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A Look at Indian Army's Main Battle Tanks

Thats kind of funny post. You know why Iron Done do not intercept remaining rockets bez they didnt poses any threat to Isreal. The remaining rocket lands just on bare land. 1100 rockets could do huge destruction any wherein wolrd, but surprise that there is very low loss from Isreal side after war. Although Isreals may be inferior in tech but they come with unique solution for there unique challenges.:azn:

Thanks for Arjun, may be we will see that in following variants or in compelete mk2.:tup:
WHat ever Dude Read Press tv Report on Rockets from Hamas and IRON DOME Failure which Promted EHUD to go to USa for CIWS and I hope Arjun is not Based ON MEkreva Because if it is It is then JUST a PAPER TIGER
but i hope its not and hoping russians and Germans Put some input into it
 
WHat ever Dude Read Press tv Report on Rockets from Hamas and IRON DOME Failure which Promted EHUD to go to USa for CIWS and I hope Arjun is not Based ON MEkreva Because if it is It is then JUST a PAPER TIGER
but i hope its not and hoping russians and Germans Put some input into it

:lol: Isreal went for CIWS for its ships, not for replace the Iron Done.
Thats call CIWS, although now missiles are also integrated in CIWS.

ORD_Phalanx_CIWS_Firing_lg.jpg

:omghaha::omghaha:
 
Does anyone has any update on the development of indigenous 1500hp or 1800hp engine for Mk2 or future versions???:what:
 
A Look at Indian Army's Main Battle Tanks

A-Look-at-India20569.jpg


New Delhi: A battle tank is a tank that fills the heavy direct fire role of many modern armies. They were originally conceived to replace the light, medium, heavy and super-heavy tanks.
Development was spurred onwards in the Cold War with the development of lightweight composite armor. Indian Army comprises of some of the best battle tanks, lets know bit about them.

Here is the list:

1. Arjun MBT Mk-1


BT1.jpg


The Arjun is a third generation main battle tank developed by India’s Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO), for the Indian Army.


The Arjun features a 120 mm main rifled gun with indigenously developed APFSDS ammunition, one 7.62 mm coaxial machine gun, and a 12.7 mm machine gun.

It is powered by a single MTU multi-fuel diesel engine rated at 1,400 hp, and can achieve a maximum speed of 70 km/h (43 mph) and a cross-country speed of 40 km/h (25 mph).

It has a four-man crew: commander, gunner, loader and driver. Automatic fire detection and suppression, and NBC protection systems are included.

All-round anti-tank warhead protection by the newly developed Kanchan armour is claimed to be much higher than available in comparable third generation tanks.

With a total of 248 to be built by Heavy Vehicles Factory. This to be followed by the Arjun MK-II and the FMBT.

2. T-90S “Bhishma”

BT2.jpg


The T-90 is a Russian third-generation main battle tank that is a modernisation of the T-72 (it was originally to be called the T-72BU, later renamed to T-90).



It is currently the most modern tank in service with the Russian Ground Forces and Naval Infantry. T-90 uses a 125mm 2A46 smoothbore tank gun, 1G46 gunner sights, a new engine, and thermal sights.

Standard protective measures include a blend of steel, composite armour, and Kontakt-5 explosive-reactive armor, laser warning receivers, Nakidka camouflage and the Shtora infrared ATGM jamming system.

The EMT-7 electromagnetic pulse (EMP) creator is used in testing but not fitted to T-90s in active service. It is designed and built by Uralvagonzavod, in Nizhny Tagil, Russia.

A contract, worth $800 million, was signed on October 26, 2006, for another 330 T-90M MBTs that were to be built with locally-sourced raw materials.

A third contract, worth $1.23 billion, was signed in December 2007 for 347 upgraded T-90Ms, the bulk of which will be licence-assembled built by Heavy Vehicles Factory.

The Indian Army would begin receiving its first T-90M main battle tank (MBT) in completely knocked-down condition from Russia’s Nizhny Tagil-based Uralvagonzavod JSC by the end of 2009.

In all, India plans to have 310 T-90S and 1,330 T-90M tanks in service by 2020 (total of 1,657 tanks by 2020).

Manufactured locally in India. Rs 10,000-crore purchase of 354 new T-90MS tanks for six tank regiments for the China border has been approved. This takes total no. of T-90 tanks to 2011.

3. T-72 Ajeya

BT3.jpg


The T-72 is a Soviet-designed main battle tank that entered production in 1971. It replaced the T-54/55 series as the workhorse of Soviet tank forces (while the T-64 and T-80 served as the Soviet high-technology tanks).


In front-line Russian service T-72 are being replaced by T-90, a modernized version of the T-72. While in the Ukraine T-72s are being replaced by the T-80 and T-84 MBTs. It has been exported and produced in many countries.

