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posted by takyon on Monday September 19 2016, @05:34PM   Printer-friendly
from the dangerous-for-whom? dept.

From the Serious Gun Porn department!

The Russian Ground Forces are set to take delivery of the first production models of the T-14 Armata main battle tank starting in 2017. The Russian army has taken delivery of twenty pre-production version of the tank for operational testing—which is currently under way just outside Moscow at Kubinka. The first operational T-14 unit is likely to be stood up in Siberia with a unit that performed particularly well during the invasion of Crimea according to a source.

"Test of the Armata are going according to schedule without any problems," Alexei Zharich, deputy director of Uralvagonzavod told the Russian language daily Izvestia. "Serial deliveries could begin at any moment—as soon as the customer wants it."

However, Zharich seems to be addressing only the T-14 main battle tank variant. He didn't address the other combat vehicles that are part of the Armata family—it's not clear if those vehicles are also in production. The Armata Universal Combat Platform consists of the T-14 main battle tank, the T-15 heavy infantry fighting vehicle and the T-16 armored recovery vehicle, among a host of other vehicles. Another member of the Armata family includes an upgunned heavy assault armored vehicle, which has been dubbed "the Tank Killer" by Russian media. The "Tank Killer" variant seems to incorporate a derivative of the 2S35 Koalitsiya-SV's 152mm artillery piece into the Armata chassis in a direct fire mounting.

There are a number of articles about the T-14 Armata on the web - I chose to use this one for this submission. Also at sputniknews.com.

takyon: Here's video of the T-14 in action. Russia is also building six new Project 636.3 Kilo-class attack submarines and is working on railguns, exoskeletons, "robot avatars", and smart bullets.

The U.S. Army will begin testing a truck-mounted 50 kW laser in 2017, and scale it to 100 kW in later tests. The Army will also be testing new 155mm, 50mm, and 35mm guns and artillery. The U.S. Navy will begin using shipping container sized Pulsed Power Container Systems from General Atomics as it tests its own railgun technology.


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Tuesday September 20 2016, @09:40AM

    by TheRaven (270) on Tuesday September 20 2016, @09:40AM (#404167) Journal

    Nothing spewing that much radio will be invisible

    Not while spewing that much RF, no. Typically; however, active RADAR has an off switch and is only turned on when you've already been detected, or when breaking cover for the first time. Until then, you'll be using passive sensors only. Ground based RADAR is usually a pretty bad idea until you've achieved local superiority, because a lot of modern artillery supports automatic targeting with passive RADAR - you send a pules and it's about 10 seconds before an artillery shell lands in your location. There was a lot of work a decade or two ago in disposable RADAR emitters for precisely that reason - you'd have passive receivers scattered over the battlefield and send a pulse from something completely expendable. It would be destroyed immediately afterwards, but the things detecting the returns would survive and you'd be able to hit back. The big problem for these systems was calibration - you need to know to a pretty high degree of accuracy the distance between the emitter and the detectors to be able to build a RADAR image.

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