Vanir Ausf B Posted February 4, 2015 Share Posted February 4, 2015 Anyone know what it is? Bonus points for links to reputable-looking sources. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ikalugin Posted February 4, 2015 Share Posted February 4, 2015 Did you access the materials posted by the BTR? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vanir Ausf B Posted February 4, 2015 Author Share Posted February 4, 2015 Yes. While that is a terrific source, it says nothing about the roof armor except that it has "good slope". 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BTR Posted February 4, 2015 Share Posted February 4, 2015 Check the materials provided, there are some good schematics, that might allow you to estimate. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vanir Ausf B Posted February 4, 2015 Author Share Posted February 4, 2015 (edited) I have checked the materials provided. No, I don't think I can get a useful estimation. Then again, I'm looking at them on my phone. If anyone thinks they have a good estimation I am all ears, er eyes. Edited February 4, 2015 by Vanir Ausf B 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Kettler Posted February 4, 2015 Share Posted February 4, 2015 Vanir Ausf B, How's this grab you? Taken from here. aw_mm's #11, dated 8/26/14. I have never seen the like of the kind of detail. During the Cold War, analysts got all excited because the someone managed to image the underside of a T-72 turret, for some reason upside down at the tank plant, allowing determination of the cavity size for special armor in the turret front. This makes that look like a nonevent by comparison. "ERA is highly efficient per thickness - afaik it is the most space efficient armor. The reactive elements in the Soviet Kontakt-1 ERA consisted of a 7 mm thick layer of explosive sandwiched between two 2 mm thick steel plates (so the total thickness is 11 mm) which can reduce the penetration of a missile warhead by 400 mm. The optimal protection is achieved when the ERA is sloped, but at the roof this is not necessary, because pretty much all top-attack weapons strike from an angle (except artillery bomblets).The only thing I was able to find about the actual Soviet/Russian ERA used on their MBTs is this picture from a Russian news website/blog:It shows trials done during the development of the enhanced roof protection in 1983. The (1) marks the 50 mm thick anti-radiation layer installed inside the tank. (2) shows the 40 mm thick roof armor made of medium hardness steel. (3) is a 2 mm thick steel layer for holding all stuff together. (4) is a 80 mm thick polyurethane layer and (6) marks a 10 mm thick armor plate of high hardness steel under which a Kontakt-1 reactive element is located.So the whole array would be: 50 mm anti-radiation liner - 40 mm thick roof armor - 80 mm polyurethane - 2 mm steel - 7 mm explosive - 2 mm steel - 10 mm high hardness steel or 191 mm of armor of which 90 mm are part of the turret roof and 101 mm applique armor.According to said blog (if Chrome translated everything correctly) the armor was tested against an artillery bomblet with a penetration of 200 mm (dent in the armor marked with (8) ) and was able to resist it. Such a bomblet strikes perpendicular at the armor, against a missile like Javelin which will strike at an angle a protection of 400 to 500 mm could be expected in my opinion. Still this wouldn't be enough to deal with the Javelin missile, but then again it is a prototype armor from 1983. I'd expect at least the T-90 (1992) or T-90A (2005) to have upgraded roof armor." Regards, John Kettler 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
antaress73 Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 (edited) so Tow-2B should not penetrate the T-90 when it defeats Arena ? Edited February 5, 2015 by antaress73 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
antaress73 Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 it says that the EFP on the TOW-2B should penetrate at most 100-120mm and that the first generation ERA from 1983 did protect against a 200mm penetration bomblet. SO you can only imagine what the latest ERA on the T-90 can protect against. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nerdwing Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 Something tells me ERA isnt as simple as people make it out to be, and in reality it isnt a flat deduction from a marketing brochure's claims. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
