Posted on 08/26/2003 6:13:43 AM PDT by .cnI redruM
Edited on 07/12/2004 4:07:10 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
The Army's new state-of-the art infantry vehicle slated to make its combat debut in Iraq in October is vulnerable to the kind of rocket-propelled grenades now being used by Saddam Hussein's guerrillas, a consultant's report charges.
The Army, which rebuts the report's findings, plans to send 300 Stryker armored vehicles and 3,600 soldiers to Iraq. This first Stryker brigade will help put down the resistance that has killed more 60 American troopers since May 1. It will also be a preview of a lighter, more mobile Army for the 21st century.
(Excerpt) Read more at washtimes.com ...
You particularly mind if I do so with a HUMVEE-mounted Ground-launched Hellfire with circa 10-KM range or a Russian AT-15 Khrizantema with a 6-8 KM operating range and choice of 9M123-2 tandem HEAT charge or 9M123-F2 HE warhead? Or would you prefer a Javelin?
There are getting to be so many interesting such possibilities, many of which can be operated from either a wheeled HUMVEE or commercial pickup truck, all the way up to an obsolete T55 or T72 tank chassis with the original turret removed, and one with a much lower silhouette mounting an autocannon replacing it, offering a swell improvement in power-weight ratio, speed and range as well.
I would prefer for you to be as well; anyone crewing a particular vehicle should be confident of it's capabilities and happy he's assigned to the particular vehicle to which he's assigned.
I just hope you aren't killed when one overturns, particularly if you're in mine country riding on the outside, or those who put the mine there then follow up their initial success with a turkey shoot at the sitting ducks therein.
External fuel tanks by rear exit door.
Bad idea, the Russians learned from it in Afghanistan.
Possibly better than internal tanks that roast the crew alive if hit by an RPG. But the Stryker also has external saddle tanks in the fender walls behind the tires, subject to penetration and rupture from M203 HEDP rounds or the Russian GP-30 underbarrel grenadelauncher equivalent, much less a RPG or LAW/SMAW/B300.
See the exposed tank behind the missing tire/wheel in a Stryker having a bad day during a training session? Just in the right place to help burn the tires off too, before the external 5-gallon fuel cans, 4 to a side, are even considered.
I hope the answer was becasue the C-130 is the aircraft we have the most of right now, and for many years into the future.
>>We should design the perfect vehicle to meet the capability requirements of the future and then tell the AF to design their new transport aircraft to match that capability.<<
Perfect world, that would be nice. Real world, limited budgets, long-lead times for aircraft design and deployment (10-plus years), lots of on-again, off-again programs (Sgt York), and you can quickly see the problem with designing an aircraft to perform a specific role, in support of a yet-to-be-fielded single specific piece of equipment.
C-130 Overloaded with wheeled vehicles crashes and burns in Afghanistan: how will they be able to fly 19-21 ton lav3strykers?A senior USAF officer writes:
"Some senior airlift officers had some interesting comments about Stryker. There's 3/4 of an INCH on either side of the Stryker when it gets loaded into a C-130. You cannot carry anything else onboard when it's loaded in its stripped configuration, which means the crew, extra armor, ammo, etc. have to go in another plane.
Here's the real kicker--they couldn't fly the Stryker up to Andrews AFB (the big 'demo' that was supposed to convince the doubters) from Pope AFB in North Carolina because when you put one Stryker into a C-130 it limits the range to under 200 miles! You have to offload so much fuel to get the plane into a safe flying configuration that it can't fly very far at all--certainly not operationally significant distances. But never mind the details--we have some transformation to do!
Our airlifters just roll their eyes at all the Army's antics, but they play along because they know the Army is the only agency who wants more airlift. They don't care how stupid the concept might be (IBCT in 96 hours? A howler! They can't get an IBCT from Ft Lewis to McChord in 96 hours!), they're just happy to have someone generating more airlift squadrons and wings for them. So it goes."
This article lays out yet another set of sad implications from Army lies. In this case, the Army understated cargo weight and it cost 3 Americans their life, in addition to a MC-130 etc. And this cargo only weighed 25,000 pounds. What are we doing with Styker at over 40,000 pounds? This should be exposed.
Army TimesIt looks like Strykers are going to kill a lot more American soldiers, too. Sad.
December 09, 2002Weight of cargo cited in crash of MC-130H
Three killed in June 12 accident in AfghanistanBy Bruce Rolfsen
The June 12 crash of an Air Force transport in Afghanistan that claimed the lives of a Soldier and two Airmen was caused by the plane being overloaded with cargo, an accident investigation board concluded in a report released Nov. 15. Air Force Brig. Gen. Frederick Van Valkenburg Jr., a fighter pilot and commander of the 37th Training Wing at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, presided over the board. He concluded that a combination of "imprecise information" about cargo weight and a "get-the-job-done" attitude led to fatal mistakes.
Valkenburg faulted the weight-estimating procedures used by the Army - and accepted by the Air Force - for allowing the plane to take off with a load heavier than estimated. He didn't fault any individuals for the accident.
