700 mm is more than enough vs old tanks, tank sides and weakened zones. Lofted trajectory of Lahat allows penetration of front side of modern tanks. Refleks on the other hand is not enough vs. front of modern tanlks.
Figures for Refleks/Invar were provided, probability of neutralisation of most modern tanks, >50%, from front. 1-2 missiles max to neutralise most modern tank, from 5 km. This is effectiveness.
Lahat, only good against old tanks with weaker armour and or no warning systems.
No they dont. I already posted you a pic. Lahat has TWO MODES: regular and lofted.
Exactly the same modes are in Refleks, direct, lofted. I showed several pics.
No warning comes much earlier. And you can do same exact trick with laser homing: you can direct a beam near tank during missile flight and move to a tank itself right before impact. There is no any difference here.
What are you saying is funny as you understand little about guidance working method. Lahat needs target to be designated by laser, and missile hits in designated point, that is all. Yeah, you could attempt many silly tricks, try to do so at 4-5km, and rapidly shift in the last 0.1 seconds
... Complete nosense.
You cannot "play" manually. In missiles as Refleks it is done automatically with special algorithm, defining flight path to target, depending on range.
Also to note, that modern russian atgm, and fire control systems in tanks, can also track target automatically, another advantage.
1/70000 of power wont make any difference anywhere. Find beter excuses to failure.
Systems can malfunction due to many external factors. I provided example, of operation under extreme temperatures and how it creates malfunctions in engine, also in thermal cameras, etc. That is not related to efficiency of those systems themselves. India did not aquire the system, they have they reasons, and I brought examples of what they can be, there are many factors. The system is operated by many countries, so your argument has not any base, nor you have proofs.
You who make claims without any base, so it is not up to me, to answer, that would be arguing against nothing.
It shows BS. How can be 50% probability from point blank range?
How it can be zero from 3.5 km when my own tank hit targets at 4 km?
This chart is a joke drawn by some internet kid.
It is that you do not understand the subject, therefore you cannot interpret correctly the graphic (These figures are from KBP, btw)
I will explain:
It is comparison of APFSDS projectile, and missile, to neutralise tank at several ranges.
APFSDS in this example is less powerfull than missile, so it has less probabilities from the start, but that is not relevant here.
Probability to neutralise tank reflected in graphic, is given by probability of hit, and probability of penetrate once hit.
Penetration of missile remains constant, does not change with range, probability of hit is high because it is guided, so there is no significant reduction in performance even at 5km/
APFSDS round, looses velocity continously (loss in penetration) and probability of hit, accuracy, is also seriously reduced, so from 2-2.5 km it is not effective at all, if dealing against modern tank armour.
For you to know, some tanks as Abrams do not even measure distance, beyond 4km. Hitting a building, or enemy position with fragmentary munition, maybe, but if you want to penetrate tank armour, moving target, do not even try beyond 2-2.5 km, because of loss of penetration capability alone, not to mention accuracy...
Are you trying to say that Ukrainian copy is better than Russian oiriginal?
Shtora is originally from the 80s. It was modernised both by russians and by ukrainians. I focused on ukrainian example, as we were talking about Pakistan.
Okey, show pics. So far we seen only one exhibistion tank.
Lahat is used by none, not deployed, so no argument here. If you talk about it's hypotetical fielding, then you must also take in account rest of deployed/to be deployed systems, factor which you do not consider.
They certainly operate them in some numbers, anyway, as said, there is nothing to discuss.