posted on Apr, 11 2008 @ 01:08 AM
As a resident tanker, I feel the need to give my two cents.
I currently own 5 M1A1AIMS Abrams Main Battle Tanks. The Army inventory is currently consolidating itself to two versions of the Abrams: M1A1AIMS, an
improved M1A1, and the M1A2SEP V2, the most advanced tank in the US Army. The idea is to streamline logistics (2 rather than 5+ versions of the tank)
and ensure the entire inventory is LandWarNet compatable.
The Army is also in progress of developing a nextgen platform (not the Stryker MGS), a medium tank with an autoloader. My current understanding is
that it will incorporate a 2 man crew with redundant controls and remote operation capability. Platoons will be composed of 3 manned tanks and one
slave tank that will fight autonomiously and be able to be controlled remotely from within the platoon. I don't know exactly how this will work or
if its just a pipe dream.
As far as the current discussion goes, as a "dinosaur" tanker (not a SEP) I am perfectly comfortable in my current platform.
I don't want an autoloader. My loader can hump rounds at about 1 every 3 to 7 seconds, depending of fatigue. Yeah, he is fallible, but without him
who would work jams on the coax? 11,000 rounds puts a lot of stress on the feeder, and he can hand-feed rounds if necessary- something that would be
impossible with an autoloader because no crew member could step behind the breech. He also works the radios and contributes to tank maintenence,
which is considerable. As a leader I frequently have to be away from my tank to recieve and write orders; without him keeping the tank running would
be next to impossible. Aside from that, he works an additional machine gun and rifle from his position, and can cover a considerable amount of dead
space that I can't see from my hatch and can command the tank when I'm busy on the radio or satellite comms.
As for current threats, it is extremely hard to get a catostrophic kill on an Abrams. RPG7s are only dangerous in that they can disable the engine
with a rear shot to the exhaust. RPG29s may penetrate the driver's compartment, depending on the angle of trajectory, but not the turret. There are
lucky shots, but if you look at the bulk of the statistics we are very well protected. EFPs are dangerous but rare and require precise aiming. The
vunerable areas of the tank are hard to hit.
The weakest part of the tank in my opinion is the main gun, for the current fight. We just can't use it. You can't have a main gun round going
through 27 blocks of civilian buildings after you kill whatever you were aiming at. We've adapted by developing the canister round and mounting a
.50 cal rifle in the breech to use as a point fire weapon.
A daily motto of the US tanker is "fight your tank." Accept your limitations and devise a way to be more lethal and increase survivability.
Soldiers will always find a way to improvise, adapt, and overcome whatever is presented them. The Abrams may be almost thirty years old, but it is
still a viable and lethal combat platform. I trust it with my life, every day.