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BATTLE: M-1 Abrams Vs. T-90
Haven't done one of these in a while.
The idea is simple, You pick the operators of the tanks based on who is using them now. Basically the Abrams is limited to the USA, Australia, Egypt, the democratic Iraq, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. Keep in mind, Only the American versions have Depleted Uranium armor protection. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_Abrams The T-90 would belong to Russia, India, Algeria, Saudi Arabia(,) and Turkmenistan http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-90 You can pick your battleground, since all the countries listed have every type of terrain. Urban, desert, grassland, steppes, tundra...you name it. Tactics are up to you, I will try not to give anyone the upper hand. For my example, I will take a running battle between an even number of Abrams and T-90's (lets say, two platoons of four) from open meadows to a small city population less than or equal to 5,000. This will be American tanks versus Russian ones, that way both sides have the best of both. Now...where to begin. American platoons will be A and B, while Russian Platoons will be X and Y, tanks will have a letter-number setup, like the lead tank in Platoon A would be A-1, then the next would be A-2 and so on. Heres the map I've come up with. http://i391.photobucket.com/albums/o...attleSetup.jpg Platoon A is ordered to patrol the area east of its current position. Russian platoon X is ordered to patrol west. Nobody's dug in. Platoon B is ordered to enter the town and push east, Platoon Y is ordered to do the same, but move west. these two platoons are the only ones who know there are enemies afoot near the town, A and X are simply patrolling in an alert condition. with any luck this scenario is totally even. The time is noon, overcast conditions, it rained recently. -START- Platoon A is moving in wedge formation at about....30 miles per hour. Platoon X is doing the same, perhaps slightly faster. X moves around the trees, and the two sight each other. Platoon A is caught slightly unprepared and X gets the jump and fires first. The Abrams' cobham armor ensure the crew will survive, but the first tank to get hit in PLT-A loses its sighting equipment. A tank from A returns fire and destroys one T-90. The sight-less tank from A fires a stray shot in manual mode, completely disabling a Russian tank before it is knocked out. A T-90 fires and disables the track on an Abrams. the last two Abrams turn north into the woods, and the T-90's attempt to fire but the Abrams move too quickly. the Abrams hide in the wood, and the T-90's move in. The ensuing fight goes quickly, the commander of one Abrams attempts to override the gun, but it hits a tree and fails to traverse, a T-90 fires and knocks it out. One T-90 goes around the wood, and flanks the Abrams, and disables. In open areas the Abrams has an upper hand with survivability but something tells me the Russians would have the win, because the training that they recieved in this time period relied on open-area battles. Now for the urban combat. I'm going to condense this a little bit, the imagination tanks are kind of drained. I can see it resulting in a draw, with all tanks disabled or destroyed. the Abrams has a speed advantage, cobham armor, as well as more training and experience in urban combat, whilst the Russian tank offers better survivability in urban environments with its 3-tier protection system. Thus, the T-90 would win, in my opinion. :yep: OKAY! Your TURN! :yeah: |
One could try this with an SBP scenario, featuring t-80s instead of T-90s, and early M1s instead of M1A2SEPs. SBP has all these but T-90s.
Don'T know if the Rusisans still are with a 3 vehicles per platoon lineup. the Yanks surely run 4 tanks per platoon, so they already would have a numerical advantage, maybe. Map is missing elevations and ranges - is the flat area between woods and town 2 km wide or 12 km? Let'S assume the whole map being 6x6 km. In this setup on the map, the Americans have a small advantage - I would prefer their positioning of platoon A to that of platoon X for the Russians. Platoon A immediaqtely forms firing line south of the left wood and seeking hull down as best as terrain allows, covering a firing arc from 90 - 135 degrees (on the compass). It gives fire protection for platoon B that takes up hasty defensive position in the Western outskirts of the village and waits for infantry to do recce on the town's centre. An element of B would also have an eye at NNW to warn A if they get engaged from enemies popping up in their rear. If situation allows, B would slowly, verty slowly advance Eastward through the town, taking care not to expose the platoon's flanks to fire from the open range . The Russians have already a slight time disadvanatge, while B and Y are equally positioned on both sides of the town, X is more distant formt he action than A, having to move around the whole damn forest first.With their Y platoon probably doing similiar action like Y, carefully advancing into or doing recce inbto the town, X would need to move into sight of A with A already being deployed, maybe hull down, and ready to engage from stationary positions. If they move south around the