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Army May "Hybridize" Abrams Tanks With Electric Propulsion
https://warriormaven.com ^ | FEB 10, 2022 | By Kris Osborn

Posted on 07/27/2022 6:13:12 AM PDT by Red Badger

Typically an Abrams tank in combat would be difficult to hide, but if an Abrams tank could linger beneath a thick forest of trees and operate while silent and not emit heat, the advantages would be enormous

What if an Abrams tank were able to surge forward into enemy territory with much greater range, endurance and offensive combat success due to needing less fuel and logistics support? What if armored vehicles could silently hide from enemy detection without emitting a heat or noise signature? This might enable clandestine scout and reconnaissance missions, enable surprise attack or simply allow focused attention of computing, communications, networking and weapons.

Army Climate Strategy These advancements are fast-becoming more realistic, in part due to the Army’s recently published Climate Strategy. While the strategy is comprehensive and wide-spanning in its sphere of topics and areas of focus, one interesting and potentially impactful area of focus relates to “hybridizing” commercial, non-tactical and tactical vehicles with electric propulsion and operational technologies. The goal, as cited in the strategy, could be described in terms of interwoven, mutually reinforcing concepts … making constructive environmental changes while also introducing extremely significant new combat advantages to the force.

A perhaps lesser recognized yet impactful element of this initiative relates to the multitude of ways in which introducing the hybridization of heavier combat vehicles could measurably improve tactical performance, perhaps even saving lives in combat.

m1a2-abrams-battle-tank Military.com

“While these steps are focused on reducing greenhouse gasses, every one of these steps is going to make us a better and more effective fighting force,” Mr. Paul Farnan, Acting Assistant Secretary of the Army, Installation, Energy and Environment, told a group of reporters when talking about the new Climate Strategy.

Hybridizing Abrams Tanks A mechanized column of armored vehicles including Abrams tanks, could certainly surge forward into enemy territory to “close with an enemy,” is a much faster and more efficient way should fuel requirements be drastically reduced. Heavily armored vehicles require so much fuel to advance forward, yet they need substantial logistics support in the way of continued fuel and other supplies. Transporting things like fuel of course introduces an element of risk, making advancing forces more vulnerable. An ability to surge farther without needing as much of a logistics chain can therefore introduce very significant tactical advantages, as explained by Farnan.

“What we are looking for is ways to more effectively enhance our force and improve how we are able to fight wars. If we reduce the amount of fuel required, there is less of a logistical tail line that we will have to supply our forces. This enables greater on-station time for forces,” Farnan explained.

M1A2 Abrams Battle Tank M1A2 Abrams Battle Tank

There are other tactical advantages as well, such as the prospect of “silent watch.” A hybridized vehicle can operate with the ability to quietly linger in a high-value, high-risk area without emitting an acoustic or thermal signature. This is extremely significant, because of course it allows the vehicle to run while saving fuel, but also helps advancing forces stay quasi “stealthy” or less detectable to increasingly advanced enemy sensors. Should a tank effectively obscure itself from an overhead EO/IR camera using terrain, it would be extremely difficult for enemy drones, satellites and other sensors to detect.

The tactical advantage of this kind of ability is massive, as it could improve success prospects for clandestine missions, scouting and reconnaissance or surprise attack. Typically something like an Abrams in combat would be difficult to hide, but if a tank could linger beneath a thick forest of trees and operate while remaining entirely silent and not emitting heat, the combat advantages would be enormous.

The text of the Army’s “Climate Strategy” explained this in terms of merging“climate and combat” advantages.

“Contemporary Army ground vehicles must continuously run their engines non-stop to power vital auxiliary systems like communications equipment even when the vehicle is not moving. Introducing anti-idle enables these systems to be powered even with the engine off, allowing the vehicle to serve its critical battlefield functions on “silent watch,” the strategy writes.

Farnan explained that integrating electrical propulsion and functionality into heavy combat vehicles such as Abrams or Bradleys will happen on a “much longer timeline given all the issues that it is going to involve. We are going to push hard to get there but be methodical and deliberate to do it,” Farnan said.

