The M113 can easily support the weight of the appliqué anti RPG armor the Stryker was suppose to have instead of those steel cages though, and there is no reason why couldn't have a cage welded on either. The M113 can also haul more men and support much heavier weapons loads, with such useful things as stabilization.jegs2 wrote:
Much louder it is too, and without a cage like the Stryker sports, also vulnerable to modern RPGs.
A Stryker takes a beating AND survives
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NZ LAV has been flown in a C-130..and without removing the turret, so the US stryker must have some issues.JointStrikeFighter wrote:Also the M113 is auctually C-130 transportable which was the whole point of building the stryker and it dosnt even fit in the herc. As for noise in missions were stealth is needed rubber band tracks can be fitted which are equal on the noise level to wheels
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And does this bear on the Strykers mission requiements? If the requiremnt were for a replacement 113 they would have asked for one, yes? I think what counts is overall support and force structure.Sea Skimmer wrote:The M113 can easily support the weight of the appliqué anti RPG armor the Stryker was suppose to have instead of those steel cages though, and there is no reason why couldn't have a cage welded on either. The M113 can also haul more men and support much heavier weapons loads, with such useful things as stabilization.jegs2 wrote:
Much louder it is too, and without a cage like the Stryker sports, also vulnerable to modern RPGs.
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IIRC the Stryker is transportable by a C-130 but the range is greatly reduced.JointStrikeFighter wrote:Also the M113 is auctually C-130 transportable which was the whole point of building the stryker and it dosnt even fit in the herc. As for noise in missions were stealth is needed rubber band tracks can be fitted which are equal on the noise level to wheels
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correct.as far as I know. Realistically you need the C-17 to move the LAV3 anywhere.SecondStorm wrote:IIRC the Stryker is transportable by a C-130 but the range is greatly reduced.JointStrikeFighter wrote:Also the M113 is auctually C-130 transportable which was the whole point of building the stryker and it dosnt even fit in the herc. As for noise in missions were stealth is needed rubber band tracks can be fitted which are equal on the noise level to wheels
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Abrams are all but impervious to the early RPG's. In one Iraqi battle, one Abram survived literally dozens of RPG hits.The Shadow wrote:Regarding those cages, why not put them on MBTs like Abrams too ? It would reduce the chance of losing a multi million dollar tank to a cheap RPG.
The main threat to MBT's, nowadays, is really other MBT's and aircraft munitions--neither one of which is going to be very well protected by a cage. Also, I'll bet that it's a bitch to try and get the cage on an MBT without fucking over the reactive armor.
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With the addition of rubber band tracks, it will be a lot quieter. And with applique armor it can be made more resistant to RPG's.jegs2 wrote: Much louder it is too, and without a cage like the Stryker sports, also vulnerable to modern RPGs.
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Only one M1 Abrams was taking out by an RPG. And they belive it was one of the new version the russian had produced to off set MBT. Also problem with Abrams is they are designed for tank fighting not infantry. There are literally gaps in the armors that small caliber rounds can slip through. And that RPG hit had produced a hole about an 2.5cm in diameter through the side of the tank.
There's no MEXAS on any Stryker vehicles yet. It didn't live up to expectations (apparently due to some sort of manufacturing error), so they had to use those grills instead.Ma Deuce wrote:
Hmm... I doubt the hull itself was twisted, just some of the MEXAS applique armor plates got dislodged by the blast and/or the rollover. If the hull itself was twisted, I doubt it would have been be able to drive off under it's own power...
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Yet they are still much louder than the Stryker. Really, the advantages I can see with the 113 is that they're more readily transportable, they can haul a couple more men, and they're plentiful. An RPG volley will tear it up, unless it sports an RPG cage like the Stryker. And no matter what you do or add to it, it's still going to be much louder than the Stryker.Cpl Kendall wrote:With the addition of rubber band tracks, it will be a lot quieter. And with applique armor it can be made more resistant to RPG's.
The proposed versions for the M113A4 have the quieter tracks and a hybrid-electric engine. Which is quieter than the standard and apperently very powerful. It also has applique armor which is supposed to make it survivable for the crew against RPG's. That HEAT cage is a poor mans version of armour, it does nothing against cannon or HMG fire. So it's weight added for a single threat. Whereas if the Stryker could support proper applique armour than it would be protected against all of it's potential threats.jegs2 wrote: Yet they are still much louder than the Stryker. Really, the advantages I can see with the 113 is that they're more readily transportable, they can haul a couple more men, and they're plentiful. An RPG volley will tear it up, unless it sports an RPG cage like the Stryker. And no matter what you do or add to it, it's still going to be much louder than the Stryker.