forest, they come under fire from A. If they move in between the two forests, they come under fire at even closer range. They would need to be clever enough to move west and pass around the left forest too to outflank the Americans completely and pop up ion the rear of A. But then the element of B would spot them, and either opens fiore, or A turns around in place and is fire-ready again. I would do this scenario defensively for the Americans, not aggressively. Therefore I would prefer the Leo-2 over the Abrams in this case, since I prefer the heavier turret armour of the latest Leopards in defensive scenarios, whuile the Abrams with its more general armour in all aspects of the vehicle may have the edge in offenbsiove operations that expose it more. The differences between both tanks in these regards are result of different military doctrines, although maybe one should not overestimate these differences. You cannot decide this by a thought experiment in this fashion, too many other factors play a roll: crew quality, ammo type, visibility conditions, to mention the three most important. I tend to be no friend of overly aggressive military moves, and think that often initiative can be better gained by being most unpredictable to the enemy, for which speed of advance can but must not be a vital element. I would also prefer the Leopard over the M1 here, since I tend to favour the Leopards for the defensive and the Abrams for the offensive role, due to the slight differences in prioritizing armour distribution over hull and turret. The bigger the map, and the longer the distances, the more aggressive the Americans would need to manouver, I think. If the map were 15x15, I would let A close in on the enemy to reject them the advantage of their longer shooting range with missile ammunition - but not so close as that their normal rounds would be able to threaten my probably superior armour as well. Somewhere in the midrange my preferred fighting distance would be, therefore. Anyhow, doing recce in a totally unknown town with tanks sounds like a bad idea to me. I would demand infantry or gunships anyway. Or I would bypass the town. But I would not advance right through it if there is no infantry support, no matter the orders. If the town is occupied by enemy with ATGMs, it would be a suicide missioin. In case of dug in enemy tanks - probably as well. |
I agree with 99% of what you posted Sky, and if I was in command of this scenario, I wouldn't let any of this happen. my idea though was to run a scenario, judging the two tanks in question on urban combat, and open area combat. with the two sides completely even.
with the map, my guess is the distance between the two wooded areas is about 3,000 meters the town wouldn't be to scale then. I'm thinking a town on the scale of Foy in WWII |
This video may be a bit overly patriotic in favour of the T-90, nevertheless it may hint at the right direction when claiming that the Abrams is overestimated.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8paDw...eature=related In SBP it is already reflected that the T-80 can be a bug extremely difficult to crack open. It is smaller than Western tanks, and has quite some effective tough armour. That it already lays down fire on you with you still being out of gunnery range, doesn't make it easier. In SBP, I made it a habit to not engage T-80s directly and head-on, but to try to "out-tactic" them. Which is good advise with any modern MBT as opponent. We in the West tend to underestimate Russian tanks. That already started with the T-72 in the later years of it' appearance. The T-72 was the answer to the former Russian tanks being outclassed by the Leopard-1 in agility, speed, punch, precision, and armour. Maybe no other tank since world war two has been so dominant at its time like the Leo-1. What we often ignore is that the T-72 all in all turned out to be a worthy contender for the Leopard, despite its initial certain weaknesses. There must have been a reason why panic bells rang alive in Brussel when it entered the scene. Numerical superiority was not the reason, but toughness, and punch. |
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I'm not really sure where I sit here, of course being from the West I'd love to ride out in an Abrams. But doing research on the T-90 has me thinking it has some critical advantages to which the Abrams has no answer. Of course, a lot of this Russian "wonder defences" can be PR'd to death, much like the Abrams is PR'd to be impregnable. |
I really have a hard time with most THIS vs. THAT weapon platform threads.
Almost no thread considers the quality, training, experience, and tactics utilized by the most important element of ANY weapon platform, the crew. Simply because it cannot be accurately predicted, or modelled. Bah, nevermind. /RANT :salute: |
actually, in order to make the test as even as possible, I left the crew out.
"The gunner in tank 3 sneezes allowing an Abrams to blow his tank to smithereens" :O: |
Just found this. Different to wide-spread argument, the T-90 has seen combat action, in the 1999 war in Dagestan.
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In 'Thunder Run' (David Zucchino) I read that the Abrahms can survive 15 RPG hits without effect (besides girlie mags burning in the luggage).
