Newsgroups: sci.military.moderated From: jaremkow@hotmail.com (Andrew Jaremkow) Subject: Re: T-90 verus M1A2 Date: Mon, 7 Jul 1997 16:34:53 GMT On Mon, 30 Jun 1997 17:08:34 GMT, antispam@uvic.ca (Robb McLeod) wrote: > A good example of a OPFOR advantage that's never appeared is the inability of > Western weapon systems to penetrate their armor. I've always felt that was > important: Yet the OPFOR is granted unrealistic armour killing levels too. Do you really expect the warheads in AT-4s and AT-5s (or even AT-11s) to penetrate an Abrams? What about their archaic AP ammunition? The steel BM-9s, BM-15's with that tiny tungsten carbide slug, and even M735 clones like the BM-32 just can't manage M-1A1 armour. Yet, as others have posted, they are given the ability to penetrate the Abrams. I'd say the disparity is applied equally to both sides in this sort of training. > T-64: > > First ever production MBT to carry combinational armor. It carried > Combination K, which appariently is composed of glass fiber suspended within a > plastic resin. All indications I have seen (Zaloga, Ogorkiewicz, Janes...) state that the T-64 used larger ceramic inserts, and not GRP. Have you a different source, or is this speculation? > DOI: 1966 > RHA verus APFSDS: 410 mm > RHA verus HEAT: 500 mm Zaloga, in his exhaustive work on Soviet armor design practices, gives figures of 410mm, and 450mm respectively. > T-80B: > > Along with the T-64B and T-72A, this vehicle substituted a Boron Carbide > filled resin aggregate in 2nd generation Combination K, similar to the above > mentioned GRP, but was more compact and provided better protection for the > same weight. Boron Carbide eh? Have you got a source, or are you just speculating? I'll bet your chain of logic went something like this: 1) T-72M1s produced in the mid 1980s apparently use a "pelletized filler agent" in their armour (JA&A 96-97). 2) Los Alamos has done work with ceramic aggregates (including boron carbide and aluminum oxide) in polymer binders (Los Alamos Science, Summer 1989). 3) Boron carbide has a high mass effectiveness against HEAT and AP projectiles. (Ogorkiewicz IDR 4/1991, IDR 6/1995, or perhaps his earlier work). 4) Therefore T-72M1s must use boron carbide. (Robb's own blind leap of faith) 5) Since the foreign built T-72M1 of the mid 80s was an upgrade to T-72A standards (Zaloga 1996) , the earlier T-72A of must have been identical. (A much more reasonable leap of faith, but we can't be certain. The Czech's and Poles liked to fiddle with Russian designs.) 6) Since the T-64B was developed even earlier than the T-72A (and by different people) it too must have had the same armor. (Leap of faith number 3) 7) Since the T-80B was an attempt to catch up with T-64B protection levels (Zaloga, 1996) it too must have the same armor. (Leap of faith number 4) 8) Therefore T-80Bs use boron carbide! (Robb's conclusion, which he proceeds to disseminate as if it's a fact.) But by all means, prove me wrong with a good source for your assertion.... > DOI: 1978 > RHA verus APFSDS: 500 mm > RHA verus HEAT: 580 mm Not all T-80Bs are the same. The T-80B had a turret armour upgrade in 1982, and a glacis armour upgrade in 1984. Are your figures here for early or late T-80Bs? > T-80U: > > The first vehicle to carry Kontakt-5 EDZ, effective both against HEAT warheads > and APFSDS. Since you can put Kontakt-5 on almost anything (provided it has sufficient armour to withstand the backplate) I don't think its association with the T-80U has any special significance. Both happened to come out in 1985, that's all. > It also carried an applique armor pack which is composed of a > frontal steel plate about 60 mm thick backed by an insert of three layers of > inert interlayer reactive armor, composed of steel plates and penapolyurethane > filler. For such a detailed assertion I definately want to hear a source. Have you had the opportunity to measure one? Since you live in British Columbia I rather doubt it. Are you guessing by the photographs in some of the Jane's? Or are you just hypothesising based on potential space available? There is an interesting hypothesis presented by Zaloga (1996) about the T-72B armor upgrade. He writes: "These performance figures and characteristics are similar to those made possible by the "bra" armor developed by the NII Stali at this time for the T-55/T-62 upgrade program: it is possible that the T-72B's armor was based on the same configuration, but integral to the turret casting rather than as an applique." Now the Bra armor in question is composed of a 60-70mm front plate followed by steel plates in penapolyurethane. (I have measured a cutaway example at the CFB Borden Military Museum.) Does this sound familiar? Its essentially what was proposed in the previous post. It seems we're looking at another big leap of faith here. Robb is assuming that because the T-80U and T-72B are contemporary, and despite the fact that they are designed by different people, they will have the same armour. He is also assuming that they are using the Bra-armor internally, despite the fact that this was only advanced as a hypothesis. He next throws in a buzzword or two by claiming the stuff is effective inert interlayer armor. This is then presented as an established fact. I would be interested to see what evidence Robb has that his "facts" are more than just a hypothesis on his part. > Tests by a unified Germany in 1995 found this material to have an Em > of about 5.0. Nonsense. The tests being referred to are reported in IDR 6/1995. These were German experiments with a variety of combinations of interlayer armour, using different materials. They were not tests on T-80Us, as Robb implies. They found that they could get a variety of mass effectivenesses out of inert interlayer systems, ranging from 2.4 to 3 with elastomers and fiber reinforce plastics, up to "about five" with a plastic "specially developed for the purpose" by Deisenroth. These results were against HEAT, not APFSDS, and the mass effectivenesses almost certainly don't include the backplate and front-plates required to maintain the structural integrity of the armor. > Also had significant increases to vehicle survivablity in other > areas, mostly the armoring and cellurization of ammunition storage and the > incorporation of composite steel/GRP armor on the vehicle's flanks. I presume this refers to the uparmoured skirts on the front half of the vehicle? I would be very surprised if they had fiddled with the hull side itself. > DOI: 1985 > RHA verus APFSDS: 820 mm > RHA verus HEAT: 1 300 mm More estimation I presume? > > T-90 > > The T-90 was the first vehicle to incorporate inert interlayer reactive armor, > along with Kontakt-5, into it's armor system rather than relying on applique > packs, lessening the number of null zones on the vehicle. I'll say it again. Source? I'm amazed you've been able to get your hands on a T-90, enabling you to speak with such authority. > > Oh gee... The M829A1 can't penetrate the frontal armor of a T-80U, but it can > kill a T-72G at about 8 km. And just what can the T-80U do to the Abrams? They're both very much in the same boat, wouldn't you say? > Pitance that the guy who designed Air-Land battle > doctrine, General Don Starry, says the same thing I do about the balance of > technology. How very wise of General Starry... You meant to say that you agree with General Starry, whose work you are parroting. > The Sherridan conversions are all hot, and show up nicely on thermals, You've had a look, have you? > even though the Russians have been incorporating thermal signature suppression in > their vehicles since the T-80U and T-72B, circa 1985. Techniques such as? Running gear and tracks are by far the most obvious heat sources on a tank from the important front and front-side angles. The Russians haven't made any changes in this area. The tank's shell is still a few inches of steel, which absorbs and radiates heat quite nicely. No modifications there. The oblique exhaust on the T-72 series, with its metal heat guard (hot and noticable!), has remained essentially the same throughout the series, and the T-80's turbine is actually a step backwards, with the characteristic high temperature high volume exhaust of gas turbine engines. Any improvements there might pull the thermal signature back to parity with older designs. Improvements in the form of camoflauge netting, matting, and other applique techniqes certainly aren't unique to the Russians, nor to any vehicle class, so you couldn't mean that. What did you mean? Thermal signatures are only significant with respect to the thermal background, and the sensitivity of the imager. It is the contrast between the target and the background that is important, not absolute temperature of the target. A target may be very hot, but if it matches the thermal background it is going to remain undetected. The thermal background warms and cools depending on the season, the weather, the terrain, and time of day. Tanks are unusual objects in the natural scheme of things (have you seen many 50 ton metal boulders lately?) and don't act like the surrounding terrain thermally. Even a completely inactive tank which has reached environmental temperatures during the day or night will be revealed when it changes temperature at a different rate than its surroundings at dawn and dusk. American pilots made use of this to find dug in Iraqi tanks during Desert Storm. Andrew Jaremkow jaremkow@hotmail.com
