tanques e blindados
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- Wingate
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Re: tanques e blindados
Acho que estamos agora sob o poderoso reinado das armas anti-carro, cada vez mais sofisticadas, fáceis de manejar e poderosamente letais, sendo usadas contra blindados, tropas e tudo o mais.
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Re: tanques e blindados
Imagens de leo II sendo acertados:
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...JTK3E0NpCU.jpg
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...EcJL8myTu0.jpg
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...hTEVKIVgck.jpg
:
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...V8apvGkwE0.jpg
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...z-eH7LlWWY.jpg
É extremamente difícil evitar isso. Lembro que os dois sabras acertados em setembro estavam 20km atrás da frente de batalha! O EI deixa equipes entocadas (ou avançam à noite). Já são 3 Leo II acertados, o de ontem salvou a vida dos tripulantes (os 4 ficaram feridos).
abs,
Rafael Poti
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...JTK3E0NpCU.jpg
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...EcJL8myTu0.jpg
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...hTEVKIVgck.jpg
:
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...V8apvGkwE0.jpg
https://pp.vk.me/c626331/v626331605/...z-eH7LlWWY.jpg
É extremamente difícil evitar isso. Lembro que os dois sabras acertados em setembro estavam 20km atrás da frente de batalha! O EI deixa equipes entocadas (ou avançam à noite). Já são 3 Leo II acertados, o de ontem salvou a vida dos tripulantes (os 4 ficaram feridos).
abs,
Rafael Poti
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Re: tanques e blindados
First contract for Russia's new Armata tanks is signed. First 100 delivered this year with 2,300 total over 10 years
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Re: tanques e blindados
Já? Ou esse se refere ao ano de 2017?P44 escreveu:First contract for Russia's new Armata tanks is signed. First 100 delivered this year with 2,300 total over 10 years
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Re: tanques e blindados
2017Viktor Reznov escreveu:Já? Ou esse se refere ao ano de 2017?P44 escreveu:First contract for Russia's new Armata tanks is signed. First 100 delivered this year with 2,300 total over 10 years
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Re: tanques e blindados
É bom postar esse vídeos para sairmos da ideia do "material invencível vs cocô de urso". Por exemplo, os Sabras que foram descritos como merdas por tomarem pau de um kornet... Dependendo do míssil ou arma anti-carro, do angulo e da posição que é acertada, qualquer bichão pode ser destruído... T90, Leo II ou Abrams... A questão é que para acertar um T55 ou Leo I é bem mais fácil. Um CC de nova geração obriga a infantaria a se colocar em posições laterais ou em locais bem próximos dos CC.EDSON escreveu:Abrams sendo danificado por RPG.
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Re: tanques e blindados
Army's first armored multi-purpose vehicle rolls off production line
The first Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle rolled off the production line in York, Pennsylvania, Dec. 15, 2016. It is shown here during a demonstration shortly after roll-out.
The AMPV will replace the Army's aging M113 family of vehicles that today make up 32 percent of the armored brigade combat team vehicle fleet, said Col. Mike Milner, project manager, AMPV, during the rollout ceremony. The M113 was first produced in 1960.
CAPABILITIES
Milner said AMPV will provide significantly more size, power, cooling and mobility than the M113 to the ABCT.
"[The AMPV] will enable mission command on the move, restore indirect fires for the combined arms battalions, provide protection and survivability to the company's logistical forces and provide significantly greater care to wounded Soldiers than was previously available," Milner said.
"All of this while providing protection and survivability levels well above the capabilities in the field today."
While pointing out the AMPV on display behind him, Erwin Beiber, president, Platforms and Services, BAE Systems, Inc. -- the company that was awarded the contract -- said the AMPV will include five variants. The variant on display was the general purpose variant.
Other AMPV variants currently in various phases of build include:
-- Mission command.
-- Medical treatment.
-- Medical evacuation.
-- Mortar carrier.
The AMPV will create a tremendous amount of commonality in the fleet, Beiber added. "When this gets out there with Bradleys, that high degree of commonality will hold down costs in production and full-life-cycle costs, supply, training and troop support to these vehicles and that will be absolutely fantastic," he said.
ON TIME, ON BUDGET
That the first prototype of AMPV was rolled out just shy of 24 months after the contract was awarded is significant, Milner said, a short time in Army acquisition programs. The AMPV was rolled out, he noted, on cost and on schedule, fewer than six months after its critical design review.
"There are so few programs today that have delivered prototypes this quickly," he said. "[Now] we can get it into test and eventually into production."
Beiber attributed the quick turnaround, in part, to the fact that the AMPV is built on prior programs like the Bradley and Paladin Integrated Management program. Bringing a lot of that mature technology to this program, he said, "significantly de-risked the timeline to execute this program."
Maj. Gen. David G. Bassett, program executive officer for Ground Combat Systems, credited Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Mark A. Milley with keeping the program moving forward.
"His personal involvement has prevented this program from falling into the trap that's caught other programs and caused them not to succeed," he said. "[Milley has] ensured we've stayed aligned with his priorities, to deliver the appropriate combination of protection, mobility, reliability … on budget and on schedule."
Bassett added, "This is not the finish line. The last thing we want to do is celebrate too soon, like Navy did" near the end of the Army-Navy game in Baltimore last week, in which Army was triumphant.