Therefore, one Abrams is worth about 2 T-90s. -But-, the American crews will hit their own tanks to effect. The Russian crews will also fire at their own tanks, but with those tube missiles that can be stopped by Shtora. According to simulation projections, half of each force will be destroyed by fire. The remainder will become stuck on bridges, partially submerged in rivers, or navigating the town's roads in an endless loop, until becoming trapped between two buildings. American casualties burn their disabled tanks and are treated for hearing loss and PTSD. The T-90s jettisonable canopy and pyrotechnic ejection system fails to live up to expectations. |
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The 80U was difficult to penetrate for Western tanks in its time. Also, it has thermals - the only Russian MBT of that time with thermals. Quote:
Ammo improved also over time, especially in Germany, Sweden and America. Latest Tungsten-type of German rounds almost amtch the destuctability of third-generation DU-rounds used by the Americans. Considering the different phasical characteristics of both materials, that really means siomething and indicates a small "wonder". In SBP, both rounds are therefore rated almost identical at ranges of up to 4000m, with just a microscopic lead for the the US round. Quote:
The Leopard-1 also dominated any Western tank design of that era. It was a Porsche, armed to the teeth, moving in a field of under-motorized Beetles. Quote:
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When the T-72 appeared, it rang alarm bells in NATO HQs, and the developement of the new Ameican and German MBT was speeded up. Both the Abrams and the Leopard 2 were demanded to have the capacity to deal with and to defeat the T-72, while being outnumered. And then came the T-80 as well, but thankfully late, and in smaller numbers than the Soviet high command wanted. Leopard-1 was produced since 1965, btw. It makes little sense to compare tank designs which are decades apart in developement. It also makes no sense to compare them just by their gun callibre. And callibre still does not mean the same like firing range and precision, and penetration value. In conventional (non-missile) gun projectile design, Russia still lacks, compared to Wetsern rounds, since it has a larger tank fleet ti equip and thus needs cheaper solutions. Its kinetic rounds for long time thus did not base on expensive Tungsten or deplreted uranium, but steel. Range of such projectiles, considering the typical (slower) velocities of Russian tank guns, gives htem an effetive (precise shooting) range of 25-30% less than Western rounds. In SBP it is modelled that weay that the L-44 gun of Westerntanks suually fires at a maximum of 4000m, Russian tanks fire at ranges of 3300m max, or less - while being able to shoot at ranges of up to I think 5000m with Refleks. But these are no miracle weapons in themselves, and come in smaller quantities also. Not compare this to the advantages of thermal sights versus IR-sights or visual sights only. As the Iraqis said in 1991: they did not even see their opponents. And then, agility: speed-in-reverse, speed, acceleration. Until today, Western tanks are superior in these fields. |
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In sum, T-80U and T-90 are viable opponents for Leo-2A4 and M1A1 but are no match for Leo-2 and M1 latest incarnations. Quote:
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- firepower: T-62 - 115 mm 2A20 gun (first smoothbore gun firing APFSDS round ever created), Leo-1 - 105 mm L7 rifled gun - frontal armor protection: T-62 - 250 mm, Leo-2A1/A3 - 190-250 mm - mobility measured in power/weight ratio: Leo-1 - 14,4 kW/t, T-62 - 11 kW/t - FCS - no Leo-1 had thermal sights until Leo-1A5 introduced in 1987! So in sum early Leo-1 (A1-A3) and T-62 models were almost equal. Their armor protection was on par, T-62 has better firepower while Leo-1 had better mobility. Later it was changing but not to a large degree as you describe it! For instance Leo-1A4 (IOC 1974) got quite advanced automatic FCS but T-62M (IOC 1983) was very deep T-62 modernization with good "Volna" FCS (digital computer, laser rangefinder, gun stabilizer), better BDD frontal armor equals 480-500 mm RHA and gun launched AT-10 ATGM providing capability to destroy Leo-1 from 4 km distance. As a result T-62M was better than Leo-1A4 and partially that's why Leo-1A5 was developed. However in 1987 Cold War was almost over and both tanks were seen as outdated. Summarization - T-62 and Leo-1 were similar second generation tanks which were modernized as a small part of arms race between two military blocks. However none of them outmatched another. Quote:
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As for 125 mm rounds - look at BM-22 APFSDS (wolfram) introduced in 1976. In contrast I can't see any NATO 105 mm APFSDS-DU round fielded before 1980s and their first wolfram APFSDS appeared in 1978. They relied heavily on...APDS rounds back then! :rotfl2: |
I may be wrong in some details, for example I lived by the idea that upgraded T-80 before the U-version had thermals, but not every vehicle, but only a small number of them, much like the German Marder AFVs had a Milan only for the platoon leader'S vehicle, not for his wingmen. But maybe I mixed up "thermals" with "night vision equipment" - like infrared. However, I stick to my statements about the Leopard-1's superior fire control system and cross-country mobility and reliability. Also, even during the 80s NATO was given the advantage in night-fighting capabilities. On paper, the T-64 indeed looks very much like the Leo-1, but practice showed it to be different. It is described to be extremely maintenance-heavy, the autoloader is a notorious danger for the gunner, and the engine is said to be extremely prone to mechanical problems and breakdowns. The gun suffered dearly from wear and tear and the barrel had to be replaced more often than in Western tanks - every 80-100 AP-shots, I read on the web, with cases of replacement known that even were much lower than 80 (after high rate of firing). The tank for the most was used in first-line GT-units of the Soviet army in East-Germany, and was produced in significantly lower quantities than the T-62 or T-55, both of wich still would have been met on the battlefield in case a war would have broken out in the 80s. While the Russians studied the use of DU very early indeed, to my knowledge they did not produce them in quantities that would have made them a regular piece of equipment, but more exotic - like you also have artillery-delivered minefields available - but not as something the ordinary fighting force would just see any day (that ammunitions was damn expensive and thus only made available in limited quantities on NATO's side). The T-72 may or may not have been designed with the intention of stopping the Leopard-1, we will not solve here to what degree intel of both sides knew in advance what potential the new tank of the other side would have. Those close release dates of the T-64 and the Leo-1 speak against the T-64 having been a direct answer to the Leo-1. On paper, the T-64 may appear as the better tank (and more expensive to build, compared to other Russian tanks), but it'S notorious mechanical unreliability made the T-72 the tank being more popular, since it is more reliable, and slightly easier to maintain. It had a nice maximum speed on the road, but in cross-country mobility was generally inferior. Several of its features nevertheless were considered as innovations. I am no insider on these things, just an interested layman picking up information when it jumps into his face. I had more information on it than the following text excerpt, and from so many different sources (as well as forum discussions I listened to and which were held by insiders for sure), but I give the following snippet from the SBP manual'S appendix just because it is easily available for me - I just had it at hand - and I do not want to re-search all the other stuff manually. There are dedicated tanksites on the web, though. The full text from which I take the section on Russian AP-design neither is historically complete nor is it up to date, it does not include the third generation of US DU-rounds, for example. But it is the only thing I easily and comfortably have available now without letting this become a piece of real time-consuming work. Quote:
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On Soviet doctrine, I would summarise it like this: extremely heavy preparatory artillery bombardement, three-waves, the follow-on wave exploiting the breaches cut into the enemy front by the first wave, and doing so not in width, but in depth. Third wave had second-.class equipment for cleanup-operations and securing the "Hinterland", major offensive burdenm on the first two waves. With the appearance of the T-72, a slight change in doctrine, no longer was the best equipment to be forming the opening offensive (T80s were available, T-64), but the T-72. When NAQTO suffered losses and its frontline was in danger, or penetrated, then the real flagships would take over, that way causing even greater damage to the enemy. Lost equipement was to be cannibalised for maintaining the effort of the ongoing first and second wave offensive. Goal was not necessarily to flank and destroy NATO frontlines, but to strike deep and reach the logistical supply network and control-command infrastructure far behind the front, and crush it. All this, like the "general aggressiveness" or "offensiveness" of military politics of the USSR, was a lesson learned the hard way in WWII, when the Russians learned they could beat the Wehrmacht only by ammassing firepower in hotspots of interest and by claiming the offense no matter the cost, not limiting themselves to defending. The restrictive chain of command and somewhat "automatted" battle lineup in the Russian army results from a general distrust of higher ranks into subordinate ranks, and from limited communication networks that did not allow as individualised command-and-control decisions as in NATO armies where subordnnate ranks are left with greater freedoms and space for flexibility. That'S what I took from various sources, and that's how a former Eastgerman Major described the Russian doctrine to me some years ago. I think we can agree at least on this part. |
People actually believe what the Russians say about their tanks? HA. :rotfl2:
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1) It is easy to control, thus has the highest probability of working if an immediate attack is required (such as in meeting engagement). If you try and launch a sudden attack and everyone is working out his own solution with the terrain, the attack will likely to break apart. 2) The support phase of the artillery offensive can be concentrated into a few minutes, thus more guns can be ready to fire, at a higher rate. Remember, to a great extent modern overwatch (fire-and-maneuver and all that) and terrain-usage tactics really came because artillery CANNOT fully suppress defenders. The West adopts overwatch. The Soviets try to create the conditions for artillery to successfully suppress the defenders, including the use of direct fire artillery where necessary. 3) In minimizing the amount of time used for the attack, even with a higher casualty rate the Soviets minimize the disruption to the advancing column behind it. Taking (lots of) time to use terrain works at the tactical level, but while you are doing that, the operational column behind you is forced to stop, and eat more NATO airstrikes. The Soviets will probably gladly trade some companies to be allowed to continue to move. There is actually an article in the American Military Review back in 1989, that basically says the American (NATO) practice of overwatch doesn't work even in exercises, and maybe they should incorporate more Soviet techniques into their approach. |
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