I read (heard) where the military is considering replacing the turbines in the M1 Abrams with good ole heavy duty diesels. The were several reasons mentioned... and several would retain the turbine engine however.
In the post cold war era... the need for a fast tank has somewhat diminished. The days of designing tanks to be fast to combat other fast tanks (Russian) in a tank battle arena are gone for the most part. The turbines get terrible fuel mileage... somewhere around 1/2 to 1 mpg but they are super fast (60 mph) for a 70 ton vehicle. Diesels on the other hand, in test models, were shown to get 3-4 mpg... so the range is greatly improved although the speed is down some.
But thats OK because in todays wars. . such as Iraq. . the tanks cant outrun the rest of the convoy, especially the fuel trucks. 30-40mph is fast enough. The 3rd ID was using 500,000 of fuel per day of operation during full swing operations.
Plus the diesels are easier to maintain, run better in dusty conditions, and troops can actually walk behind them for cover in urban fighting. The current turbines have hot exhaust shooting out the rear making walking behind them impossible. Diesels are also quiter so troops can actually use an intercom phone to talk to the inside tankers while walking along with them. Seems like slower is better in the type of environment the military is expecting to see in the future?
In the post cold war era... the need for a fast tank has somewhat diminished. The days of designing tanks to be fast to combat other fast tanks (Russian) in a tank battle arena are gone for the most part. The turbines get terrible fuel mileage... somewhere around 1/2 to 1 mpg but they are super fast (60 mph) for a 70 ton vehicle. Diesels on the other hand, in test models, were shown to get 3-4 mpg... so the range is greatly improved although the speed is down some.
But thats OK because in todays wars. . such as Iraq. . the tanks cant outrun the rest of the convoy, especially the fuel trucks. 30-40mph is fast enough. The 3rd ID was using 500,000 of fuel per day of operation during full swing operations.
Plus the diesels are easier to maintain, run better in dusty conditions, and troops can actually walk behind them for cover in urban fighting. The current turbines have hot exhaust shooting out the rear making walking behind them impossible. Diesels are also quiter so troops can actually use an intercom phone to talk to the inside tankers while walking along with them. Seems like slower is better in the type of environment the military is expecting to see in the future?
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