DieselHello. This is a strict question to Australian tank crews, or people that have a direct knowledge about subject of my question.
What fuel Australian Army use for M1's? It is a diesel or JP-8 like in US Army?
DieselHello. This is a strict question to Australian tank crews, or people that have a direct knowledge about subject of my question.
What fuel Australian Army use for M1's? It is a diesel or JP-8 like in US Army?
By using diesel are their any performance trade offs?Diesel
There's no performance issues that you'd notice. The reason our Abrams use diesel is simply because that's what everything else in the brigades use. The Australian Army just doesn't have enough helicopters for JP8 to be widely available. The US has so many that its easier just running everything on JP8.By using diesel are their any performance trade offs?
I can understand the logic by using diesel it is the choice of fuel outside of the major regional centres but with training ranges close to major fuel terminals jet would be readily available. It would be interesting to see the margin for which goverment pays for dist and jet.
While it doesn’t look pretty it’s not half the mess it would be if it was an armd, engr, inf or other sub unit getting the mess around.I see 4th Regiment RAA has only 107 Battery on it's ORBAT with 3 "troops" of 4 guns within the single gun Battery and 3 Observation Post Batteries, whilst 8/12 has 3 gun batteries (101, 102 and 103) with a single Operations Support Battery, whilst 1st Regiment RAA has 1 gun battery with 3 troops of 4 guns (notionally until delivered) and 3 Observation Batteries...
USMC run their Abrams on diesel. So we just have the same engine set up as they do.By using diesel are their any performance trade offs?
It could be a way around a penalty clause. Because the Kiwi ones are all late they are all delivered by Antanov 124 to Ohakea at NHs expense which one pundit figured out was $20mill per delivery, so thats equivalent of one free one for us (four deliveries).So Australia is getting a free NH-90 off Eurocopter.
Buy 46 and get one free
Eurocopter Gives Australia Free NH90 Chopper in Delay Accord - Bloomberg
We never hear about a Defence company giving away free kit to its clients.I am very curious to this tactic from Eurocopter.The Australian Government must have applied a lot of pressure toward Eurocopter.
How is this program travelling,must not be going to well if it is being sweetened by a free chopper.
The 47th airframe was mentioned in a Defence press release about a week ago, the relevant paragraph:So Australia is getting a free NH-90 off Eurocopter.
Buy 46 and get one free
Eurocopter Gives Australia Free NH90 Chopper in Delay Accord - Bloomberg
We never hear about a Defence company giving away free kit to its clients.I am very curious to this tactic from Eurocopter.The Australian Government must have applied a lot of pressure toward Eurocopter.
How is this program travelling,must not be going to well if it is being sweetened by a free chopper.
Me thinks wired can't tell the difference between M40 106mm and Carl Gustav 84mm.A US site, wired.com is carrying a story stating that the Australian Army, along with the Danes, used the M40, 106mm recoilless rifle in Afghanistan.
It was my belief that they were well and truely in the back of the warehouse.
I know Wired as being a techno-gaming magazine geared towards hipsters and computer/platform gamers. I have read a few Defence-related articles from them, but I have found their 'Defence' reporters to be generally more clueless about defence than regular broadsheet journo outlets like the NYT, WSJ, Washington Post, etc.Me thinks wired can't tell the difference between M40 106mm and Carl Gustav 84mm.
I can see a definite future for a guided rocket system on the Tiger ARH, the MH-60R Romeo and perhaps on a UAV system in years to come.Australia is firmly committed to Plan Beersheba a combined arms team format centered on multi-role brigade. With the current government’s aversion for a tracked in-direct fire support platform (SPG) and since Abrams in the direct fire support role and is not likely to be sent overseas. Does the Army need a more mobile light direct fire support system such as Lockheed DAGR which would also be compatible with Tiger ARH EO.
Obviously DAGR won’t replace Abrams in heavy amour support role when needed such as in Operation Hammer (Battle of Binh Ba) but can provide additional support to ASLAV or M113 in the over watch role such as the Battle of Derapet. It may be able to be placed on Hawkei PMV or M113 for a wheeled and tracked version, my only problem is reload time and the effort needed to sustain it in the field.
Is it something that would be needed as part of an Amphibious Assault Task Group or would we be better off just relying on Tiger ARH and SPG at a later date (hopefully).
Lockheed Demos DAGR Missile Ground Vehicle Launch Capability from JLTV | Missiles & Bombs News at DefenceTalk
Lockheed Martin Demonstrates DAGR Missile Ground Vehicle Launch Capability from JLTV - YouTube
PMVs are going to the CSSBs; a SQN each.The latest edition of Army News has a number of articles regarding Plan Beersheba.
The first of the Armoured Cavalry Regiments deployed on an excercise with 3 Brigade.
And how do the Bushmaster PMVs fit into this structure?
Are they allocated to each Infantry Battalion directly or are they operated by Reserves?
That's not the definitive version of the ACR, its just what Armd Regt happened to take with them for TS/Hamel. With the ASLAVs, the full ACR will have more than 30. If you include the A1 Ech, A2 Ech and Regt HQ, the ACR will have over 40 ASLAVs. 2RAR are also supposed to get two troops in direct support as well. To put that in perspective, the current structure has 18 ASLAV troops, the new structure will have 14. Considering that all the ASLAVs are being returned from theatre and reconditioned, all the Phase 4 prototypes have been returned and the ASLAV-S are finally be delivered, the regiments will be fully equipped for the first time in a long time.The latest edition of Army News has a number of articles regarding Plan Beersheba.
The first of the Armoured Cavalry Regiments deployed on an excercise with 3 Brigade.
What is interesting is the composition of the new ACR.
441 Soldiers
14 Abrams
30 ASLAVs
55 M113 AS4s
2 M88s
I don't know if this is the definitive structure of an ACR but if it is, it seems that many ASLAVs will be mothballed (or handed to the Reserves?).
Currently I believe EACH of the two current Cavalry Regiments operates around 90 ASLAVs, whereas only 30 will be needed for each of the three new Armoured Cavalry Regiments. So effectively the six current ASLAV Cavalry Squadrons will be reduced to only three.
And how do the Bushmaster PMVs fit into this structure?
Are they allocated to each Infantry Battalion directly or are they operated by Reserves?
The ACR structure has been decided (down to the last soldier and last piece of equipment), however it is only a proposed structure and has yet to be tested. 1 Armd Regt are testing it on TALISMAN SABRE. All the considered opinion is that it will fail miserably.Has a final structure for each of the Armoured Cavalry Regiments been decided and if so is it public knowledge?
Yes and no. 2 RAR is only forming the basis for the ARE, not the full ARG, so anything not needed for the ARE will not be part of the 2 RAR orbat. Essentially, 2 RAR will simply be two AREs, with one being online at any one time. The elements of the ARE that are not organic to an infantry battalion will be raised, trained and sustained by the relevant unit in 3 Bde, but allocated direct support to 2 RAR. For instance, the ASLAVs in direct support to 2 RAR will remain part of 2 CAV (the 3 Bde ACR), but will do all their collective training with the relevant rifle company of 2 RAR.If 2RAR is going to have attached armour is it also going to have an attached artillery detachment , engineers etc and form an Australian version of a Marine Expeditionary Unit?