HRK
PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
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AK-2 will be put in production in 2022-2023 as per expected schedule .... till then HIT will produce AK-II feel the AKII is dead
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AK-2 will be put in production in 2022-2023 as per expected schedule .... till then HIT will produce AK-II feel the AKII is dead
After few years:
Tier 1:
VT-4 - 7 regts (ongoing program)
AK-1 - 5 regts (ongoing program)
AK - 7 regts
T-80UD - 7 regts
Tier 2:
T-85UG - 6 regts
AZ - 11 regts
Tier 3:
T-59MI/MII/T-69IIMP
Means AK-2 not coming in few years
AK-2s Will come once the Production Run of Ak-1 is over. Last time it was Reported it was having Cost Related Issues But its Development was proceeding well. They have probably Rectified that Problem by now.I feel the AKII is dead; could be we repackage VT-4 as AKII.
We wont have much choice in this Regard Indians are Procuring Tanks at a Speed we cant Match. T-85 will stay for at least for the Next decade and Half. PA right now has a Modernization Program going on for T-85s Slated to be finished by 2022-2023.I would think the lower tiers (asidie T-85) will be cosigned to paramilitary or reserves. I wouldn't be confident fielding such tanks in a theatre of war where even the most modern tanks have been taken out by ATGMS (Syria theatre).
We wont have much choice in this Regard Indians are Procuring Tanks at a Speed we cant Match. T-85 will stay for at least for the Next decade and Half. PA right now has a Modernization Program going on for T-85s Slated to be finished by 2022-2023.
ToT point was dropped last year. These tanks will be only overhauled in Pakistan when their Maintenance/First Overhaul Cycle is due. All Tanks to be manufactured at Full Capacity by Norinco and provided to PA as per the timeline set by PA. Contract was signed last year. It’s delivery time now.
Likely because the Army isn't buying nearly enough tanks to make sense of ToT. So, it's more cost-effective to buy them off-the-shelf as-is, and they'll reach sooner. Finally, HIT has its own MBT (i.e., AK), yes it needs work, but AK-2 will be as modern as any tank by the time it enters production.Really sad, why is the transfer of technology not necessary?
I doubt that, especially in terms of sensors and a hard-kill system. But then again, are they even needed in our case?Likely because the Army isn't buying nearly enough tanks to make sense of ToT. So, it's more cost-effective to buy them off-the-shelf as-is, and they'll reach sooner. Finally, HIT has its own MBT (i.e., AK), yes it needs work, but AK-2 will be as modern as any tank by the time it enters production.
Those subsystems will become available, be it from China, Ukraine, Turkey and/or South Africa. The real question is how well HIT can manufacture them, and whether the PA will be in a position to afford the AK2. There's a trade-off with buying off-the-shelf...I doubt that, especially in terms of sensors and a hard-kill system. But then again, are they even needed in our case?
Let what emerges - if anything. We've been watching this space for the better part of a decade.Those subsystems will become available, be it from China, Ukraine, Turkey and/or South Africa. The real question is how well HIT can manufacture them, and whether the PA will be in a position to afford the AK2. There's a trade-off with buying off-the-shelf...
That looks like manual shifting.baseline AK steering wheel
View attachment 628035
You need to set up production to handle the manufacturing. Since some are new tech, it is inevitable that money need to be invested for it. This will add up cost for the overall tank. Plus setting up line and train skilled tech will be another task which needs time and money. So how long do u think it will take and cost before first production VT-4 comes out from Pakistan? There is urgent need for VT-4 and time is not luxury.Really sad, why is the transfer of technology not necessary?
na bro, he's a good, competant officer AND a veteran, I've known him since he was a 2nd lieutenant. And he's seen plenty of frontline combat, he posted pics in the old PDF. He deserves the most respect & gratitude out of everyone on this forum.
