I like that - would be a moral boost as 'our' forces would always win . A bit like in the 'first round' in Kuwait when the MBTs could see further ahead than the CRVTs that were supposed to recce for themCaribbean wrote: be used as Opfor in training exercises as well.
FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
- ArmChairCivvy
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Ever-lasting truths: Multi-year budgets/ planning by necessity have to address the painful questions; more often than not the Either-Or prevails over Both-And.
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Why not have 3 smaller regiments of 38 tanks?
Fortune favors brave sir, said Carrot cheerfully.
What's her position about heavily armed, well prepared and overmanned armies?
Oh, noone's ever heard of Fortune favoring them, sir.
According to General Tacticus, it's because they favor themselves…
What's her position about heavily armed, well prepared and overmanned armies?
Oh, noone's ever heard of Fortune favoring them, sir.
According to General Tacticus, it's because they favor themselves…
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
For better or for worse, most of this is done as a progression from classroom theory, to desktop trainers, to platform simulators and then simulated laser battle.Caribbean wrote:I believe there's a tad more to training to operate a tank than firing the gun and learning a new interface. Operating as a unit would be pretty high on the list. Tactics would be in there. Navigation, command skills, standard process and procedures as well. All stuff that could be done in an unmodified vehicle (much of which would need to be innate skills, so you can still function when the pretty, pretty hi-tech gear goes phut at a critical point). Then move on to the simulators (good, but not quite the same as being there) and finally to the "real thing" for advanced training.
Presumably they could also be used as Opfor in training exercises as well.
In between, you have weapons drill trainers for doing Hangfire drills and stoppages. Probably including manual firing too.
There's really no point training on old hardware if the drills and skills are completely different. Even manual firing will be different you're swapping the sights, ammunition and gun system in the upgrade.
Keep the legacy platforms for reservists by all means, but don't think for a moment they can just jump into a upgraded vehicle without significant re training.
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
...... and yet the rumoured plan appears to be to do precisely that with the reserves. Retain some of the old C2s (with some comms and maybe sight upgrades, rather than wholesale turret replacement), but use the reserves to provide replacement crews (not vehicles) for the regulars, presumably using a combination of the old versions, simulators and a small number of the new version for type-specific training.RunningStrong wrote:Keep the legacy platforms for reservists by all means, but don't think for a moment they can just jump into a upgraded vehicle without significant re training.
The pessimist sees difficulty in every opportunity. The optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
abc123 wrote:Why not have 3 smaller regiments of 38 tanks?
First, 3 smaller Regiments are less efficient, in terms of manpower and equipment than 2 Regiments. Its just not as simple as dividing every thing by 3 rather than 2. You would need for instance another RHG, as their is very little scope for reducing their size (they will still need to be able to command a BG), additional manpower and equipment will be needed. Note by going to 38 tanks you have increased the overall numbers required by 2. The same would be true in many other areas. Their would be savings, just no where near enough to provide for an additional Regiment.
Second, effectiveness. Sabre troops operate best with 4 MBTs, Sabre Squadrons with 4 Sabre Troops, hence the total of 18 MBTs per Sqn. As for Armoured Regiments 4 Sabre Sqns is optimum. (I would say the same basic structure is true of Infantry Battalions). This makes for very large units not in itself a bad thing, but they have to fit in at higher levels as well. As the same is true of the higher levels, with 4 Manoeuvre Units per Brigade and 4 Brigades per Division being optimum, but you would end up with an enormous and unwieldy Division. In Cold War days that would have meant most of BAOR would have been contained in 1 Division! To get around this compromises need to be made. That usually means going from a 4(square) structure to a 3(triangular) structure, at certain levels. Note the British Army not infrequently swapping between a triangular and square structure at various levels. This works well enough, but a linear structure(based on 2) lacks flexibility and mass. This means taking a Sqn from each Regt and creating a new Regt would not be a sound idea, instead you would have to create 3 Sqns from 2. The best compromise would be to go back to 14 MBTs per Sqn, that however would require another 20 over and above the total for 2 current Regts. Changing the structure at one level effects other levels making it all very complicated.
Finally why would 3 Armoured Regiments be better than 2?