4. T-55

BT4.jpg


The T-54 and T-55 tanks were a series of main battle tanks designed in the Soviet Union. The first T-54 prototype appeared in March 1945, just as the Second World War ended.




The T-54/55 series eventually became the most-produced tank in history. Estimated production numbers for the series range from 86,000 to 100,000.

They were replaced by the T-62, T-64, T-72, T-80, and T-90 in the Soviet and Russian Armies, but remain in use by up to 50 other armies worldwide, some having received sophisticated retrofitting.

Up to 200 additional T-55s are kept in storage. T-55s were to be phased out in favour of T-90.Some T-55s may be converted into Tarmour AFV by Heavy Vehicles Factory’s.

A Look at Indian Army's Main Battle Tanks
Take that Arjun out and T-55 your main Battle Tanks are T-90 and T-72
 
Take that Arjun out and T-55 your main Battle Tanks are T-90 and T-72

No mate Arjun Mk1 and Arjun MK2 are heavy weights in the battle, They can take hits and stand in the battle. India's armored thrust consists of a combination of T90's and Arjun's.

There are about whooping 80 upgrades from Arjun Mk1 to Arjun Mk2. :cheers:
 
Hahahahah .... Indian standard...I wont call ya a shitbag ... There is no one in this world who can compare with Indians in abusing..

You got no compare with Al Khalid....so burning you may be,, You are just headless..

Aapne kaha aur hamne maan liya aapne ye kaise soch liya
Hum scientific facts ki baat maante hain ch#####n ke tarah chillane valon ki nahi
 
Arjun tank outruns, outguns Russian T-90 | Business Standard

India's home built tank outruns and outguns Russian T-90 - Global Grind

Broadsword: Arjun tank outruns, outguns Russian T-90

India's Arjun has tested positively when compared to Russia's T-90. - Army Technology

:cheers:

Now would you be so kind as to point out some of these "flaws" that you mentioned, that haven't been rectified? Of course you can't, because you don't know much about tanks, you just wanted to come here and troll, you just started burning when you saw a world class Indian development. Bur baby, burn! :flame:

Is tht why only 100 are to be produced and 1000 t-90s are to be purchased from russia?
 
Is tht why only 100 are to be produced and 1000 t-90s are to be purchased from russia?

124 are in service, 124 are being built. That's 248 Mk1 alone.

At least the same number (probably a lot more) of Mk2 will be ordered, which has completed all trials satisfactorily.

That's about 500 right there of Mk1 and Mk2 together.

After that, all our future tanks will be future blocks of Arjun, as has been confirmed by the MoD (while cancelling the FMBT project).

All this info has already been typed out earlier on this very thread. Please read the thread before commenting.

Also, when the T-90s were ordered, the development of Arjun was incomplete. If it had been developed earlier, the number of T-90s would have been lower. And they are not all purchased from Russia, but license produced at Heavy Vehicles Factory, Avadi.

The total number of Arjuns will easily exceed the T-90s, as the T-90s have no future growth potential, but the future MBTs of IA will be Mk3, Mk4 etc of Arjuns.
 
124 are in service, 124 are being built. That's 248 Mk1 alone.

At least the same number (probably a lot more) of Mk2 will be ordered, which has completed all trials satisfactorily.

That's about 500 right there of Mk1 and Mk2 together.

After that, all our future tanks will be future blocks of Arjun, as has been confirmed by the MoD (while cancelling the FMBT project).

All this info has already been typed out earlier on this very thread. Please read the thread before commenting.

Also, when the T-90s were ordered, the development of Arjun was incomplete. If it had been developed earlier, the number of T-90s would have been lower. And they are not all purchased from Russia, but license produced at Heavy Vehicles Factory, Avadi.

The total number of Arjuns will easily exceed the T-90s, as the T-90s have no future growth potential, but the future MBTs of IA will be Mk3, Mk4 etc of Arjuns.

Post a link... only 124 were ordered (to save face) and than 124 MK-2 were ordered... tht totals to 124 arjuns in service..... while arjun MK-II is under development... :tdown:
https://www.google.com.pk/url?sa=t&...gnNQgzoiMefGFIA0g&sig2=3k5oJX-sStS_0pkfql9YOw

al khalid aims for a standard of t90 early version and we aim for merkava see the gap!

era - arjun - http://www.defence.pk/forums/indian-defence/230236-photos-arjun-mk-2-desert-trials-2.html

armor thickness 1200- 1400 w/o ERA beat that !


AK and AK-I are both superior to ur T-90 bhismas ... as for the under development Argun mk-II... we have the 1500 hp AK-II under development.
 
