It is worth noting some more recent developments. Though not accepted for service yet, the XM111 is a guided conventionally launched projectile fired from the 120mm cannon. It comes in two variants, one with a KE penetrator, the other with a shaped charge. It was designed for both line of sight and indirect fire, testing gained a hit at over 8.5km. (The M1 normally isn't expected to engage much over 4km). Something else worth noting is that you can put a missile on anything, but if you want a proper accurate tank gun, you need something heavy enough to mount it, and hopefully tough enough to take what comes back the other way. So pretty much for a tank gun's firepower, you need a tank, but for a missile's firepower, you can use anything-but-a-tank.
@kylesenior2 жыл бұрын
? XM111 was cancelled more than a decade ago.
@TheChieftainsHatch2 жыл бұрын
@@kylesenior Which is why it has not entered service! But it is an example of extant technology which combines the capability of a missile with the speed and ease of a conventional round. The issue is that there seems to be no need for it, not that it doesn't seem to work, which is an interesting addition to the arguments in this video.
@bobo-cc1xw2 жыл бұрын
Is a source allowed to argue with the video? And what were u more deadly with a tow or 120mm
@fortusvictus82972 жыл бұрын
I thought that was for anti-heli work anyway.
@marzapan90292 жыл бұрын
This sounds like a redo of the old SADARM round that was going to make armour weak at the knees back in the 70s. Never really went into service.
@jprehberger2 жыл бұрын
Good video! A couple of other factors to consider: Missiles tend to be more fragile than tank rounds. Rounds can stand more bouncing around and mis-handling in armored vehicles than can missiles. Missles tend to be bulkier than tank rounds (particularly while in their shipping containers) thus potentially limiting the shooting capacity in tanks.
@tommihommi12 жыл бұрын
Solid rocket motors turning into bombs from being mishandled is scary
@jwenting2 жыл бұрын
Javelin is a prime example. Even in its carry container with special shock absorbing rings around it the soldier can easily make it inoperable if he simply stumbles and bumps the container against the ground or say a tree. That's not going to happen with a HEAT or APFSDS tank shell.
@jwenting2 жыл бұрын
@@tommihommi1 which happened to the Dutch army during operations in Yugoslavia. The field commander upon receiving his Dragon missiles found that the propellant charges on ALL of them were cracked, rendering the missiles more dangerous to his own troops than to Serbian tanks and APCs. The same was true for most of his LAW rockets and even his mortar shells. This left the Dutch batallion in Yugoslavia without any anti-armour capability at all and inevitably led to the failure of their mission . The culprit was poor maintenance and storage under incorrect conditions in the Dutch war supply warehouses, while never publicly stated I guess the entire Dutch munitions stockpile was probably similarly affected.
@bucherwurm53442 жыл бұрын
I also love the content but I think it needs some music
@theodoresmith52722 жыл бұрын
I'm on the other side of this. The gun itself is a better weapon. The problem is there big and need transport, so you make them mobile. But you want them protected, so they weigh a lot with armour, so the mobile platform grows giant and all the gadgets and equipment on the tank and training the crew is super $$$ . the problem is no matter how tough you make it, the other side will build a handheld missile 1 50 year old guy like me can fire smoking a cigarette destroying the tank after 30 minutes playing the video game version for training. Tanks also are more vulnerable to be destroyed from the air more then ever with drones. Rommell knew in ww2 planes had made large formations impossible unless you owned the skies. Artillery, the oldest take destroyer since ww1, is so accurate, 1 or 2 guns can do some real damage to tank formations as we have seen some video coming from Ukraine. Israel had problems with the first wire guilded missiles in the Sinai. Bazooka and panzerfoust had several upgrades in ww2 and proved deadly thats how quickly war changes.
@MUSASHI19444444444442 жыл бұрын
Also I think that tank guns are there for the higher versatility; tanks often shoot at structures/buildings in infantry support, and here the ability to shoot HE is very important.
@tommihommi12 жыл бұрын
>structures/buildings i.e. ukrainian hospitals and apartment buildings
@mr.waffentrager44002 жыл бұрын
Shooting guided ATGM at a big statistic target is such a waste of money is the biggest reason i think.
@Rokaize2 жыл бұрын
Why can’t you use an HE missile for the same thing?
@maxwell120L552 жыл бұрын
@@Rokaize Missiles are kind of expensive to just shoot them at buildings all the time.
@talltroll70922 жыл бұрын
@@Rokaize A tank shell can cost from a few hundred dollars, or the local equivalent, to a few thousand, maybe even into the low tens of thousands for a DU round (uranium is a very hard metal, and thus an absolute sod to work with, as well as needing considerable additional safety measures), and can reach out to maybe 3 or 4 miles, although you're unlikely to hit anything other than a large stationary target at the far end of that range. An NLAW might make 1 mile under ideal circumstances, and costs £20,000. A Javelin has a similar max range to the tank shell, but costs about £200,000
@Pikilloification2 жыл бұрын
Important to keep in mind as well that MBTs are not only designed to fight other tanks, but also support infantry or other vehicles. That may require the use of HE or smoke rounds. Missile systems to deliver those ammunitions would take too much room to be any useful.