The whole issue is dead anyways, Rumsfeld wanted the Stryker and that's what they got. Now they have to prove that it lives up to it's expectations.
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What are you going on about? The M113 was capable of being upgraded to meet all the requirements for the program that gave us Stryker, unlike the Stryker its self, which effectively fails the C-130 requirement that is the entire point of the program, and it could do so for less money. The only reason that can be found for why it wasn't selected was because the previous Secretary of the Army, General Shinseki, was a moron who didn't think the M113 would be 'revolutionary' enough to crush the critics he had to deal with over the slow reaction of the US Army to Kosvo.Stuart Mackey wrote:
And does this bear on the Strykers mission requiements? If the requiremnt were for a replacement 113 they would have asked for one, yes? I think what counts is overall support and force structure.
Of course, the entire program was and is quite pointless no matter what vehicle is used because the airlift simply does not exist to move armored brigades of anything by air and support them. And if you travel by sea, as the first Stryker brigade did to get to Iraq, you have nothing to lose by fielding a much larger and heavier vehicle. Even if we still went with wheels, a new medium armored vehicle could at least have been a 10x10, as the Swiss already has on the market, which would provide a vehicle much better able to cope with the weight and recoil of an 105mm cannon and the weight of all the extra armor the US Army has piled. Or better yet, we could have just spent the money on the several dozen upgrade programs of existing Army equipment which got canacled to pay for Stryker.
The fact that Stryker isn't the total deathtrap that many critics claim it is doesn't change these issues.
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To only 100 miles, a fairly useless distance. And that is a Stryker without any form of additional armor. With MEXAS fitted (MEXAS can be removed, but the original requirement was for the Strykers to roll off combat ready) it's too heavy, and with the steel anti RPG cage its both too heavy and too wide to even fit inside.SecondStorm wrote: IIRC the Stryker is transportable by a C-130 but the range is greatly reduced.
But that all really doesn't matter, there simply isn't enough airlift to make transporting any large armored force anywhere possibul, and unless Congress starts funding alot more C-17's thats not going to change.
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The M113 would have been fully C-130 transportable. For that matter its still fully transportbale even with aplique armour enough to protect it against 30mm cannon fire an TOW type ATGM's.
As well as the C-130 transport, which was the WHOLE POINT OF STRYKER the M113 ACAV can be transported 8 at a time in a C-747 and deploy without any airport equipment as it can carry a self deploying vehicle ramp.
Part of the reason the the germans failed so badly in russia was there wheeled mobility, wheels dont fare well in bad terrain, when the goign gets tough, the tough get tracks.
Furthermore wheels dont have anywhere near the psycological effect of tracks. if the infantry commander has one reccurent nightmare it is the unexpected rumble of heavy armour, the Thump-Thump-Thumping of the tracks is what the friendly commander wants to hear above all things, not that air is on the away, not that there heli's brining enforcemnts, he wants to know that friendly armour is on the way. For the opposing infantry commander the Thump-Thump-Thup of armour signifies that he is about to be engaged by a force, that while his defensive weapons my blunt they will probably not defeat, in a ground only battle his options are retreat or immeditate destruction
As well as the C-130 transport, which was the WHOLE POINT OF STRYKER the M113 ACAV can be transported 8 at a time in a C-747 and deploy without any airport equipment as it can carry a self deploying vehicle ramp.
Part of the reason the the germans failed so badly in russia was there wheeled mobility, wheels dont fare well in bad terrain, when the goign gets tough, the tough get tracks.
Furthermore wheels dont have anywhere near the psycological effect of tracks. if the infantry commander has one reccurent nightmare it is the unexpected rumble of heavy armour, the Thump-Thump-Thumping of the tracks is what the friendly commander wants to hear above all things, not that air is on the away, not that there heli's brining enforcemnts, he wants to know that friendly armour is on the way. For the opposing infantry commander the Thump-Thump-Thup of armour signifies that he is about to be engaged by a force, that while his defensive weapons my blunt they will probably not defeat, in a ground only battle his options are retreat or immeditate destruction
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The M113 would have been fully C-130 transportable. For that matter its still fully transportbale even with aplique armour enough to protect it against 30mm cannon fire an TOW type ATGM's.