The Air Force Special Operations Command has made five changes to its cargo procedures as a result of the accident but the command won't discuss specific changes, said spokeswoman Maj. Karen Finn.
The accident took the lives of Army Sgt. 1st Class Peter P. Tycz II, of the 3rd Special Forces Group, Fort Bragg, N.C., and two Air Force loadmasters, Tech. Sgt. Sean M. Corlew and Staff Sgt. Anissa A. Shero, both of the 15th Special Operations Squadron, Hurlburt Field, Fla.
The assignment for the crew of the MC-130H Combat Talon II that day was to help ferry 30 Soldiers, their vehicles and their gear to Kandahar from a remote dirt-and-rock landing strip near the Bande Sardeh dam.
The movement required five flights split between two aircraft.
The MC-130H, based in Oman, was to fly three of the hops, while an older MC-130E Combat Talon I, staged out of Uzbekistan, was to handle two trips.
As Air Force special-operations planners worked up the flights' fuel and cargo requirements, they figured the first payload weighed about 17,500 pounds and that the maximum allowable load was 21,000 pounds. The Talon carried a High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle, a Special Forces gun-mounted vehicle, a trailer and three Soldiers.
The payload's weight was a critical factor for the night operation because the special operations-modified C-130 took off in thin air from a dirt airstrip at 7,200 feet above sea level.
About 45 minutes before the crew members departed their Oman office for the plane, a mission coordinator got word the Army had upped cargo weight to 20,500 pounds, the report said.
The weight estimates came from Army Special Forces team members at Kandahar. And because there was no practical way to weigh cargo at such isolated airstrips, Air Force special-operations crews depended on Army weight estimates.
The mission pilot, a major with 4,721 flight hours in C-130s, was given a verbal message about the change, but he misunderstood and thought the new weight was 19,000 pounds.
But all those estimates were wrong, the accident investigation board concluded.
When the investigators weighed similar gear plus other items in the Army trucks - such as six cases of MREs - the board concluded the cargo weighed between 23,000 and 25,800 pounds.
The first sign of problems came when the Talon had to abort its initial takeoff roll because it hadn't accelerated fast enough. The aircrew thought the problem was caused by a tailwind.
After turning around, the plane made a second takeoff attempt and this time got airborne. But the Talon couldn't reach a speed higher than about 123 mph and an altitude of 200 feet.
The landing gear was pulled up, but within seconds the plane began losing speed and altitude after it lost the lifting effect of being near the ground. Even after the flight engineer began dumping fuel, the plane couldn't stay aloft.
At 30 feet above the ground the pilot announced, "We're going down."
The MC-130H struck the ground tail first and skidded to a halt about two miles from the runway.
Loadmasters Corlew and Shero and Soldier Tycz, all of whom were in the cargo bay, died immediately from head injuries.
The other five aircrew members and two Soldiers escaped from the plane before it caught fire.
Bruce Rolfsen covers Air Force issues.
-archy-/-
This sounds like a system we came up with. Who that resides in our threat index and whom we are likely to face in future armored warfare has GOT this? And anyway, that's why the term "combined arms" was invented, to help deal with these kinds of situations. Minefields (no matter how "smart") can be neutralized.
In 2020? EVERYBODY. Moore's Law works for everyone, not just the US of A.
True. The plan is to replace them with the Future Combat Vehicle. The FCV will probably be a tracked vehicle but will weigh about as much as a Stryker. The initial promise was that it would be at least as lethal and survivable as the M-1. The problem is that the technology to do that in a light weight vehicle hasn't been invented.
The heavy force will always be around.
I hope you are right.
I'm not as worred about the Stryker now that procurement plans have been scaled back. It's a nice little armored car to use on peacekeeping operations. I question using Stryker in Iraq because it's vulnerable to RPG's and bombs, but they're more survivable than a Humvee and lots of them are on patrol in Iraq.
The concern is that when "transformation" and the FCV were announced it was made quite clear that the M-1's and Bradleys are to be junked when the FCV is deployed. Rummy's housecleaning of Army generals and bringing the new Chief of Staff out of retirement seems to be a signal that the Army was not sufficiently "transformational." So, we are proceeding headlong down a path to "transform" away from the most potent heavy force in the world to a light weight tank that can't be built to original parameters because we haven't invented the technology.
I'm with Rummy that we need to think ahead and will not fight in the future the way we did in Gulf War I. I thought the GWII plan was brilliant and I wasn't saying we needed more troops or tanks. The new over the horizon precision weapons look to be awesome. Air power using precision munitions can take over some of the artillery function. So, I'm not one of the old dinosaurs. But I do look at reality and what I see right now is an FCV that won't be much more than a high tech Stryker.
I agree with you. I would swag a 15 to 20 year timeline rather than the original 10. The original timeline was overly ambitious given that we have to develop new technologies.
So, my guess is we'll be nursing along old M-1's and Bradleys for the next 15 to 20 years while the next generation fighting vehicles are invented.
Bataan, 1942.
You did ask.
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