Post a link... only 124 were ordered and than 124 MK-2 were ordered... tht totals to 124 arjuns in service..... while arjun MK-II is under development... :tdown:
https://www.google.com.pk/url?sa=t&...gnNQgzoiMefGFIA0g&sig2=3k5oJX-sStS_0pkfql9YOw


Army places fresh order for 124 more Arjun tanks - The Times of India

Army to purchase more Arjun tanks | Business Standard

Future of India's Arjun tank looks secure - UPI.com

The Army on Monday placed a fresh order for an additional 124 'Arjun' main battle tanks, giving a much-needed fillip to the over three-decade-long DRDO programme.

The new order comes in the wake of reports that Arjun had outdone the Russian-made T-90 tanks during comparative trials in the deserts of Rajasthan earlier this year.

"The Army has decided to place fresh order for an additional home-built 124 Main Battle Tank Arjun. This is over and above the existing order of 124 tanks. The development follows the success of the indigenous MBT Arjun in the recent gruelling desert trials," a defence ministry spokesperson said here.

As you can see from the reports at that time, it was in 2010 that the order for a fresh batch was placed, long before the Mk2 was doing user trials. The timelines regarding the production line sitting idle in between the two orders, being restarted etc are also available from lots of sources.

"Save face", my foot. What you want to believe is often very different from what is actually true. Google can help you understand the difference.

The Indian armed forces will never order a domestic product just to save face. Unless it confirms to world class standards, they will go for other options. The comparative trials convinced even the Indian army, and it was only after these trials that they ordered more Arjuns. From then on, there has been no looking back for the program.
 
well AL KHALID IS way Better then T-90 For Sure

Typical fanboy mentality.... you are looking like some online warrior kiddo who claims all sorts of stuff without arguments.

Has absolutely no one taught you how to have a decent discussion??? :rolleyes:
 
As the article states, we have already contracted the purchase of 354 T-90MS for the north east, comprising six regiments - presumably for the new mountain strike corps. These will be the mainstay on thee Chinese front. So there is no more scope for any additional tanks. A good decision, since we don't want three kinds of MBTs in service. The T-90, and future iterations of Arjun will be our only two MBTs.

Not for fully fledged MBTs but as Scull and Bones said, for Light Tanks and Tank Destroyers! Infact they will be of much higher use in the norther areas as of now, because we still lack the infrastructure to transport the MBTs effectively. Light Tanks based on IFV chassis, tracked or wheeled but with the firepower of an MBT instead, would be a better choice in higher numbers.
Also with the new C17s comming in, the need for a mobile, air transportable IA battle corp, that can be transfered to any point in India, within a day or so would be important! Something where fully fledged MBTs and heavy strike corps have big limitations.
China is far ahead of us in this field, be it with modern IFVs, MBTs, light tanks and tank destroyers, SPHs, mortar and AA carriers. Truly impressiv what they have come up in the last few years and in what a pace, while we are still stuck between IA messing up competition after competition, delays, blacklisting and cancellations. Even building up road and train routes are going in slow mode, just happy that IAF is much faster in this regard, with raising new air bases and squardons, I only regret the Chinook selection.
 
Not for fully fledged MBTs but as Scull and Bones said, for Light Tanks and Tank Destroyers! Infact they will be of much higher use in the norther areas as of now, because we still lack the infrastructure to transport the MBTs effectively. Light Tanks based on IFV chassis, tracked or wheeled but with the firepower of an MBT instead, would be a better choice in higher numbers.
Also with the new C17s comming in, the need for a mobile, air transportable IA battle corp, that can be transfered to any point in India, within a day or so would be important! Something where fully fledged MBTs and heavy strike corps have big limitations.

That would be waaay beyond our means or capabilities. Even the USA can only afford to keep a division sized airborne unit, the 101rst air assault division. In our present capability, even airlifting a battalion and all their equipment is questionable. Eventual plans call for every corps having the ability to airlift a company, every command having the ability to airlift a battalion, and the IA HQ having the ability to airlift a brigade. We cannot even have a division sized airborne unit, let alone an entire corps (which even the USA can't).

As for the tanks, I am not sure if the topology of they North East is suited for tank warfare. The reason we are raising a MOUNTAIN STRIKE CORPS whose composition would be very different from an ordinary corps is because of that - they would be trained to fight mainly as small infantry units with a lot of artillery and helicopter mobility, but much fewer tanks, APCs or other ground vehicles. So other than these 350 odd T-90s, I don't think they have plans for a lighter tank. If they did, then they would not have ordered these T-90s at all. The hilly terrain of the north east is just not suited for tank warfare.
 
Crossposting from a post I recently made on IDF, since it fits here:

zs3gj.jpg


Probably too late now, but the recent IDEX 2013 show in the UAE presented an intersting option for our needs:

It is based on the S. Korean Doosan DST K21 IFV and is offered with a Belgian 105 or even 120mm turret, to total weight is expected at 25ts only, which would perfectly fit to IAs requirements. More infos and specs here

K-21 With XC-8 Turret Prototype Light Tank | Military-Today.com
 

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