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
- they should read these pages,asCaribbean wrote:Retain some of the old C2s (with some comms and maybe sight upgrades, rather than wholesale turret replacement), but use the reserves to provide replacement crews (not vehicles) for the regulars
and in 'modern' military thinking I guess the Soviet end-of-WW2 Breakthrough Armies may have had that concept: one exhausted, through it away, and send the second one inwhitelancer wrote:a linear structure(based on 2) lacks flexibility and mass
... they only had so many, and as the test run on the Karelian Isthmus didn't go too well, they had to pack up, for those same ones being there in time for "the end of season party" in Berlin
Ever-lasting truths: Multi-year budgets/ planning by necessity have to address the painful questions; more often than not the Either-Or prevails over Both-And.
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
whitelancer wrote:abc123 wrote:Why not have 3 smaller regiments of 38 tanks?
First, 3 smaller Regiments are less efficient, in terms of manpower and equipment than 2 Regiments. Its just not as simple as dividing every thing by 3 rather than 2. You would need for instance another RHG, as their is very little scope for reducing their size (they will still need to be able to command a BG), additional manpower and equipment will be needed. Note by going to 38 tanks you have increased the overall numbers required by 2. The same would be true in many other areas. Their would be savings, just no where near enough to provide for an additional Regiment.
Second, effectiveness. Sabre troops operate best with 4 MBTs, Sabre Squadrons with 4 Sabre Troops, hence the total of 18 MBTs per Sqn. As for Armoured Regiments 4 Sabre Sqns is optimum. (I would say the same basic structure is true of Infantry Battalions). This makes for very large units not in itself a bad thing, but they have to fit in at higher levels as well. As the same is true of the higher levels, with 4 Manoeuvre Units per Brigade and 4 Brigades per Division being optimum, but you would end up with an enormous and unwieldy Division. In Cold War days that would have meant most of BAOR would have been contained in 1 Division! To get around this compromises need to be made. That usually means going from a 4(square) structure to a 3(triangular) structure, at certain levels. Note the British Army not infrequently swapping between a triangular and square structure at various levels. This works well enough, but a linear structure(based on 2) lacks flexibility and mass. This means taking a Sqn from each Regt and creating a new Regt would not be a sound idea, instead you would have to create 3 Sqns from 2. The best compromise would be to go back to 14 MBTs per Sqn, that however would require another 20 over and above the total for 2 current Regts. Changing the structure at one level effects other levels making it all very complicated.
Finally why would 3 Armoured Regiments be better than 2?
I think that British Army and it's tank force is in such state that any talk about this or that being the most effective is a moot point. This is fight for survival. When you are drowning, you don't care whether this or that life-jacket is more effective...
And if 3 armoured regiments aren't better than 2, than 2 are not better than 1 or 0.
Fortune favors brave sir, said Carrot cheerfully.
What's her position about heavily armed, well prepared and overmanned armies?
Oh, noone's ever heard of Fortune favoring them, sir.
According to General Tacticus, it's because they favor themselves…
What's her position about heavily armed, well prepared and overmanned armies?
Oh, noone's ever heard of Fortune favoring them, sir.
According to General Tacticus, it's because they favor themselves…
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Then that sounds parallel to the Royal Artillery use of Light gun reservists to support the AS90 regular army. The basic principals will be known, but it's a completely different training path.Caribbean wrote:...... and yet the rumoured plan appears to be to do precisely that with the reserves. Retain some of the old C2s (with some comms and maybe sight upgrades, rather than wholesale turret replacement), but use the reserves to provide replacement crews (not vehicles) for the regulars, presumably using a combination of the old versions, simulators and a small number of the new version for type-specific training.RunningStrong wrote:Keep the legacy platforms for reservists by all means, but don't think for a moment they can just jump into a upgraded vehicle without significant re training.
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
While I appreciate the logic, I would think that the probability of use also directs what kit is with reserves, e.g.RunningStrong wrote:that sounds parallel to the Royal Artillery use of Light gun reservists to support the AS90 regular army.
101st Regiment Royal Artillery has GMLRS (and another rgmnt close support air defence).
- not forgetting that the RHA with light guns would in many situations be the 'first in'
Ever-lasting truths: Multi-year budgets/ planning by necessity have to address the painful questions; more often than not the Either-Or prevails over Both-And.