Newsgroups: sci.military.moderated From: jaremkow@hotmail.com (Andrew Jaremkow) Subject: Re: T-90 verus M1A2 Date: Tue, 15 Jul 1997 16:07:37 GMT On Thu, 3 Jul 1997 16:44:42 GMT, antispam@uvic.ca (Robb McLeod) wrote: > I have been told that the M111 "Hetz" could not penetrate the frontal armor of > the T-72, and the real key to killing it was the "Shafta" warhead on the TOW. Good for you. I can also provide sources that claim the M111 could handle the T-72 at 3,500 yards. Which highly politicized claim from the arms dealers would you like to believe? > A couple of T-72M1s gave the USMC great trouble in Desert Storm for awhile. > They proved capable of withstanding hits from Super Dragons to the front, and > had to be taken out by a pair of AH-1W Super Cobra's firing Hellfires under > the cloak of the burning oilfields. Interesting. Where was this? Source? > So, what's the formula to compute the penetration of long-rods? > > (T*[sec(theta)^0.75]/D) - 1 = (v^2/u^2)*[(D/L)^0.3]*(M/D^3) > > T = target thickness, in cm > theta = angle of obliquity > D = diameter of penetrator, in cm > v = velocity of penetrator, in m/s > u = penetrator constant > L = penetrator length, in cm > M = penetrator mass, in g > > 'u' is about 4 000 for heavy steel penetrators and is about 3 500 for > tungsten/Du penetrators. I have better numbers but you can't have them. I have to laugh. If you think you're going to get anything more than a general ballpark estimate from that formula you're wrong.The formula was derived by a gentleman named DeMarro. It is a simplified method of determining the penetration of long rods, and ignores many very important factors. The formula includes values for the rod's dimensions, mass (and thus density), and its velocity. Unfortunately, rod penetration is governed by a host of other variables as well. The formula makes no mention of the strength of the rod and target materials. These factors are quite important, and after density have the dominant effect on penetration. Depending on which is stronger (rod or target) and by how much the penetration characteristics can be quite different. The difficulty lies in the fact that you need dynamic strengths (the strength of the materials under the impact conditions), not the static strengths. Dynamic strengths are very difficult to measure, and vary depending on the materials, and the impact velocity. The formula assumes that rod penetration can be described with a constant velocity. Unfortunately this is not the case. As the rod penetrates into the target elastic waves bounce back and forth within the rod, slowing it down. This has been measured experimentally. As the rod changes speed its penetration abilities will change. Not only that, its dynamic strength will change. This means that for any realistic determination of penetration value you're going to have to determine the penetration bit by bit by bit as the rod slows down, its strength changes, and its penetration method changes. Unfortunately, that's not all. The shape of the rod's nose is quite important in determining its penetration ability. Weapons engineers go to great lengths to determine optimum nose shapes. Unfortunately, there is almost no unclassified data about the effects of operational nose shapes. The noses themselves are hidden under the pointed windshields that are visible to the naked eye. There are cutaway photos of various noses in Jane's, but can we really be sure which are real, and which are representational? No. We can't. So this very significant factor in penetration is essentially a guess on our part. Furthermore, there are several stages of the penetration process, each of which has different characteristics and durations, that are not simulated by the equation above. Initially, the brief transient phase is characterized by the intense pressures of the impact and formation of the plastic shockwave. At the end of the penetration process there is after-flow, where the crater continues to expand after the penetrator has been consumed due to momentum effects. Neither of these phases, which account for about a sixth of penetration at ordnance velocities, are taken into account by the formula above. Similarly, there are other material characteristics which will have significant impact on the penetration process. How ductile is the penetrator? How brittle is it? Is is susceptable to adiabatic shear? None of this is taken into account by the above formula. Everything except velocity, mass, and size is lumped into "u". You need a different U for each combination of nose/strength/velocity/material/shape/etc. Do you honestly