Lance Wiebe
Sr. Member
- Reaction score
- 6
- Points
- 230
Just for clarification.....when the Germans decided to install the Leo 2A4 FCS in to the Leo 1 family, this created quite a bit of work. It may be hard for some to believe, but the flight characteristics of a rifled round makes it more difficult for a computer to calculate the aim point, as compared to a smooth bore round. German engineers spent about five years developing the EMES 18 FCS as is used in the Leo1A5. During these five years, a number of improvements were added to the FCS, the end result was a FCS superior to the Leo2A4, and in fact, superior to, or at least the equal of any FCS you care to name.
The problem was, when the Germans upgraded their fleet of Leo 1's, they upgraded the original Leo1, the Leo1A1, and the Leo1A2. They all shared the same turret design, after all. But all of them had hull changes, and, for example, the support arms were not interchangeable, amongst a slew of other things the Germans upgraded throughout the build life of the Leo 1 family.
Anyway, when the Canadians initiated the Leo Thermal Sight Upgrade Program, it came with a fixed, finite amount of dollars. The Danes had just finished upgrading their Leo1A3 to the A5 standard, while keeping the Leo1A3 turret, like we wanted to do. The problem there was that there was exactly zero companies in Canada with the required capability. The Germans, around this time (~1998) decided on a fleet rationalization plan, which would see the Leo1 removed from service, except for specific specialized roles, such as the FOO vehicle. All of a sudden, there were literally a thousand Leo1A5 FCS systems available. All used, to be sure, but a very capable system, at a price we could afford.
I was lucky enough to be involved in the program, and managed to get a few trips in to Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Holland, and Israel....
After a bunch of negotiations, Germany agreed to sell us 114 tanks. They would not just sell us the turrets, or just the FCS, because they wanted to get rid of the whole shooting match. So, 114 tanks were parked at Wegmann, in Kassel, just for us. A deal was struck (with Wegmann, not the German government) for the turrets to be repaired and rebuilt as necessary, so that the FCS systems were in a "like new" standard. We found a few, not many, Leo1A2 hulls in the batch, which we could buy, as they matched our hull. (The difference between the Leo1A2 and the Leo1A3 was turret, not hull) We brought something like 20 hulls to Canada, I think it was seven were used to replace worn out hulls, the remainder were stripped to fill the parts bins. We sold the remaining Leo 1 hulls to Wegmann.
The problem was, when the Germans upgraded their fleet of Leo 1's, they upgraded the original Leo1, the Leo1A1, and the Leo1A2. They all shared the same turret design, after all. But all of them had hull changes, and, for example, the support arms were not interchangeable, amongst a slew of other things the Germans upgraded throughout the build life of the Leo 1 family.
Anyway, when the Canadians initiated the Leo Thermal Sight Upgrade Program, it came with a fixed, finite amount of dollars. The Danes had just finished upgrading their Leo1A3 to the A5 standard, while keeping the Leo1A3 turret, like we wanted to do. The problem there was that there was exactly zero companies in Canada with the required capability. The Germans, around this time (~1998) decided on a fleet rationalization plan, which would see the Leo1 removed from service, except for specific specialized roles, such as the FOO vehicle. All of a sudden, there were literally a thousand Leo1A5 FCS systems available. All used, to be sure, but a very capable system, at a price we could afford.
I was lucky enough to be involved in the program, and managed to get a few trips in to Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Holland, and Israel....
After a bunch of negotiations, Germany agreed to sell us 114 tanks. They would not just sell us the turrets, or just the FCS, because they wanted to get rid of the whole shooting match. So, 114 tanks were parked at Wegmann, in Kassel, just for us. A deal was struck (with Wegmann, not the German government) for the turrets to be repaired and rebuilt as necessary, so that the FCS systems were in a "like new" standard. We found a few, not many, Leo1A2 hulls in the batch, which we could buy, as they matched our hull. (The difference between the Leo1A2 and the Leo1A3 was turret, not hull) We brought something like 20 hulls to Canada, I think it was seven were used to replace worn out hulls, the remainder were stripped to fill the parts bins. We sold the remaining Leo 1 hulls to Wegmann.