Posted on 08/30/2018 5:09:35 PM PDT by tlozo
New technology promises to give tankers an unprecedented view of the battlefield around themwithout exposing them to lethal enemy fire. Camera systems, often linked to VR headsets, can provide soldiers with a real-time view of the world outside their tank, eliminating the often severely restricted view tankers are forced to fight with.
Tanks are large, lethal, imposing beasts, surrounding their crews with layers of thick steel, composite, and even uranium armor. All of that protection makes it hard to see outside the tank, however, and tankers usually must rely on small vision ports to make sense of things. Seeing to the tanks flanks and rear is particularly difficult, an often unnerving prospect because those are areas where a tanks armor is thinnest.
New tech borrowed from fighter jets promises to change that. One of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighters most fascinating features is its so-called Distributed Aperture System, or DAS, which uses a network of infrared cameras on the outside of the F-35 to provide the pilot with views in all directionsincluding behind the cockpit and straight down through the cockpit floor. This provides the pilot with greater situational awareness in training and combat.
A Ukrainian company is testing a form of DAS for tanks. The company, LimpidArmor, says its Land Platform Modernization Kit enables a 360-degree real-time battlefield environment delivery" to the crew of armored vehicles due to 4 sets of cameras that merge streams and displays it in an operator's augmented reality glasses. It increases safety of both vehicle operators and people outside by enabling its crew to see even in so-called blind zones. Installed on a Ukrainian Army T-84 main battle tank, Land Platform Modernization Kit uses sixteen image-stabilized cameras that provide both day and night vision views in all directions outside the tank.
The key to the kit is the use of a commercial technology, specifically Microsofts Hololens mixed reality headset. The Hololens attaches to a tankers helmet like a pair of night vision goggles, allowing outside camera views to be projected into the users field of vision. In addition to camera views the Hololens can project other data, including the telemetry of all systems of the combat vehicle, task statuses, goals, interactive hints, placement of friendly and hostile units. It can be connected to the fire control system and to receive data from the UAV.
LimpidArmor isnt the only company to market AR-enabled headsets for vehicle crews. Israeli defense giant Elbit Systems has its IronVision system, promising seamless 360 degree line of sight, the ability to spot vehicles at ranges of up to 300 meters, and a look-lock-launch fighting capability. European arms contractor Hensoldt is also marketing its Local Situational Awareness System, or LSAS.
See-Through tank technology is likely to become very big in coming years. The technology is simple, inexpensive, and very useful to vehicle crews. It can also be retrofitted to existing equipment, making it a quick and efficient upgrade for literally tens of thousands of existing tanks and armored fighting vehicles.
And we will develop tech todisable the cameras, or hijack and display false imagery on the cameras.
Invisible tanks would be hard to hit.
Great for tranny troops in peekaboo nighties. Make the other side loose their lunch.
See though tank-tops on the other hand......
Transparent titanium would blow Scotty’s mind.
Could somewhat ameliorate tank vulnerability in MOUT environments.
.
Not at all, not unless they also could 'camouflage' their heat signature. But that's already been done, too.
https://www.baesystems.com/en-us/feature/adativ-cloak-of-invisibility
To: gaijin
"Could somewhat ameliorate tank vulnerability in MOUT environments."
Not unless they also added weapons systems to cover the dead spots. Otherwise the only close-in defense they'd have is driving erratically to run over the enemy. Which, BTW, is why tankers refer to infantry as "crunchies."
the emperors new tank
I suggest anyone who thinks this workable should try reading their smartphone first through the bottom of a glass coke bottle
Yep, getting close enough to use an AT-4 was never an ideal situation but I could see drones doing handoffs to the fire and forget platforms.
I have seen several videos of combatants in Syria running up to a tank to destroy it. In one, a guy goes to put a grenade down the barrel of a tank. He has some technical difficulty, so he leaves and comes back a minute later to seal the deal.
Amazing that the tank crew had zero awareness of a dude running around outside their tank multiple times.
I suspect hash was involved, on both sides!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.