Army Secretary Wormuth’s intent to align climate change enviro-friendly adaptations with tactical, technological and strategic warfighting improvements involves ongoing synergies with the services’ acquisition and modernization communities and the Installation, Energy and Environment units. Some of these efforts, which were referred to by Farnan, include a step by step hybridization and things like the installation of batteries.

Army Modernization This is quite significant and not without some kinds of technological precedent in the realm of Army modernization. For instance, as far back as 15 years ago, the Army’s Manned-Ground Vehicles developed for Future Combat Systems were engineered with electricity and power-generating battery technologies.

While batteries need to be properly cooled in many cases to function in an optimal way, this innovation brought the clear tactical advantage of being able to better power up and sustain on-board electrical systems such as sensors, computing and C4ISR communications systems. This is just one of many examples in which Army innovations explored for Future Combat Systems wound up informing successful modernization efforts in subsequent years.

While the ambitious and in many ways successful FCS program was canceled in 2009 by former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, many FCS-inspired technological breakthroughs wound up contributing to and informing decades of continued modernization. In the realm of hybridization of vehicles and electric propulsion systems, this paradoxical dynamic with FCS could help as there are previous successful technological efforts likely able to expedite current developments.

Much of this may take time to evolve, yet there is precedent and previous technological progress which might help accelerate development with both the tactical and combat vehicle fleet. Hybridized vehicles would need to be effectively ruggedized for combat and able to preserve their weapons and warfighting advantages. This enviro-military synergy, however, appears auspicious and promising as something quite realistic, favoring success and already underway.

M1A2 Abrams Battle Tank M1A2 Abrams Battle Tank

Military.com

The Army’s Climate Strategy does speak to this progress, by referring to a number of projects such as its Electric Light Reconnaissance Vehicle, a program slated to begin testing by September of next year. Research along these lines is surging ahead. The strategy writes “

“The Army is researching key questions about hybrid vehicle propulsion and power generation systems, developing advanced technologies, and working with vehicle Program Managers to integrate hybrid electric technologies into future and existing platforms.”

Kris Osborn is the Defense Editor for the National Interest. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army—Acquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The History Channel. He also has a Master's Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; History; Military/Veterans; Society
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To: SharpenedEdge

Most of the services’ materiel commands are full of woke morons who will try to green the military. The all worship the Green Nude Eel.


81 posted on 07/27/2022 9:32:04 AM PDT by MIchaelTArchangel (I miss Don Imus!)
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To: SharpenedEdge

Most of the services’ materiel commands are full of woke morons who will try to green the military. The all worship the Green Nude Eel.


82 posted on 07/27/2022 9:32:04 AM PDT by MIchaelTArchangel (I miss Don Imus!)
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To: Pollard

What sort of electrical source would be needed to electrify her? It seems she has ten times the mass of Julius and Ethyl Rosenberg combined.


83 posted on 07/27/2022 9:33:59 AM PDT by MIchaelTArchangel (I miss Don Imus!)
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To: antidemoncrat

I assume you must think the US military doesn’t already know about EMP hardening.


84 posted on 07/27/2022 9:34:25 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: Travis McGee
If we had ham, we could have ham and eggs.

If we had eggs.

85 posted on 07/27/2022 9:40:45 AM PDT by kiryandil (China Joe and Paycheck Hunter - the Chink in America's defenses)
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To: GingisK

When I was designing EMP hardened equipment in the late 90s it seemed all the talk and design efforts were focused on it. Don’t seem to hear much about that now especially since they are talking about buying hybrid and all electric vehicles which are very difficult to harden.


86 posted on 07/27/2022 9:48:45 AM PDT by antidemoncrat
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To: Red Badger

None of the recharging stations in Ukraine are working...


87 posted on 07/27/2022 9:53:56 AM PDT by Jim Noble (I’ve stumbled on the side of twelve misty mountains)
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To: Red Badger
What if we all turn inside out and explode?

This story is patently ridiculous. An Abrams weighs 60-70 tons. So would the batteries this article envisages.

