Anjian, on 01 May 2015 - 11:15 PM, said:
The thought of that design did cross my mind, but it would put the mech at a severe disadvantage because it would put too much height above the main gun, making humping and hull-down positions difficult, and the gunner would have to turn the entire mech to fire at a target past a certain angle, or we'd have to shorten the barrel, making it much less accurate. Instead, I was thinking of putting a turret on the bottom, similar to the belly-gunner on a B-17 Flying Fortress, only it would be automated/remotely operated.
Praetor Knight, on 01 May 2015 - 11:45 PM, said:
I could definitely see something similar to Pararescue using mechs. They need a vehicle that can go behind enemy lines even in adverse weather conditions and can provide covering fire and a few Pararescuemen to whoever is in need of assistance, and evacuate them if need be.
Power armor and small bipedal mechs will definitely be used, and quads could be used for support (i.e. artillery, IFVs) but probably not front-line fighting because they wouldn't be as fast since they wouldn't have the flexible spine that that allows for high speeds that we see in the animal kingdom. We'd also see them working alongside traditional wheeled and tracked vehicles; they wouldn't be the end-all-be-all of warfare simply because of the "cool factor."
For a power supply the main draw is going to be from the computers/operating systems. The artificial muscles will use very very little. With the advances we've made in batteries we could probably just throw one of those on there and have a relatively cheap, quiet, stealthy frame.
Lily from animove, on 02 May 2015 - 11:05 AM, said:
ASIMO isn't designed for battle, but it is one of the most advanced bipedal robots in the world, and most bipedal robots use a leg design similar to ASIMO's to allow for 14 degrees-of-freedom like humans have:
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Nik Reaper, on 03 May 2015 - 07:13 AM, said:
I think automization is definitely where military vehicles are going, and it would be a much better idea for a mech to controlled more like drone since it would be difficult to damp the jostling of the walking/running motion to a point where it wouldn't injure the crew or make it impossible for them to operate the mech.
Our armor is actually pretty great. Many anti-tank missiles are useless against the Abram's frontal armor. Usually it's the older Cold-War-era tanks that are in danger. Obviously missiles fired from aircraft will be a problem but operating an aircraft is much more expensive than operating a tank or mech, so cost-wise the ground vehicle is better, and the US is looking for cost-effectiveness right now.
Combine this with sloped armor and it would be pretty survivable:
Helmstif, on 03 May 2015 - 08:53 PM, said:
The problem with a wide base is that the mech will have to "waddle" back and forth to keep the center of gravity over the feet when moving. I high leg-lenth to hip-width ratio will decrease that effect. I agree that the technology is not really here yet, but we're right on the brink with advances in computers, robotics, and artificial muscles.
SethAbercromby, on 04 May 2015 - 02:05 AM, said:
The way I see it, even if the foot is ripped off, the leg will absorb much more of the impact than tank treads will, and it can still limp, while if a tank is hit it loses tread(s) and is rendered immobile.
Calebos, on 04 May 2015 - 05:02 AM, said:
If you're interested I can post links to articles on carbon nanotube muscles that I used in a research paper I wrote last year. Conventional materials won't work, but with the insane properties of carbon fiber materials it's definitely possible.