Zakatak, on 30 September 2012 - 12:29 PM, said:
I'm sure any entry could have made the shot. Right place and the right time.
None of the others have made a shot at that distance though. As such it is merely assumption.
Zakatak, on 30 September 2012 - 12:29 PM, said:
Let's not forget that the reason the rifled barrels aren't used in favor of smoothbore is maintenance. It costs less to purchase saboted rounds then it does to maintain a rifled barrel, because the intense heat can cause the rifling to warp and decay. Sort of like a railgun.
I thought this was a discussion about which tank would fare best in a battle, not about which was easiest to maintain / makes the most sense all-around.
Zakatak, on 30 September 2012 - 12:29 PM, said:
Does anybody have some statistics regarding armor? Chobham vs. Chobham II vs. Ceramic Composite vs. etc etc etc? I know that the Canadian Forces have bolt-on armor kits for the Leopard 2A4/6M that drastically reduces RPG damage and IED's.
Given Chobham and Chobham II are both classified armors, there are only the rough estimations given to the public, Chobham being said to be ~1.5x stronger than steel of the same thickness and Chobham being 2-3x stronger for the thickness. No actual details are really available on the armors.
Lightdragon, on 30 September 2012 - 02:38 PM, said:
its not just hte maintenance that makes the smooth bore more popular... its the ability to use a wider variety of ammo types in the smoothbore
In general, the only two rounds important in a tank battle, are APKE (armor piercing kinetic energy rounds) and HEAT (high explosive anti-tank), of which both rounds are available to and generally loaded in a Challenger II tank.
Edited by Vulpesveritas, 30 September 2012 - 03:08 PM.