I think you know what I ment with "going were the Abrams goes". I mean operating in the same terrain with the same speed. Not facing enemy fire. And it is possible.
This has to be te target of every knew IFV.
Or do you think the grunts are happy with a vehicle which slows down the entire group during mobile engagements? I would not feel very happy with this as a squadmember in the back.
Ok, I will repeat again. Aside from the fairly well known fact that the formation moves at the speed of the slowest element in it, in the Australian Army the
Infantry calls the pace. Abrams goes where the Infantry goes, and not the other way around.
Now how fast does infantry IFV
NEED to go? Let's say the suspension on the IFV can be improved to achieve a 200% performance over M113. That would give it a 60km/h
off-road speed. Is this realistic, wanted, NEEDED by the
Australian Army (even if it is a selling point for the Puma in Saudi Arabia, Singapore or Brazil)?
For sure you can achieve everything you want but it needs a huge load of money and time.
Yes, or one can improve the project management and utilise as many COTS components as possible (or COTS varians that do not attract significant cost escalation in manufacturing).
I think two chassis would be better. IMHO you would need to make too many compromises when using the same chassis. But these two chassis can for sure be modular and I also think that modularity is the way to go.
I think innovative use of enginnering can allow use of a single chassis.
And what is outside the box? Have you thought about this?.
Yes, I have thought about it. Wooki found my ideas goofy, but 'goofy' ideas have saved an awfull lot of soldiers over the past century. I will not discuss them in a public forum though.
For sure there has no way an IFV can withstand everything but proper frontal armor for duells against enemy IFVs and a good all around protection against low level enemy weapons and IEDs/Mines should be a target, especially when looking at the emphasisis on oversea missions.
Airlift is another factor. The Puma for example would have been an even bigger monster if cold war wouldn't had ended.
Airlift is not a factor for Australian Army. Having four C-17s does not make us airliftable. Majority of equipment will still be going to combat in ships.
Please forgie me for saying this (and I am not trying to be patronising or condescending), but you have a distictly tanker's view of IFV design.
Tanks are relatively safe from a lot of threats infantry are not. To design a survivable IFV one needs to think in these terms. thinking in these terms quickly leads one to the conclusion that priority #1 in design is the ability to acquire the enemy
first, and defeat the target before it is able to counterattack. If the IFV is able to do this, it does not need increased armour.
he issue of mine/IED threat is entirely different to common infantry tasks because they are sapper tasks. Never send a tailor to do the shomaker's job.
The sappers need to have a very capable FV of their own, and be integrated into the infantry force structure and doctrine much more intimatelly then through simple mission cross-attachment. I would go so far as to actually integrate sappers into standard company and battalion organisation.
In any case counter-mine warfare is a problem not only for the infantry, and recon would be the first to receive any tools to deal with detection and nutralisation of such threats.
What do you think my posts about size, weight, gun performance, electronics, optics, etc. are about?
You not really tried to argument against my thoughts. You just say again ad again that it would be a waste without hard facts.
- THis turret is big not just the turret diameter. Makes it hard to put it onto a chassis and make it airdeployable in something smaller than a C-17
- The electronic and optics need and upgrade.
- The FCS needs and upgrade.
- The weight (11 tons) we are talking about even without the extra armor of you version and without ammo and equipment.
- The gun is neither top when it comes to AT capabilities, nor when it comes to infantry support. And it is hard to make a small vehicle taking the recoil of the gun..
As others pointed out, it may be too expensive to reuse the turret since to accomodate the recoil one would need to compensate in other ways which may cost more then use of low-pressure weapon.
I would think that two new chassis would be good for Australia.
One wheeled APC and one tracked IFV. Both modular (If bought now for example a mix of Boxer and CV90).
The IFV chassis for mech forces (IFV, AMOS mortar carrier, etc.)
The wheeled chassis for the other tasks (APC, C3i, EW, etc.)
Ok, but I think there is another solution.