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TUSK to update Abrams for urban battle (TREAD-HEAD ALERT)
ARNEWS ^ | 03/09/05 | Eric W. Cramer

Posted on 03/10/2005 8:40:12 PM PST by SandRat


The M1A2 Abrams tank is shown with TUSK improvements that will adapt it for the urban battlefield. The M1A2 Abrams tank is shown with TUSK improvements that will adapt it for the urban battlefield.

TUSK to update Abrams for urban battle

By Eric W. Cramer

WASHINGTON (Army News Service, March 9, 2005) -- The Abrams tank is growing a TUSK – that’s Tank Urban Survival Kit, a series of improvements, including some still in development.

TUSK will allow Soldiers in the field to improve the Abrams’ ability to survive in urban areas off the traditional battlefield for which it was designed.

Lt. Col. Michael Flanagan, product manager for TUSK, said the goal is to help improve the tank’s survivability.

“You have to remember, the tank was a Cold War design, aimed at a threat that was always to its front. It’s still the most survivable weapon in the arsenal from the front,” Flanagan said. “Today it’s a 360-degree fight, and these systems are designed to improve survivability in that urban environment.”

The TUSK includes additional protection at the loader’s gun station on the turret, the commander’s gun station, reactive armor to protect the tank’s side from attack by rocket-propelled grenades and slat armor to protect the tank’s rear from the same weapon, and the tank/infantry telephone to allow infantry and armor Soldiers to work together in combat.

Flanagan said all the proposed upgrades use “off the shelf” technology, and the goal is for the entire TUSK to be applied by units in the field, without requiring a return to a depot for modification.

“The reactive armor, for example, is a product similar to what’s on the Bradley (Armored Fighting Vehicle),” Flanagan said. “It’s explosive armor that protects the vehicle.”

Another example would be the slat armor designed to protect the tank’s rear from RPG attack. It is similar in design and concept to the slat armor used on the Stryker armored vehicles for the same purpose.

The first TUSK component to reach the field has been the Loader’s Armored Gun Shield, which provides protection to the loader when the Soldier is firing the 7.62mm machinegun on the Abrams’ turret. Flanagan said about 130 of the shields have already been purchased and sent to units in Iraq. Also incorporated into the loader’s firing position is a thermal sight, giving the position the ability to locate and fire on targets in the dark.

“This is the same unit that is used on machineguns carried by infantry troops, and we’ve incorporated it into the loader’s position,” Flanagan said. He said a system that attaches a pair of goggles to the sight, allowing the loader to fire the gun from inside the turret, while seeing the thermal sight’s image, is under development.

Also under development are improvements to the commander’s station outside the turret, although different systems are necessary for the M-1A2 Abrams and its older M1-A1 brethren.

“Because of things we added to the turret in the A2, the commander’s station had lost the ability to shoot the .50-caliber machinegun while under armor,” Flanagan said. “We’re developing a Remote Weapons Station, that will probably be similar to the one used on the Stryker, to allow that weapon to be fire from inside the turret.”

Flanagan said the design could also allow the use of the crewed weapon station used on Humvees, but a final determination hasn’t been made.

Ultimately, most of these add-ons will be incorporated into a kit – installed in the field and removed in the field as a pre-positioned component for the next Abrams unit to take duty in that location. Flanagan said some kits will begin to reach the field later this year.

At least some of the kits’ components may also be included in new Abrams’ production.

“The loader’s shield and the remote weapons station, and the tank/infantry telephone all may be included as regular production items in the tank,” Flanagan said. “It’s important to remember that the Abrams will continue to be the dominant weapons system for the Army until at least 2030.”

www.ARMY.mil OCPA Public Affairs Home www.ARMY.mil OCPA Public Affairs Home

 


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: abrams; armor; m1a2; marine; protection; soldier; tank
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To: SandRat
“Today it’s a 360-degree fight, and these systems are designed to improve survivability in that urban environment.”

M1C1 Modular Combat Vehicle
Science & Technology


M1C1 Modular Combat Vehicle
(Proposals To Upgrade Mothballed M1 Abrams Tanks Into Active Duty Urban Infantry Support Platforms)

The M1C1 is a modified M1 (or M1A1 or M1A2) Abrams main battle tank platform. It contains nine unique improvements:
1. The 105mm M1 Cannon is replaced with the 20mm GAU-4 (or 30mm GAU-8) Cannon
2. The two M1 tank treads are replaced with four half tracks
3. The 4 man M1 tank crew is downsized to a 3 man M1C1 crew
4. Ammunition storage for 105mm shells is replaced by the integrated GAU-4
5. Two long-range anti-tank missiles (e.g. TOW, HellFire, etc.) are added to the M1C1
6. Two powerful external intercoms are added to communicate with nearby infantry
7. An incoming projectile detection system for locating enemy small arms fire is added
8. An electrically deployable, 387 inch long full body ghilli camouflage system is added
9. Infrared and laser jamming modules are added; laser detection units are added

The M1C1 is designed to be an A-10 infantry support fighter on the ground.


41 posted on 03/10/2005 9:27:27 PM PST by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

Thanks for the info! Good night to all.


42 posted on 03/10/2005 9:34:15 PM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Southack

1. The 105mm M1 Cannon is replaced with the 20mm GAU-4 (or 30mm GAU-8) Cannon

The M1C1 is designed to be an A-10 infantry support fighter on the ground.

----

Sort of also like a Spectre gunship on the ground as well. Holy smokes. You don't want to be on the wrong end of that gun!


43 posted on 03/10/2005 10:45:20 PM PST by need_a_screen_name
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To: SandRat
Are M-2s/M-3s and M113s going to have any similar upgrades for urban warfare? I would like to see the slat armors used by Stryker to be added on other vehicles. Will slat armor do the job for hummers and ASV-150s?
44 posted on 03/11/2005 1:02:12 AM PST by Wiz
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To: SandRat

Bump!


45 posted on 03/11/2005 5:10:28 AM PST by windchime (Hillary: "I've always been a preying person")
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To: endthematrix
No, HE round first to get entry into the building, followed by two or three WP rounds. Beehive rounds kill the enemy to quick.

This also works great for mortars. HE to blow the roof off of the building, WP into the building to anoy or what ever the occupants. During WWII, my father who was in the Sixth AD, told me the Germans use to always put their towed anti-tank guns in the woods. The solution was to use WP on them and burn them out.
46 posted on 03/11/2005 12:31:15 PM PST by U S Army EOD (John Kerry, the mother of all flip floppers.I)
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To: Wiz

Don't know about the M-2s/M-3s, most of the M-113s/M-577s had been sent to storage depots awaiting destruction or were pushed way down the Guard chain to units that were at a very - very low state of readiness for mobilization/deployment with a few exceptions. Now the M-113s/M-577s are being upgraded and sent to the sandbox as well as a Swedish variant that is well armored is being look at from an article I read, oh at least two months back on www.army.mil.


47 posted on 03/11/2005 3:53:18 PM PST by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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