As well as the C-130 transport, which was the WHOLE POINT OF STRYKER the M113 ACAV can be transported 8 at a time in a C-747 and deploy without any airport equipment as it can carry a self deploying vehicle ramp.
Part of the reason the the germans failed so badly in russia was there wheeled mobility, wheels dont fare well in bad terrain, when the goign gets tough, the tough get tracks.
Furthermore wheels dont have anywhere near the psycological effect of tracks. if the infantry commander has one reccurent nightmare it is the unexpected rumble of heavy armour, the Thump-Thump-Thumping of the tracks is what the friendly commander wants to hear above all things, not that air is on the away, not that there heli's brining enforcemnts, he wants to know that friendly armour is on the way. For the opposing infantry commander the Thump-Thump-Thup of armour signifies that he is about to be engaged by a force, that while his defensive weapons my blunt they will probably not defeat, in a ground only battle his options are retreat or immeditate destruction
As well as the C-130 transport, which was the WHOLE POINT OF STRYKER the M113 ACAV can be transported 8 at a time in a C-747 and deploy without any airport equipment as it can carry a self deploying vehicle ramp.
Part of the reason the the germans failed so badly in russia was there wheeled mobility, wheels dont fare well in bad terrain, when the goign gets tough, the tough get tracks.
Furthermore wheels dont have anywhere near the psycological effect of tracks. if the infantry commander has one reccurent nightmare it is the unexpected rumble of heavy armour, the Thump-Thump-Thumping of the tracks is what the friendly commander wants to hear above all things, not that air is on the away, not that there heli's brining enforcemnts, he wants to know that friendly armour is on the way. For the opposing infantry commander the Thump-Thump-Thup of armour signifies that he is about to be engaged by a force, that while his defensive weapons my blunt they will probably not defeat, in a ground only battle his options are retreat or immeditate destruction
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Are there any pictures of that tank?Abrams are all but impervious to the early RPG's. In one Iraqi battle, one Abram survived literally dozens of RPG hits.
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Not that I've been able to find, there also don't seem to be any pictures of the Challenger II which apparently at least sixty RPG-7 hits on the forward arc. Though unlike the M1 it had blow tracks and its gun disabled. Surviving RPG hits on the frontal arc of a MBT is pretty easy though since they simply can't penetrate, in 1968 during the fighting in Hue city one USMC M60, a tank lacking in any form of composite armor, survived at least two dozen hits over several days. And it wasn't an isolated example.BlkbrryTheGreat wrote:Are there any pictures of that tank?Abrams are all but impervious to the early RPG's. In one Iraqi battle, one Abram survived literally dozens of RPG hits.
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Actually its 500 miles not 100 but the original requirement was 1000.Sea Skimmer wrote:To only 100 miles, a fairly useless distance. And that is a Stryker without any form of additional armor. With MEXAS fitted (MEXAS can be removed, but the original requirement was for the Strykers to roll off combat ready) it's too heavy, and with the steel anti RPG cage its both too heavy and too wide to even fit inside.SecondStorm wrote: IIRC the Stryker is transportable by a C-130 but the range is greatly reduced.
But that all really doesn't matter, there simply isn't enough airlift to make transporting any large armored force anywhere possibul, and unless Congress starts funding alot more C-17's thats not going to change.
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No, the range is only 100 miles with a stripped down Stryker. This has been demonstrated by US Army tests, which where attempting to prove that the thing was air mobile.SecondStorm wrote: Actually its 500 miles not 100 but the original requirement was 1000.
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Wasn't Shinseki the idiot who suggested the army of the future should be an "all wheeled" (no tracked vehicles) force?Sea Skimmer wrote: The only reason that can be found for why it wasn't selected was because the previous Secretary of the Army, General Shinseki, was a moron who didn't think the M113 would be 'revolutionary' enough to crush the critics he had to deal with over the slow reaction of the US Army to Kosvo.
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Yes, and he had many other similar suggestions to transform the military. He and Admiral Cebrowski have the source of a great deal if trouble for the US military. Cebrowski has worse ideas, but they tend not to get funded, though defeating his Streefighter plan (replace most of the USN with 200 tons missile boats) is what spawned LCS, which is still a big waste of money.Ma Deuce wrote:
Wasn't Shinseki the idiot who suggested the army of the future should be an "all wheeled" (no tracked vehicles) force?
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