- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Reviving this thread on a different tangent. One of the most vexing problems for military planners is logistics, and armoured vehicles consume vast quantities of fuel, in addition to the maintenance requirements, associated support like tank transporters for long road moves (in the case of tracked vehicles) and so on.
In the "A Scary Strategic Problem: No Oil" http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/37017.0.html, several suggestions are raised about increasing fuel efficiency, along with alternative fuels and powerplants. Certainly if a four passenger automobile that can achieve 100 mpg is within the current state of the engineering art, what is possible with armoured vehicles? Giant machines like the M-1 guzzle fuel at a rate of gallons per mile, and IFV's like the M-2, Warrior or PUMA are probably not much better. Wheeled vehicles like the LAV can do better, but still consume more fuel than a comparably sized truck, for example.
In general, a smaller, lighter machine will outperform a larger, heavier one. This also provides other benefits outside the fuel and logistical slice arguments, such as being more air portable, presumably fitting into more places and having a smaller signature for enemy soldiers and weapons to track.
Here are some off the cuff suggestions to start:
Preferential armouring. Place the crew in a "pod" inside the vehicle with max armour protection, and surrounded by secondary systems so a shot has to travel through them before striking the armoured pod. The Merkava incorporates this idea to some extent, since a frontal strike has to penetrate the engine compartment before entering the hull.
Suspension. A four wheeled vehicle is lighter than an eight wheeled vehicle. Eliminating a lot of weight can reduce ground pressure to the extent that four wheels will suffice. In four or multi wheel configurations, simplify the suspension further by eliminating steered wheels and incorporate "skid" steering like on a "bobcat" or "Argo" ATV
Powerplant: Diesel electric hybrid drives are current state of the art. In the near future, Solid Oxide Fuel Cells should be able to use liquid hydrocarbon fuels directly (current examples can run on straight natural gas). Fuel cells convert the chemical energy of the fuel directly into electricity, so the efficiency is far higher than using an IC engine.
The floor is open to ideas
In the "A Scary Strategic Problem: No Oil" http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/37017.0.html, several suggestions are raised about increasing fuel efficiency, along with alternative fuels and powerplants. Certainly if a four passenger automobile that can achieve 100 mpg is within the current state of the engineering art, what is possible with armoured vehicles? Giant machines like the M-1 guzzle fuel at a rate of gallons per mile, and IFV's like the M-2, Warrior or PUMA are probably not much better. Wheeled vehicles like the LAV can do better, but still consume more fuel than a comparably sized truck, for example.
In general, a smaller, lighter machine will outperform a larger, heavier one. This also provides other benefits outside the fuel and logistical slice arguments, such as being more air portable, presumably fitting into more places and having a smaller signature for enemy soldiers and weapons to track.
Here are some off the cuff suggestions to start:
Preferential armouring. Place the crew in a "pod" inside the vehicle with max armour protection, and surrounded by secondary systems so a shot has to travel through them before striking the armoured pod. The Merkava incorporates this idea to some extent, since a frontal strike has to penetrate the engine compartment before entering the hull.
Suspension. A four wheeled vehicle is lighter than an eight wheeled vehicle. Eliminating a lot of weight can reduce ground pressure to the extent that four wheels will suffice. In four or multi wheel configurations, simplify the suspension further by eliminating steered wheels and incorporate "skid" steering like on a "bobcat" or "Argo" ATV
Powerplant: Diesel electric hybrid drives are current state of the art. In the near future, Solid Oxide Fuel Cells should be able to use liquid hydrocarbon fuels directly (current examples can run on straight natural gas). Fuel cells convert the chemical energy of the fuel directly into electricity, so the efficiency is far higher than using an IC engine.
The floor is open to ideas