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Interestingly the Cold War era Soviet Army used a square structure at Regimental and Division level. All be it 3+1 or 1+3 rather than the 2+2 structure employed by British Army square Brigades. They achieved this by keeping their Battalions comparatively small, (3x3x3 for 31 tanks per Tank Battalion and similar in the Motor Rifle Battalions), and concentrating CS and CSS at Regimental and Divisional level. Overall I think this was a very effective structure in many ways better than the traditional triangular (2+1 or 1+2) found in many NATO armies.ArmChairCivvy wrote:and in 'modern' military thinking I guess the Soviet end-of-WW2 Breakthrough Armies may have had that concept:
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
I agree that it alleviates the difficulty of getting the right mix moved to the right point at the right time
... depending on whether the planning for the nature of follow-on operations got it anywhere near 'right' as to 1+3s, or 3+1s
And these break-through, or 'shock', armies I was referring to got transformed into normal armoured formations (the latter were meant to be the means to exploit the concentration created by the former).
In modern terms I guess an MBT is an MBT ,and whether they are covered/protected by heavy IFVs (Puma or T-15, derived from the T-14 Armata chassis... both v expensive) or by infantry in greater numbers but riding in cheaper cabs; we will get to see (as well as how the use of MBTs relates to the concept of Strike)
... depending on whether the planning for the nature of follow-on operations got it anywhere near 'right' as to 1+3s, or 3+1s
And these break-through, or 'shock', armies I was referring to got transformed into normal armoured formations (the latter were meant to be the means to exploit the concentration created by the former).
In modern terms I guess an MBT is an MBT ,and whether they are covered/protected by heavy IFVs (Puma or T-15, derived from the T-14 Armata chassis... both v expensive) or by infantry in greater numbers but riding in cheaper cabs; we will get to see (as well as how the use of MBTs relates to the concept of Strike)
Ever-lasting truths: Multi-year budgets/ planning by necessity have to address the painful questions; more often than not the Either-Or prevails over Both-And.
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
I would suggest its not moot at all. The smaller the force you have the more effective and efficient it needs to be otherwise you risk losing the capability altogether. If the number of Challengers to be updated drops much below the rumoured number of 148 its debatable whether it will be worth having them at all.abc123 wrote:I think that British Army and it's tank force is in such state that any talk about this or that being the most effective is a moot point. This is fight for survival. When you are drowning, you don't care whether this or that life-jacket is more effective...
The question was asked, if 3 Regts of 38 Challengers would be better than the soon to be 2 Regmts, that is what I attempted to answer. If you didn't like my answer or think the question was irrelevant that's fine, but justify your position, don't just come out with some meaningless twaddle.abc123 wrote:And if 3 armoured regiments aren't better than 2, than 2 are not better than 1 or 0.
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Should be added to the Forum ruleswhitelancer wrote:justify your position, don't just come out with some meaningless twaddle
- not aimed at @123... just a general comment
Ever-lasting truths: Multi-year budgets/ planning by necessity have to address the painful questions; more often than not the Either-Or prevails over Both-And.
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Well you see, you answered it yourself. I mean, it's all a question what do you want. How many armoured brigades and armoured regiments do you want. If anything else, having 3 of them allows rotation of one somewhere. Better than two.whitelancer wrote:If the number of Challengers to be updated drops much below the rumoured number of 148 its debatable whether it will be worth having them at all.
If you didn't like my answer or think the question was irrelevant that's fine, but justify your position, don't just come out with some meaningless twaddle.
Of course that in normal circumstances regiment of 56 is better than of 38.
But, would we discuss that if the circumstances are normal? Simply, two regiments makes it easier to turn into one regiment and after that to zero regiments. So, better to keep three of them, even with lesser number of tanks. Less can sometimes be more, but not in this case.
And no, I don't consider British Army as normal army without tanks. What's next? Without guns? Rifles?
Fortune favors brave sir, said Carrot cheerfully.
What's her position about heavily armed, well prepared and overmanned armies?
Oh, noone's ever heard of Fortune favoring them, sir.
According to General Tacticus, it's because they favor themselves…
What's her position about heavily armed, well prepared and overmanned armies?
Oh, noone's ever heard of Fortune favoring them, sir.
According to General Tacticus, it's because they favor themselves…
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
At present retaining even two Armoured Infantry Brigades that are actually combat effective is still an aspiration not a certainty. AS for unit rotation, well we won't be deploying a whole Regiment anywhere unless we are involved it a Peer conflict and then it won't be a case of rotation but more of replacing if the first becomes combat ineffective. The only rotations we are likely to see are at Troop or Squadron level like we see in the Baltics.
