Gibbs said:I was actually talking about using the C-RAM.... I'd be inclined to send as many arachnids as possible at it from all angles,,, overwhelm it with targets!
Gibbs said:Unless you put it on some sort of hover platform... then you'd be in trouble. :wink:
BuShips said:Gibbs said:Unless you put it on some sort of hover platform... then you'd be in trouble. :wink:
Yeah, "checkmate". Then you run back to the drawing board and give high priority to developing laser weapons. :wink:
Gibbs said:BuShips said:Gibbs said:Unless you put it on some sort of hover platform... then you'd be in trouble. :wink:
Yeah, "checkmate". Then you run back to the drawing board and give high priority to developing laser weapons. :wink:
Then deflector shields for your hovering C-RAM (wink)
The next thing is reactive armor covered in thick armor of its own - it protects the ERA from detonating after being fired at with hmgs and autocannons as well as lowers the chance of the ERA block being detonated by precursor charge (which is usually much smaller than the main warhead). In fact this "next thing" has been around for a few years in some countries, which rely on ERA a little bit more than US...BuShips said:What's next, "double-layered reactive armor", with the arabic label "So there!" screen-printed on it? :lol:
Pietia said:The next thing is reactive armor covered in thick armor of its own - it protects the ERA from detonating after being fired at with hmgs and autocannons as well as lowers the chance of the ERA block being detonated by precursor charge (which is usually much smaller than the main warhead). In fact this "next thing" has been around for a few years in some countries, which rely on ERA a little bit more than US...BuShips said:What's next, "double-layered reactive armor", with the arabic label "So there!" screen-printed on it? :lol:
The tests of Erawa-2 (Polish ERA) and the modern Russian ERAs proved that it is possible. Of course this is not the only thing - the individual ERA block is better shaped and has several more improvements. Oh - and the armor gets scratched a little bit anyway, putting this on a Stryker would not make sense (but it does on a front or side armor of a tank).BuShips said:OK, I've heard of armored ERA, intended to stop MG and auto-cannon fire from detonating the ERA but wasn't thinking of it as a counter to say a Kornet's tandem charge. Interesting.
More or less, but without the networked part. In the latest conflict Hezbollach troops used "swarm tactics" to defeat Israeli armor. They fired several RPGs (from ambush) simultaneously, a few aimed at each side of the tank. Similar tactics were used by Chechen rebels to take out ERA-protected russian tanks in Grozny.BuShips said:So the counter to that might be a rapid-firing RPG that had multiple rounds (think of a hand-fired Katyusha, lol)) or even a special version of an anti-tank weapon that was used by several personal and launch tubes but networked to fire at a specific point with a staggered delay. This would be like a boxer that hits an opponent repeatedly with successive blows. Has anyone thought of that one yet? :idea: :wink:
Pietia said:The tests of Erawa-2 (Polish ERA) and the modern Russian ERAs proved that it is possible. Of course this is not the only thing - the individual ERA block is better shaped and has several more improvements. Oh - and the armor gets scratched a little bit anyway, putting this on a Stryker would not make sense (but it does on a front or side armor of a tank).BuShips said:OK, I've heard of armored ERA, intended to stop MG and auto-cannon fire from detonating the ERA but wasn't thinking of it as a counter to say a Kornet's tandem charge. Interesting.
More or less, but without the networked part. In the latest conflict Hezbollach troops used "swarm tactics" to defeat Israeli armor. They fired several RPGs (from ambush) simultaneously, a few aimed at each side of the tank. Similar tactics were used by Chechen rebels to take out ERA-protected russian tanks in Grozny.BuShips said:So the counter to that might be a rapid-firing RPG that had multiple rounds (think of a hand-fired Katyusha, lol)) or even a special version of an anti-tank weapon that was used by several personal and launch tubes but networked to fire at a specific point with a staggered delay. This would be like a boxer that hits an opponent repeatedly with successive blows. Has anyone thought of that one yet? :idea: :wink:
More or less, but without the networked part. In the latest conflict Hezbollach troops used "swarm tactics" to defeat Israeli armor. They fired several RPGs (from ambush) simultaneously, a few aimed at each side of the tank. Similar tactics were used by Chechen rebels to take out ERA-protected russian tanks in Grozny.
soulman said:Remember if you cannot see it, you cannot hit it...!!!
Stealth is the word..
" Now where did i park that tank of mine "....
soulman said:Remember if you cannot see it, you cannot hit it...!!!
Stealth is the word..
" Now where did i park that tank of mine "....
Sgt. Brassones said:The PLA get the FAV, I want these for my Marines:
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The Old Soldier said:Great, now you got that theme song from the TV show going around inside me head.... :? :lol: