- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Most of what is "offered" by the MMEV can be accomplished more cheaply and easily by taking (insert favorite tank here), and providing a load-out of advanced ammunition.
A tank can carry 30-40 rounds of 120mm ammunition under protection, giving the crew lots of choices:
Through tube missiles for those long range shots (LAHAT has a range of 13Km when fired semi indirect at a designated target).
APDSFS for hard or elusive targets (potentially even enemy helicopters)
HESH or HEAT-MP to defeat a wide range of targets, both hard and soft. The Americans use HEAT-MP, while the British and Canadians favor HESH.
Tanks and gun armed vehicles have a high rate of fire, so can engage multiple targets quickly, have protection against enemy weaponry and a drivetrain and suspension system which provide excellent cross country mobility. To a lesser extent, this can be accomplished with a LAV III based fire support vehicle packing a 105mm cannon and a similar choice of ammunition. Modern AFVs have day/night and thermal surveillance and sight systems to identify and track targets, and can be fitted with high bandwidth data transfer systems to trade target and situational awareness information.
As for the anti aircraft requirement, this is best done by a dedicated system or systems. The front line vehicles can thicken up the fire with their on board machine guns and (perhaps) the occasional main gun shot if opportunities arise, or if specialized AA shells or through tube missiles can be developed (probably cued from off board sensors).
As for the "3D" awareness, I'm not qualified to comment, but it seems to me that you would probably get better results cuing off AWACS or J-STARS type systems (or both) for wide ranging situational awareness.
You can get virtually everything described here in Military Off the Shelf (MOTS) form, and rather than try to wedge it in into a single vehicle, the sensitive electronic sensor systems can be distributed among many elements of the force and airborn platforms. The airborn antenna can be much larger than vehicle mounted ones.
A tank can carry 30-40 rounds of 120mm ammunition under protection, giving the crew lots of choices:
Through tube missiles for those long range shots (LAHAT has a range of 13Km when fired semi indirect at a designated target).
APDSFS for hard or elusive targets (potentially even enemy helicopters)
HESH or HEAT-MP to defeat a wide range of targets, both hard and soft. The Americans use HEAT-MP, while the British and Canadians favor HESH.
Tanks and gun armed vehicles have a high rate of fire, so can engage multiple targets quickly, have protection against enemy weaponry and a drivetrain and suspension system which provide excellent cross country mobility. To a lesser extent, this can be accomplished with a LAV III based fire support vehicle packing a 105mm cannon and a similar choice of ammunition. Modern AFVs have day/night and thermal surveillance and sight systems to identify and track targets, and can be fitted with high bandwidth data transfer systems to trade target and situational awareness information.
As for the anti aircraft requirement, this is best done by a dedicated system or systems. The front line vehicles can thicken up the fire with their on board machine guns and (perhaps) the occasional main gun shot if opportunities arise, or if specialized AA shells or through tube missiles can be developed (probably cued from off board sensors).
As for the "3D" awareness, I'm not qualified to comment, but it seems to me that you would probably get better results cuing off AWACS or J-STARS type systems (or both) for wide ranging situational awareness.
You can get virtually everything described here in Military Off the Shelf (MOTS) form, and rather than try to wedge it in into a single vehicle, the sensitive electronic sensor systems can be distributed among many elements of the force and airborn platforms. The airborn antenna can be much larger than vehicle mounted ones.