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Does this mean that our tanks are locked up, until further notice?Lord Jim wrote:AS for unit rotation, well we won't be deploying a whole Regiment anywhere unless we are involved it a Peer conflict
"Germany extends COVID-19 lockdown in Gütersloh"
Ever-lasting truths: Multi-year budgets/ planning by necessity have to address the painful questions; more often than not the Either-Or prevails over Both-And.
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Nice now can we have 200 minimum please.Andy-M wrote:New video out today.
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
The Challenger 2 LEP was mentioned a few times at the Defence Committee a few days ago (full transcript available here: https://committees.parliament.uk/oralevidence/652/pdf/).
Among the more interesting parts:
Among the more interesting parts:
Is this confirmation the LEP will include anti-tank missiles?General Sir Nick Carter: I think the requirement is now pretty clear, and that is one of the reasons why Challenger 2 is taking a long time. It is because there was this realisation that the programme was not ambitious enough. It needed a smoothbore gun. It needed the ability to put a missile down that barrel to overmatch Armata, as you rightly describe. It needed its protection levels to be significantly enhanced. So the requirement has evolved.
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
What the heck is he talking about?
PS Thanks Andy, nice video, gets the blood stirred
PS Thanks Andy, nice video, gets the blood stirred
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Interesting wording, isn't it? It could just mean improved 120mm ammunition (likely), or even a gun-launched missile like Falarick (less likely). I think "put a missile down that barrel" rules out ATGMs, thoughThe Armchair Soldier wrote:Is this confirmation the LEP will include anti-tank missiles?
The pessimist sees difficulty in every opportunity. The optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.
Winston Churchill
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
It definitely appears that the Army is now looking at a comprehensive upgrade to the Challenger 2 rather than simply replacing obsolete components, and has drawn up a list of requirements that would make it basically a new Tank able to compete on a future battlefield against a peer opponent.
Now that is good news, but I worry as the same idea of upgrading an existing platform to make it more capable as a cheaper alternative to buying new was the sane as used for the Warrior CSP, and look how that has progressed, overbudget, reduced numbers and late to put it mildly.
As for an ATGW, well the US Army amongst others are developing gun launched ATGMs and Israel has them already in service, and all of which use the Rheinmetall 120mm or a similar gun, so adopting such a munition would not be a huge step if the CR2 upgrade delivers what the Army hopes for, and the same goes for the advanced penetrators in use around the world for the same gun.
Now that is good news, but I worry as the same idea of upgrading an existing platform to make it more capable as a cheaper alternative to buying new was the sane as used for the Warrior CSP, and look how that has progressed, overbudget, reduced numbers and late to put it mildly.
As for an ATGW, well the US Army amongst others are developing gun launched ATGMs and Israel has them already in service, and all of which use the Rheinmetall 120mm or a similar gun, so adopting such a munition would not be a huge step if the CR2 upgrade delivers what the Army hopes for, and the same goes for the advanced penetrators in use around the world for the same gun.
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
RLS and Israel have tested the LAHAT. We have a history of Spike missiles. LAHAT seems like a decent option.Caribbean wrote:Interesting wording, isn't it? It could just mean improved 120mm ammunition (likely), or even a gun-launched missile like Falarick (less likely). I think "put a missile down that barrel" rules out ATGMs, thoughThe Armchair Soldier wrote:Is this confirmation the LEP will include anti-tank missiles?
Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
Jealous girlfriend meme, with distracted boyfriend looking at sexy Challenger 2 (now with added missile!), and jealous girlfriend being "deployability".
Until the Army comes up with the coherent plan to be able to move its assets from A to B in an operationally relevant timeframe, those assets are always going to be very vulnerable in defence reviews. People outside the MOD can figure this stuff out.
Until the Army comes up with the coherent plan to be able to move its assets from A to B in an operationally relevant timeframe, those assets are always going to be very vulnerable in defence reviews. People outside the MOD can figure this stuff out.
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Re: FV4034 Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank (British Army)
The Australians have moved Abrams on C17, obviously with a degree of teardown, and I doubt it was anything but a prestine runway to land on.CMOR wrote:Jealous girlfriend meme, with distracted boyfriend looking at sexy Challenger 2 (now with added missile!), and jealous girlfriend being "deployability".
Until the Army comes up with the coherent plan to be able to move its assets from A to B in an operationally relevant timeframe, those assets are always going to be very vulnerable in defence reviews. People outside the MOD can figure this stuff out.
But, given the right efforts, what would prevent Chally 2 being C17 transported? Probably won't roll-off and straight into the fight, but it could be in theatre within 24hrs of first shot?