"We're not going to rest," he said. "We're going to be relentless until we deliver AMPVs across every ABCT in the Army. Our Soldiers deserve nothing less."
He concluded: "The [ABCT] is not the kind of formation you send out when you want to put up a school, hand out bags of rice or build a road. It's for dominating our nation's adversaries. It is our most lethal formation. There are no more lethal formations on the ground today in the world than a U.S. Army ABCT. This vehicle … will make this ABCT even stronger."
https://www.army.mil/article/179779/arm ... ction_line
The first Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle rolled off the production line in York, Pennsylvania, Dec. 15, 2016. It is shown here during a demonstration shortly after roll-out.
The AMPV will replace the Army's aging M113 family of vehicles that today make up 32 percent of the armored brigade combat team vehicle fleet, said Col. Mike Milner, project manager, AMPV, during the rollout ceremony. The M113 was first produced in 1960.
CAPABILITIES
Milner said AMPV will provide significantly more size, power, cooling and mobility than the M113 to the ABCT.
"[The AMPV] will enable mission command on the move, restore indirect fires for the combined arms battalions, provide protection and survivability to the company's logistical forces and provide significantly greater care to wounded Soldiers than was previously available," Milner said.
"All of this while providing protection and survivability levels well above the capabilities in the field today."
While pointing out the AMPV on display behind him, Erwin Beiber, president, Platforms and Services, BAE Systems, Inc. -- the company that was awarded the contract -- said the AMPV will include five variants. The variant on display was the general purpose variant.
Other AMPV variants currently in various phases of build include:
-- Mission command.
-- Medical treatment.
-- Medical evacuation.
-- Mortar carrier.
The AMPV will create a tremendous amount of commonality in the fleet, Beiber added. "When this gets out there with Bradleys, that high degree of commonality will hold down costs in production and full-life-cycle costs, supply, training and troop support to these vehicles and that will be absolutely fantastic," he said.
ON TIME, ON BUDGET
That the first prototype of AMPV was rolled out just shy of 24 months after the contract was awarded is significant, Milner said, a short time in Army acquisition programs. The AMPV was rolled out, he noted, on cost and on schedule, fewer than six months after its critical design review.
"There are so few programs today that have delivered prototypes this quickly," he said. "[Now] we can get it into test and eventually into production."
Beiber attributed the quick turnaround, in part, to the fact that the AMPV is built on prior programs like the Bradley and Paladin Integrated Management program. Bringing a lot of that mature technology to this program, he said, "significantly de-risked the timeline to execute this program."
Maj. Gen. David G. Bassett, program executive officer for Ground Combat Systems, credited Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Mark A. Milley with keeping the program moving forward.
"His personal involvement has prevented this program from falling into the trap that's caught other programs and caused them not to succeed," he said. "[Milley has] ensured we've stayed aligned with his priorities, to deliver the appropriate combination of protection, mobility, reliability … on budget and on schedule."
Bassett added, "This is not the finish line. The last thing we want to do is celebrate too soon, like Navy did" near the end of the Army-Navy game in Baltimore last week, in which Army was triumphant.
"We're not going to rest," he said. "We're going to be relentless until we deliver AMPVs across every ABCT in the Army. Our Soldiers deserve nothing less."
He concluded: "The [ABCT] is not the kind of formation you send out when you want to put up a school, hand out bags of rice or build a road. It's for dominating our nation's adversaries. It is our most lethal formation. There are no more lethal formations on the ground today in the world than a U.S. Army ABCT. This vehicle … will make this ABCT even stronger."
https://www.army.mil/article/179779/arm ... ction_line
- gabriel219
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Re: tanques e blindados
Na matéria do Fantástico deu pra ver que ainda usam Urutu e Cascavel no combate ao Estado Islâmico.
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Re: tanques e blindados
Sem dúvida, essa está sendo a década das armas anti-carro.EDSON escreveu:Abrams sendo danificado por RPG.
Wingate
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Re: tanques e blindados
Srs. uma duvida.
Saberiam dizer o que seria uma pequena grade inclinada, presente na lateral ou traseira de alguns blindados, no caso da imagem do Pandur que o Cabeça de Martelo postou recentemente, a "grade" está na lateral esquerda entre o segundo e o terceiro eixo do veículo.
Desde ja agradeço.
Att.
Centauro
Saberiam dizer o que seria uma pequena grade inclinada, presente na lateral ou traseira de alguns blindados, no caso da imagem do Pandur que o Cabeça de Martelo postou recentemente, a "grade" está na lateral esquerda entre o segundo e o terceiro eixo do veículo.
Desde ja agradeço.
Att.
Centauro
“Quero a ordem e a liberdade, mas quando esta perigar, minha espada estará pronta para defendê-la. As dificuldades não me quebrantam o ânimo” Marechal Manoel Luis Osorio
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Re: tanques e blindados
Para ver melhor: http://www.operacional.pt/vbr-8x8-tp-pandur-ii-127/De acordo com o STANAG 2129, a VBR PANDUR II 8X8, possui os seguintes
dispositivos de identificação de combate: “V” invertidos, Combat Identification Panel (CIP)
e Thermal Identification Beacon (TIB).