panzersaurkrautwerfer Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 it says that the EFP on the TOW-2B should penetrate at most 100-120mm and that the first generation ERA from 1983 did protect against a 200mm penetration bomblet. SO you can only imagine what the latest ERA on the T-90 can protect against. T-90 should still unzip like most tanks. 500 MM RHA is pretty ambitious for roof armor. Also TOW-2B is a tandem warhead system. ERA isn't going to do as much. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nerdwing Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 I imagine the roof armor/ERA on the T-90 are meant to protect versus DPICM-level stuff rather than dedicated top-attack missiles. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Kettler Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 (edited) antaress73, Javelin has a tandem charge specifically designed to defeat ERA. I can't really directly speak (used to work at Hughes Missile Systems Group, which made the TOW) to TOW 2B Aero effectiveness (no Aero was in existence then) vs the aforementioned roof armor with ERA, but this Army TOW overview would appear to indicate TOW 2B Aero (dual charge EFP) not only can do that--"defeats all current and projected armor systems," but, by unspecified means, also defeats APS. For sure, it completely defeats the vanilla tank's roof armor. Call the vid strong motivation for those in Russia working to keep their tanks alive in battle vs ATGMs. http://www.military.com/video/guided-missiles/antitank-missiles/tow-missile-destroys-t-72-tank/1689627847001/ Regards, John Kettler Edited February 5, 2015 by John Kettler 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
panzersaurkrautwerfer Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 The best thing about that video is the youtube comments claiming it's fake because the missiles CLEARLY explodes above the tank, and stating the explosion is because the tank was unfairly filled with explosives (like, you know rounds in the magazine and such). 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akd Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 (edited) T-90 should still unzip like most tanks. 500 MM RHA is pretty ambitious for roof armor. Also TOW-2B is a tandem warhead system. ERA isn't going to do as much. We looked into this and it seems the two charges in TOW-2B are intentionally aimed with an offset to increase probability of a hit, rather than to aimed at the same point to achieve a tandem ERA defeat effect. Whether ERA would be even effective against this EFP warhead is a bit of an open question (currently it is effective in game). Edited February 5, 2015 by akd 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ikalugin Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 ERA does not add much protection by itself, it decreases the penetrative power of the weapon and thus acts as a multiplier. Thus if you have a thick armor array to back the ERA up you get a significant protection increase (making it very efficient). I am not sure about K1, but K5 roof tiles did offer protection against EFPs. Panzer, on the Tow video the explosion begins before the hit, you could send that from frame by frame analysis. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vanir Ausf B Posted February 5, 2015 Author Share Posted February 5, 2015 Thanks, John. That helps. Vanir Ausf B, How's this grab you? Taken from here. aw_mm's #11, dated 8/26/14. I have never seen the like of the kind of detail. During the Cold War, analysts got all excited because the someone managed to image the underside of a T-72 turret, for some reason upside down at the tank plant, allowing determination of the cavity size for special armor in the turret front. This makes that look like a nonevent by comparison. "ERA is highly efficient per thickness - afaik it is the most space efficient armor. The reactive elements in the Soviet Kontakt-1 ERA consisted of a 7 mm thick layer of explosive sandwiched between two 2 mm thick steel plates (so the total thickness is 11 mm) which can reduce the penetration of a missile warhead by 400 mm. The optimal protection is achieved when the ERA is sloped, but at the roof this is not necessary, because pretty much all top-attack weapons strike from an angle (except artillery bomblets).The only thing I was able to find about the actual Soviet/Russian ERA used on their MBTs is this picture from a Russian news website/blog:It shows trials done during the development of the enhanced roof protection in 1983. The (1) marks the 50 mm thick anti-radiation layer installed inside the tank. (2) shows the 40 mm thick roof armor made of medium hardness steel. (3) is a 2 mm thick steel layer for holding all stuff together. (4) is a 80 mm thick polyurethane layer and (6) marks a 10 mm thick armor plate of high hardness steel under which a Kontakt-1 reactive element is located.So the whole array would be: 50 mm anti-radiation liner - 40 mm thick roof armor - 80 mm polyurethane - 2 mm steel - 7 mm explosive - 2 mm steel - 10 mm high hardness steel or 191 mm of armor of which 90 mm are part of the turret roof and 101 mm applique armor.According to said blog (if Chrome translated everything correctly) the armor was tested against an artillery bomblet with a penetration of 200 mm (dent in the armor marked with (8) ) and was able to resist it. Such a bomblet strikes perpendicular at the armor, against a missile like Javelin which will strike at an angle a protection of 400 to 500 mm could be expected in my opinion. Still this wouldn't be enough to deal with the Javelin missile, but then again it is a prototype armor from 1983. I'd expect at least the T-90 (1992) or T-90A (2005) to have upgraded roof armor." Regards, John Kettler 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DreDay Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 (edited) ERA does not add much protection by itself, it decreases the penetrative power of the weapon and thus acts as a multiplier. Thus if you have a thick armor array to back the ERA up you get a significant protection increase (making it very efficient). I am not sure about K1, but K5 roof tiles did offer protection against EFPs. Panzer, on the Tow video the explosion begins before the hit, you could send that from frame by frame analysis. Those are all good points. It is also important to remember that the Russians claim to have built an Active Defense System (Arena-E) that intercepts top attack misses like Javelin and TOW-2B. It remains to be seen how effective such system would bee; but Russians certainly seem to be well aware of a threat posed to their armor by top-attack ATGMS... Edited February 5, 2015 by DreDay 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
panzersaurkrautwerfer Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 Panzer, on the Tow video the explosion begins before the hit, you could send that from frame by frame analysis. I'm going to pull Occam out and stick with it's more likely the principles of the tank's destruction are not understood especially well by casual observers than someone went through all the effort of faking a catastrophic explosion on a tank well known for catastrophically exploding using a missile that stands an excellent chance of causing a catastrophic explosion, in a test in which merely "tank destroyed" was an acceptable outcome vs tank annihilated, but then after all that effort did such a poor job at syncing missile and explosion to the point where nerds on the internet could stare at the video long enough to totally throw the veil of lies off of TOW missile testing. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
antaress73 Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 (edited) Anyway I use a very effective APS against Javelin when playing the Russians.. tree tops ! works like a charm ! Takes a lot of planning .. easier to do on defense than on offense. You must also choose dense tree terrain. Edited February 5, 2015 by antaress73 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
antaress73 Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 (edited) I guess this one was filled with explosives too turn the sound off... those victory shouts are annoying Edited February 5, 2015 by antaress73 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akd Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 Those are all good points. It is also important to remember that the Russians claim to have built an Active Defense System (Arena-E) that intercepts top attack misses like Javelin and TOW-2B. It remains to be seen how effective such system would bee; but Russians certainly seem to be well aware of a threat posed to their armor by top-attack ATGMS... The intercept envelope claimed by manufacturer for latest Arena is +20° at 50m. Javelin dives at 45°. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
antaress73 Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 (edited) Trophy works against the javelin but limited # of shots. I played an American civil war II quick battle hehe first time I fired a javelin surprise surprise Edited February 5, 2015 by antaress73 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gunnersman Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 I guess this one was filled with explosives too turn the sound off... those victory shouts are annoying Pretty gutsy when that gun barrel is pointed in your direction. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChrisND Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 Thickness of top armor for T-90 and T-72 tanks should be increased in v1.01, effectively improving their resilience against precision artillery (don't count on it to help against a Javelin though). 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DreDay Posted February 5, 2015 Share Posted February 5, 2015 The intercept envelope claimed by manufacturer for latest Arena is +20° at 50m. Javelin dives at 45°. Are you sure about that? Regular arena is said to cover 20-40 degree vertical arch around the turret. From what I understand - Arena-E is fired at a straight vertical angle (i.e. 90 degrees) so in theory it should be able to engage anything flying above the turret... 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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