88 posted on 07/27/2022 10:26:51 AM PDT by Thud
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To: antidemoncrat
Maybe they are sure nobody would sufficiently impolite to use such a weapon. ;-D

Here I sit, trying to harden my electronics for near lightning strikes. That stuff is brutal. I'm having pretty good results with a chain of beefy inductors, TVS diodes, resistors, and zener diodes. Its a lot of board space. (These things sit in the open running pumps at landfills.)

89 posted on 07/27/2022 10:31:30 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: Red Badger

A diesel electric tank would make some sense. Since I didn’t bother to read the article, I don’t know if that’s what they are talking about :-)


90 posted on 07/27/2022 11:59:09 AM PDT by zeugma (Stop deluding yourself that America is still a free country.)
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To: Red Badger

Well...
It makes sense...

The chicoms, already, are buying up all the land around our military installations, infiltrating all our military research establishments, sneak peaking into our military electronic hardware, flooding the universities & colleges with spies, and establishing economic control within countries all around the globe...

Now they will be the main suppliers of both materials and production of the batteries that will be needed to run our tanks until the EMP blast occurs...

Good thinking from the same group of american communists that gave China (and, eventually, North Korea) the ability to build ICBMs...


91 posted on 07/27/2022 12:10:54 PM PDT by SuperLuminal
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To: SuperLuminal

The whole idea was probably China’s in the first place!..............


92 posted on 07/27/2022 12:21:28 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Red Badger

The Tiger tank was hybrid electric. Overly complicated, prone to breakdowns. But it seems to work for cars.


93 posted on 07/27/2022 12:25:04 PM PDT by Mr. Blond
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To: Mr. Blond

And locomotives. They have been hybrids for decades...................


94 posted on 07/27/2022 12:30:41 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Red Badger

FTA: While these steps are focused on reducing greenhouse gasses..

In a war no one and I mean no one is caring about greenhouse gasses!!!

except the democrats.....!


95 posted on 07/27/2022 1:13:47 PM PDT by minnesota_bound (Need more money to buy everything now)
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To: GingisK

There are 3 pulses produces by EMPs. The sun produces E2 and E3 pulses that can hit the power grid and cause problems. The nuclear EMP E1 pulse is the one that eats electronics. There is items that can protect delicate electronics i.e. Mylar bags that have EMP protection built in. “A Faraday cage or Faraday shield is an enclosure used to block electromagnetic fields.” and can protect critical electronics and can be purchased or built. I believe renegade countries like Iran or N Korea would love to hit the US with an EMP which both could do at any time.


96 posted on 07/27/2022 2:37:44 PM PDT by antidemoncrat
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To: antidemoncrat
Lightning also produces an EMP. The type produced by a nuclear explosion can produce a particle surge that is not stopped by a Faraday cage.

Electronics can be taken out by any of them; however, the purely electro-magnetic pulses can be mitigated using in network of inductors, spark gaps, TVS diodes, resistors, and diode clamps.

97 posted on 07/27/2022 3:50:10 PM PDT by GingisK
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To: Psalm 73

Without the govern, I will say 60 is like Riding like the wind.


98 posted on 07/27/2022 4:05:43 PM PDT by Trueblackman (I'm positive that Slow Joe mistakes paint thinner for coffee each morning. )
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To: Red Badger

Locomotives are not hybrids. There are no massive batteries in one used for propulsion. They are motor/generator sets AKA diesel-electric. There is no electric without the diesel.


99 posted on 07/27/2022 4:12:34 PM PDT by GingisK
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To: Mr. Blond
There was only one Tiger that was electric powered. It wasn't a hybrid, it was a diesel-electric in the same manner as a modern railway locomotive. There were no massive batteries in that tiger used for propulsion; just one to start the engine.

That single prototypes was made by Porsche. It did make it into combat; however, a total absence of spare parts took it out of service in a hurry.

All other Tigers were powered by conventional engines.

100 posted on 07/27/2022 4:16:15 PM PDT by GingisK
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