the full stealth kit on the Leo 2(or even better, on a LeClerc which is clearly less visible from the start), the full difference you get is enough that i can say that it gives a clearly valuable tactical advantage. Ie. if a Leo 2 with stealth kit and a M1-A1 hunts each other, chances are very good that the Leo will be able to start shooting potential killing shots before the M1 have seen it(of course, firing means being seen, VERY seen).
And the very basic reality is that you cant use the same kind of IR reduction gear that is part of the Leo 2 stealth kit on a M1, as the turbine engine prevents it. Or more correctly, if you modify it to work with a turbine engine, you kill off half the power of the engine. Leaving it without all the advantages that was the very reason for using it from the start.
This is something that I covered in one of the Iraqi M1A1SA threads, as I have stated we have knowned all along that the AGT1500 is fuel thirsty especially sitting at idle, with newer technologies that are floating around for turbines it is possibly to get the fuel consumption lowered, can we get fuel consumption to a level compared to a diesel power pact I do not know
While its truly a huge improvement, nope you cant(almost certainly at least, i wont say its impossible because it IS impossible to predict the future, but extremely unlikely at least) get it down to diesel range average fuel consumption. In part that is for the simple reason that the diesels in question are getting improvements as well.
As far as heat signature goes I have looked at vehicles that range in size compared to a Russian T series all the way up to a Leopard and Challenger size vehicle and I have never run into a issue of target detection all the way out beyond 2,500 meters, thats both in thermal black hot or white hot, vehicles with newer Gillie suites benefit only with extended target detection range at the current times and the vehicle has to be stationary.
In that case, as i already guessed above, you´re not talking about the same as i am for sure.
What im talking about does NOT require being stationary.
The only reason why Russia has decided to not stick with the T-80 turbine engine is due to cost factors not because they are junk, they like the U.S have found that they work rather well for the following reasons:
Who ever said anything about them being junk?
Excellent engines. Just like the one in the M1s. Cost however, oh yes.
Exhaust signature during daylight hours, diesels tend to be smokers.
Huh?!? NO WAY!!! WTF kind of diesel powered tanks have you been looking at? Or maybe it was you doing the smoking?
:
But seriously, thats a matter of either poor maintenance, bad fuel or bad lubricants.
And i might add that you can easily get either a turbine engined T-80 or M1 to trail smoke the same way, even if they´re less sensitive to bad fuel.
More reliable during extreme cold temperatures.
Partially true. One of the main reasons why Sweden choose the Leo 2 over the M1 was the latters poor performance during the winter trials here. OTOH, the T-80 that was unofficially being tested as part of the trials did not have the same problems so the likely cause was narrowed down to lubricants, and the US manufacturer did guarantee that they could and would take care of that problem(regardless of Swedish purchase or not), so its quite possible that this is no longer an issue. I have simply not kept up to date with this part.
And it was an overall issue, that specifically wet & cold weather really hurt the M1 badly (well, deep snow really killed it as well), with even gunnery tests suffering alot, and i must say that seeing one getting towed out of heavy snow by the T-80(which while by far the most inferior tank overall, was the only one that moved through heavy snow unhindered) was quite amusing.
The Leo-2 meanwhile had what you might call "average" problems with heavy snow. It didnt bog down even if it got seriously slow at worst.
matter of fact there are alot of countries out there that admire and have studied the U.S logistical system.
Yes, with dread...
:
If we had tried to copy that supply chain, we would have to cut active troop numbers by 2/3s or more. During the cold war that would have meant armed forces after mobilisation at at most 300.000 or less, not nearly enough to make reasonably sure to be a "too big bite to chew off" as was the basics of Swedish defence, because we well knew that trying to be impossible to invade would cost impossibly much both in money and in personnel.