China dispatches two customised VT4 MBTs to undisclosed foreign customer
Gabriel Dominguez, London and Dmitry Fediushko, Moscow - Jane's Defence Weekly
28 April 2020
One of the two customised VT4s photographed leaving China’s Inner Mongolia First Machinery Group on 20 April. The group did not reveal the identity of the customer. Source: Inner Mongolia First Machinery Group
China's Inner Mongolia First Machinery Group released images on 20 April via its WeChat account showing what appear to be two customised China North Industries Corporation (Norinco) VT4 main battle tanks (MBTs) being transported on trucks to an undisclosed foreign customer.
The images, which show the MBTs featuring a new explosive reactive armour (ERA) fitted to the glacis and turret, indicate that these VT4s are slightly different from the ones exported to Thailand and Nigeria.
The factory did not provide further details about the platforms (which were painted in green-brown camouflage), the value of the contract, or the number of tanks set to be supplied, saying only that it had held a "launch ceremony" for the two VT4s, which were being delivered to an undisclosed country.
According to Jane's Land Warfare Platforms: Armoured Fighting Vehicles, the export-only VT4 (formerly known as the MBT-3000) follows a conventional Soviet-layout MBT with a 125 mm smoothbore gun and carousel automatic loading system.
For close support and anti-personnel fire, the VT4 carries a 7.62 mm coaxial machine gun and what is most likely the Type 88 12.7 mm machine gun, which is cupola-mounted for the commander's use.
The turret also carries eight 76 mm smoke dischargers and four dischargers of 76 mm high-explosive fragmentation grenades. In 2014, an enhanced version of the platforms was shown featuring a remote weapon station, believed to be the UW1, which can mount a 7.62 mm or a12.7 mm machine gun.
The protection afforded to the VT4 has yet to be disclosed, and it is unclear whether the base armour design is a close copy of the T-72B or the T-90A MBTs, as Samuel Cranny-Evans, senior research analyst and editor of Jane's Land Warfare Platforms: Armoured Fighting Vehicles, pointed out.
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(318 of 489 words)
China dispatches two customised VT4 MBTs to undisclosed foreign customer | Jane's Defence Weekly
China dispatches two customised VT4 MBTs to undisclosed foreign customer
Gabriel Dominguez, London and Dmitry Fediushko, Moscow - Jane's Defence Weekly
28 April 2020
One of the two customised VT4s photographed leaving China’s Inner Mongolia First Machinery Group on 20 April. The group did not reveal the identity of the customer. Source: Inner Mongolia First Machinery Group
China's Inner Mongolia First Machinery Group released images on 20 April via its WeChat account showing what appear to be two customised China North Industries Corporation (Norinco) VT4 main battle tanks (MBTs) being transported on trucks to an undisclosed foreign customer.
The images, which show the MBTs featuring a new explosive reactive armour (ERA) fitted to the glacis and turret, indicate that these VT4s are slightly different from the ones exported to Thailand and Nigeria.
The factory did not provide further details about the platforms (which were painted in green-brown camouflage), the value of the contract, or the number of tanks set to be supplied, saying only that it had held a "launch ceremony" for the two VT4s, which were being delivered to an undisclosed country.
According to Jane's Land Warfare Platforms: Armoured Fighting Vehicles, the export-only VT4 (formerly known as the MBT-3000) follows a conventional Soviet-layout MBT with a 125 mm smoothbore gun and carousel automatic loading system.
For close support and anti-personnel fire, the VT4 carries a 7.62 mm coaxial machine gun and what is most likely the Type 88 12.7 mm machine gun, which is cupola-mounted for the commander's use.
The turret also carries eight 76 mm smoke dischargers and four dischargers of 76 mm high-explosive fragmentation grenades. In 2014, an enhanced version of the platforms was shown featuring a remote weapon station, believed to be the UW1, which can mount a 7.62 mm or a12.7 mm machine gun.
The protection afforded to the VT4 has yet to be disclosed, and it is unclear whether the base armour design is a close copy of the T-72B or the T-90A MBTs, as Samuel Cranny-Evans, senior research analyst and editor of Jane's Land Warfare Platforms: Armoured Fighting Vehicles, pointed out.
To read the full article, Client Login
(318 of 489 words)
China dispatches two customised VT4 MBTs to undisclosed foreign customer | Jane's Defence Weekly