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Upgraded Arjun Mark-II tanks undergoing trial at Pokhran

Agent_47

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JAISALMER: The upgraded version of the series of Arjun Mark-II tanks are undergoing trial at the Indian Army core level excercise at Pokhran field firing range. The tank, Arjun Mark-II, is being tested for different parameters here.

The first test will examine its missile firing ability, while the second one will look into tank's automotive aspects, that is, its running, especially with added load.

A defence source said successful testing will pave way for the production of upgraded Arjun. In all, 124 tanks of the first series have been produced so far. Indian Army has two armoured regiments, both deployed in western desert sector, which comprise of Arjun-I tanks.

The tank is produced by the DRDOs, combat vehicles research and development establishment near Chennai.

A major modification involves equipping the new version of the tank with missile firing capability. The DRDO aims at firing missiles accurately up to a range of 2,000 km. The missiles, fired through the tank's main gun, are primarily meant for targeting armoured vehicles and fortifications over extended ranges.

Sources said, the automotive trials will test the new suspension of the tank designed to handle weight up to 70 tonne. The engine will be from the same German parentage. This testing trial has been taking place as part of army exercise since the last one month.

It is said, the upgraded version has 89 improved aspects over its predecessor. These include long-range missile firing capabilities, panoramic sights with night vision, enhanced weapon penetration, digital control, better hunter-killer capability, improved auxiliary power unit (APU), better communication equipment and navigation aid. The tank will have frontal explosive reactive armour (ERA) to protect against incoming missiles.

Source revealed that the ongoing trails of Arjun Mark-II in Pokhran field firing range will mainly focus on 19 parametres after army's recommendation. A successful trial at Pokharan firing range would give a green signal for building 124 Arjun Mark-II tanks at the Heavy Vehicles Factory in Avadi. These will supplement the 124 Arjun Mark-I tanks already in service.

Source said "The major upgrades would be missile-firing capability against long-range targets, panoramic sight with night vision to engage targets effectively at night, containerisation of the ammunition, enhanced main weapon penetration; additional ammunition types, explosive reactive armour, an advanced air-defence gun to engage helicopters; a mine plough, an advanced land navigation system and a warning system which can fire smoke grenades to confuse laser guidance. Other upgrades are an enhanced Auxiliary power unit providing 8.5 KW (from 4.5 KW) and an improved gun barrel, changes in the commander's panoramic sight with eye safe LRF, night vision capability including for driver, digital control harness, new final drive, track and sprocket."

Defence spokesperson Lt Col Manish Ojha said upgradation of weapons and equipment through trial is a constant and ongoing process, but at present, no information about Arjun Mark-II tank trial has been provided by the army.

Upgraded Arjun Mark-II tanks undergoing trial at Pokhran - The Times of India
 
JAISALMER: The upgraded version of the series of Arjun Mark-II tanks are undergoing trial at the Indian Army core level excercise at Pokhran field firing range. The tank, Arjun Mark-II, is being tested for different parameters here.

The first test will examine its missile firing ability, while the second one will look into tank's automotive aspects, that is, its running, especially with added load.

A defence source said successful testing will pave way for the production of upgraded Arjun. In all, 124 tanks of the first series have been produced so far. Indian Army has two armoured regiments, both deployed in western desert sector, which comprise of Arjun-I tanks.

The tank is produced by the DRDOs, combat vehicles research and development establishment near Chennai.

A major modification involves equipping the new version of the tank with missile firing capability. The DRDO aims at firing missiles accurately up to a range of 2,000 km. The missiles, fired through the tank's main gun, are primarily meant for targeting armoured vehicles and fortifications over extended ranges.

Sources said, the automotive trials will test the new suspension of the tank designed to handle weight up to 70 tonne. The engine will be from the same German parentage. This testing trial has been taking place as part of army exercise since the last one month.

It is said, the upgraded version has 89 improved aspects over its predecessor. These include long-range missile firing capabilities, panoramic sights with night vision, enhanced weapon penetration, digital control, better hunter-killer capability, improved auxiliary power unit (APU), better communication equipment and navigation aid. The tank will have frontal explosive reactive armour (ERA) to protect against incoming missiles.

Source revealed that the ongoing trails of Arjun Mark-II in Pokhran field firing range will mainly focus on 19 parametres after army's recommendation. A successful trial at Pokharan firing range would give a green signal for building 124 Arjun Mark-II tanks at the Heavy Vehicles Factory in Avadi. These will supplement the 124 Arjun Mark-I tanks already in service.

Source said "The major upgrades would be missile-firing capability against long-range targets, panoramic sight with night vision to engage targets effectively at night, containerisation of the ammunition, enhanced main weapon penetration; additional ammunition types, explosive reactive armour, an advanced air-defence gun to engage helicopters; a mine plough, an advanced land navigation system and a warning system which can fire smoke grenades to confuse laser guidance. Other upgrades are an enhanced Auxiliary power unit providing 8.5 KW (from 4.5 KW) and an improved gun barrel, changes in the commander's panoramic sight with eye safe LRF, night vision capability including for driver, digital control harness, new final drive, track and sprocket."

Defence spokesperson Lt Col Manish Ojha said upgradation of weapons and equipment through trial is a constant and ongoing process, but at present, no information about Arjun Mark-II tank trial has been provided by the army.

Upgraded Arjun Mark-II tanks undergoing trial at Pokhran - The Times of India

Just dump the project already... stick to russian weaponry.
 
The DRDO aims at firing missiles accurately up to a range of 2,000 km

seriously ..... :blink:

The tank will have frontal explosive reactive armour (ERA) to protect against incoming missiles.

if its improvement over MK-I .... which mean MK-I was lacking this basic feature (which I believe is not the case) amateurish reporting .....
 
For all the trolls here, the first lot of 40 Arjun Mk2 have been already produced and Arjun mk2 had already proved itself when the order for 118 tanks was given.

It is the last trials by the user , in this case Army, before its induction.
 
For all the trolls here, the first lot of 40 Arjun Mk2 have been already produced and Arjun mk2 had already proved itself when the order for 118 tanks was given.

It is the last trials by the user , in this case Army, before its induction.
There is something seriously wrong when you need Mk2's right after a Mk1 and then upgrading those Mk2's before they even had some weaning in operational exercises. The Arjun is just another victim of the gutter pool that is project management at DRDO. An utter insult to Indian talent and finances and nothing more.

At leas the Tejas is a very capable platform that a victim of poor planning, but the Arjun is clearly lacking in even those respects.
 
May be india should just buy the arnarta production line and license build 2000
Tanks unfer lucense.

How that soule ne nice
 
May be india should just buy the arnarta production line and license build 2000
Tanks unfer lucense.

How that soule ne nice
looks like arjun MK2 gonna get indian army clearence for a "big deal" after all these years

as for armata looks more like its gonna wait for some time
 
Indian army is already looking for T90MS.
I don't see any room of another tank in Indian arsenal. Inducting local faulty tanks in small numbers ......(118 Mk1, 124Mk2) indicate few lobbies still want to "earn" money by keeping the production lines of DRSO running.....
If Arjun is good enough then India must induct them in large numbers (300 per batch at least)
If it is not then better scrape it and go for more Russian tanks, like Armata........
 
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