expect it to be an accurate simulation? What you've got on your hands is a curve fitting exercise. "U" is not a real physical characteristic. It's an invented number to make the curve fit the data points. As such it's only accurate in the limited range of the original data. Attempting to use such a model outside its data range is not going to produce good results. For those who want the straight story, I'd suggest a set of three books. One is called Impact Dynamics by Zukas et al, another is High Velocity Impact Dynamics edited by Zukas, and the third is Fundamentals of Shaped Charges by Walters and Zukas. They will give an explanation that is heavy on the math, but worthwhile. You don't have to follow step by step to understand the conclusions. For those interested in where Robb learned his stuff, I'd suggest you go to the Tanker's Forum (http://www.airfax.com/tanks) and have a look at the Ammunition Chronology/Technology thread. > M111 'Hetz' > > Mass = 3950 g > Diameter = 3.07 cm > Length = 36.7 cm > Muzzle Velocity = 1 455 m/s Let me guess. The dimensions come from advertising photographs showing the round in flight, don't they? Since they don't come with a scale bar that makes things difficult when you haul out the ruler and start trying to measure... > See above formula. The effect yaw has on penetrator peformance is the only > remaining factor on penetration, no? No. > The adiabatic shear mechanism whereby > the long rod radially displaces the armor material and self-sharpens as it > cuts down into the slope is accounted for. Um, no it's not. It's just lumped into "u" along with everything else. That's hardly "accounted for" in my book. > Perhaps the dilatancy effect whereby ceramic armor erodes a penetrator > should be explained? Perhaps. Perhaps then you can also explain why it has no relevance in the above formula... > I really do understand this stuff Evidently you don't understand enough. > and I can compute the figures to a very high degree of > accuracy when I have accurate figures, which is more and more the case > nowadays. Oh please.... Do you know the alloys involved? Sure it's W-Ni-Fe, but precisely what alloy? Or perhaps it's W-Ni-Cu? Or Du-Ti? Have the manufacturer's really released their formulae? What is the density? How ductile? Just how have you gotten the dynamic strengths? The data isn't let out, and you can't be sure. You can make impressive looking estimates and extrapolations all over the place, but they remain just that. Estimates. > The Russians are very conservative in their armor estimates. I know this from > experience in working with the numbers. Uh-huh. > The Germans claim that Kontakt-5 shatters their Du penetrators, BTW. Pity. Source? Is this Manfred Held in IDR? > Also, the testing method uses > reduced charges fired in a evacuated underground chamber at a lesser range > than is claimed. This means that there isn't as much penetrator yaw at the > claimed "range" than you'd normally expect, and penetrator performance is > higher than the results you'd expect in real conditions. There are several techniques which allow the testing of yawed penetrators, even when using reduced charge techniques. The rod can be tilted by means of a jet of gas from an explosive placed beside the flightpath, by means of an asymmetric muzzle brake, or by means of a reflector plate placed alongside the flight path to nudge the rod with its reflected shockwave (Zukas, 1990). The methods are well developed, and the engineers can thus select velocity and yaw angle as required for their tests. > Waste of resources. They deployed roughly 1 200 jamming units in East > Germany, mounted in trucks and trailers. If you drop on a jammer, a Smerch > will hammer your MLRS. Unfortunately, since the SMERCH only carries unitary HE (9N218F) or fragmentation bomblet (9N218K1) warheads, it's not much of a threat to an armored target with shoot and scoot abilities. > So where'd the 280 mm come from that the Israeli's gave us? Well, that's the > thickness of the exposed lip of the glacis that projects beyond the side > armor: 110 mm deep @ 68^. If anyone wonders where Robb came up with this figure, I'd suggest they go to the Tanker's Forum, at http://www.airfax.com/tanks, and have a look through the "Russian T-72" thread. That is the amount of glacis armour visible above the weldline at the side on basic T-72s. I've measured it on the T-72 on display at CFB Borden. I've never seen the 280mm number listed from an Israeli source. It has been used in Jane's for years, however, as the protection level for the turret. It certainly looks like that's where the number came from, but we don't actually know. Andrew Jaremkow jaremkow@hotmail.com