Terran
Well-Known Member
The main issue with the Soviet design is that it lacks elevation and depression on the gun. Even the Armata tank moved somewhat away from the classic Soviet very low profile.
The main weight saving for Soviet tanks was to move from a manned loader with the associated space needed for said loader to the automatic Carousel loader which moved the ammunition to the hull almost entirely, reduced the crew size and crew compartment size to two men in the turret. Already French Leclerc moved to an Autoloader but bustle mounted as the carousels tend to use the crew compartment as a blow out panel resulting in 2/3 of the crew having a dramatically lower chance of survival. After Leclerc came type 90, K2 and Type 10 which followed this design. Also came Altay which didn’t.
Generally I think the next generation Western MBT will follow a bustle loader. The XM8 system was tested yes but as a light tank it used smaller ammunition. It’s highly doubtful that tank crews will be reduced below 3 man crews, which is already used in Leclerc
The UAV is of interest as it means the tank has even more of a observation point than currently available. I don’t see a tube launched system as a need it would just eat up ammunition stowage. Rather a roof mounted system. I believe that future IFV and APC will also gain such. The point being that you can now see farther beyond the horizon even using it for targeting. As well as seeing beyond buildings and urban development.
as to engines we already are seeing development of diesel/Multifuel electric systems having matured. The key advantage is weight and power management. Weight as even a Modern turbo diesel is still heavier than a Gas turbine but the electric drive is substantially lighter than a conventional transmission. Well also being more efficient in power management, quieter and less in need of maintenance. Farther the Electric motor generates the preferred type of low end torque.
As to trying to parts share between tank and IFV that will depend on the IFV. Some armies are moving hard to HIFV but that type of vehicle being based off a tank hull is better suited to an army that is more direct in nature. The biggest proponent seems to be the Israelis, Russians and Jordanians but If you are the Israeli army for example all your fighting is pretty much inside your own boarders or very close to them. As such all your deployments are such that you can drive to the front. It’s joked that the IDF doesn’t need a MRE system as they can order takeout. The Russians have been adopting such a system yet again the Russian army fights on on roads and from its own boarders.
Most NATO fighting has however been indirect needing transportation beyond either Europe or the American continents. This drives for lighter weight. Yet that weight is based on the protection offered to the crew and passengers. A few years back the US was looking at designing a vehicle to offer HIFV protection UN the GCV initiative. Concepts ended up weighing 80 tons with full armor load outs. Transportation of such a vehicle is pretty much impractical by ship impossible by air.
This is the issue with the HIFV it ends up weighing as much as the MBT it’s often based off if not more as you try and equalize the protection. The Namer and Merkava series tanks are the prefect example here they are built off the same General family with degrees of parts share but also the same weight.
Though vehicles like the Lynx and Redback are classed in the HIFV they seem to still sit at the lighter weight than most modern MBT. It may be possible down the road to use parts of their suspension systems and automotive systems for a NGMBT. But not the hull form as that is decidedly IFV oriented in design with a higher profile.
The main weight saving for Soviet tanks was to move from a manned loader with the associated space needed for said loader to the automatic Carousel loader which moved the ammunition to the hull almost entirely, reduced the crew size and crew compartment size to two men in the turret. Already French Leclerc moved to an Autoloader but bustle mounted as the carousels tend to use the crew compartment as a blow out panel resulting in 2/3 of the crew having a dramatically lower chance of survival. After Leclerc came type 90, K2 and Type 10 which followed this design. Also came Altay which didn’t.
Generally I think the next generation Western MBT will follow a bustle loader. The XM8 system was tested yes but as a light tank it used smaller ammunition. It’s highly doubtful that tank crews will be reduced below 3 man crews, which is already used in Leclerc
The UAV is of interest as it means the tank has even more of a observation point than currently available. I don’t see a tube launched system as a need it would just eat up ammunition stowage. Rather a roof mounted system. I believe that future IFV and APC will also gain such. The point being that you can now see farther beyond the horizon even using it for targeting. As well as seeing beyond buildings and urban development.
as to engines we already are seeing development of diesel/Multifuel electric systems having matured. The key advantage is weight and power management. Weight as even a Modern turbo diesel is still heavier than a Gas turbine but the electric drive is substantially lighter than a conventional transmission. Well also being more efficient in power management, quieter and less in need of maintenance. Farther the Electric motor generates the preferred type of low end torque.
As to trying to parts share between tank and IFV that will depend on the IFV. Some armies are moving hard to HIFV but that type of vehicle being based off a tank hull is better suited to an army that is more direct in nature. The biggest proponent seems to be the Israelis, Russians and Jordanians but If you are the Israeli army for example all your fighting is pretty much inside your own boarders or very close to them. As such all your deployments are such that you can drive to the front. It’s joked that the IDF doesn’t need a MRE system as they can order takeout. The Russians have been adopting such a system yet again the Russian army fights on on roads and from its own boarders.
Most NATO fighting has however been indirect needing transportation beyond either Europe or the American continents. This drives for lighter weight. Yet that weight is based on the protection offered to the crew and passengers. A few years back the US was looking at designing a vehicle to offer HIFV protection UN the GCV initiative. Concepts ended up weighing 80 tons with full armor load outs. Transportation of such a vehicle is pretty much impractical by ship impossible by air.
This is the issue with the HIFV it ends up weighing as much as the MBT it’s often based off if not more as you try and equalize the protection. The Namer and Merkava series tanks are the prefect example here they are built off the same General family with degrees of parts share but also the same weight.
Though vehicles like the Lynx and Redback are classed in the HIFV they seem to still sit at the lighter weight than most modern MBT. It may be possible down the road to use parts of their suspension systems and automotive systems for a NGMBT. But not the hull form as that is decidedly IFV oriented in design with a higher profile.