@klonik792 жыл бұрын
yes, that's why it is so bad idea for politicians to tell army what they need to buy or where they are "best" used. You get tank barrel launched missiles or even worse ATGM Carriers liek IT-1, or Gallipoli campaign ... or as with any other war, Ukraine.
@sukositb2 жыл бұрын
I think he didn't bring it up because all of his example (M551,M60A2,T-64,T-90) already pack powerful punch against infantry. So only the AT capability are used instead. Remember that he is talking about gun-launched ATGM and not ATGM in general.
@meow1990_22 жыл бұрын
But couldn't the shells designed to destroy tanks simply be replaced by ATGMs and then leave a supply of HE and Smoke shells?
@klonik792 жыл бұрын
@@meow1990_2 Usually the have different dimensions, also APDSFS is much cheaper than missile 10 fold or more. Missile is much more finicky. They need to be checked more often for defect, especially on rocket engine part. etc. Since currently they give no advantage to tank, while having many disadvantages, no not really
@meow1990_22 жыл бұрын
@@klonik79 Makes sense! :)
@SilverShamrockNovelties2 жыл бұрын
Your choice of icon to illustrate the “top attack” made me laugh hard enough to spit my drink. Well played!
@dvdraymond2 жыл бұрын
Agreed. The subsonic icon was also awesome :)
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I spent quite some extra time to make it.
@nanorider4262 жыл бұрын
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Your time was well spent. ^^
@tyree90552 жыл бұрын
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized As a Javelin Gunner, I appreciated the Top Attack icon. 🤣👍
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
@@tyree9055 did anyone made this an unofficial symbol of the Javelin units yet?
@bluemountain41812 жыл бұрын
Presumably missiles are also more vulnerable to active defence systems too due to their slower speed and relative complexity/fragility
@TheTrueAdept2 жыл бұрын
That is just with the commonly-available rocket motor tech, there is some newer rocket motors that would vastly improve missile speed, the problem is _mass production_ and that's the real problem with mil-tech.
@darugdawg24532 жыл бұрын
Active defence does not makes the tank impervious to a missile
@Welterino2 жыл бұрын
@@darugdawg2453 I think It does, very few missiles are capable of jamming the APS detection to get a direct hit. APS is overpowered as hell, Trophy APS even stops Javelins. There are probably blind spots in the rear or you could fire an RPG from a very high position down into the tanks roof but it would need to be very close for that. About US army testing Trophy: ...the U.S Army has reported similar success in tests. “I tried to kill the Abrams tank with ATGM 48 times and failed, despite the fact that some of them were supersonic,” said US Army Col. Glenn Dean.
@virutech322 жыл бұрын
@@darugdawg2453 as with anything in the realm of modern industrial warfare not being impervious is irrelevant. Everything is about probabilities & cost. Active defense lowers effective hit probability & that's all that matters. Sure you can always go with higher speeds, better guidence, better tech, but that has an added cost too. Anything that reduces the probability of a fast & speedy kill while increasing the cost of achieving a given hit probability is a problem.
@Kevin-hx2ky2 жыл бұрын
Not against the slower, more fragile HEAT rounds
@Archeangelous2 жыл бұрын
I wasn't an assaultman [Javelin] or a TOW gunner in the US Marines, but my buddies who were said they were trained to [ideally] trigger two additional smoke/demo explosions when firing so a tank crew had to choose among the 3 choices
@willtaylor93092 жыл бұрын
You mean to obscure their position with two other smoke clouds, that could be launch points? Or to protect the missile?
@Welterino2 жыл бұрын
@@willtaylor9309 probably obscure position of launch point, but if the enemy tank has APS system, the Javelin will be neutralized and the approximate position of launch will be shown to the crew. But the only armies I know that use APS on their tanks and are capable of neutralizing Javelins are US and Israel's army. (they use the same Trophy APS system)
@JJadx2 жыл бұрын
@@Welterino note that a lot of US abrams tanks aren't even equipped with trophy APS systems.
@Archeangelous2 жыл бұрын
@@willtaylor9309 yes to obscure position. I think they were using Dragons at the time in addition to TOWs, a very slow going ATGM that was wire guided iirc
@fortusvictus82972 жыл бұрын
@@Archeangelous Yeah, tactics for Dragon and TOW were much different than modern NLAW and Javelins.
@MsZeeZed2 жыл бұрын
Khrushchev was a big fan of missiles and rockets - see the Cuban Missile Crisis & the Space Race. Many Soviet rocket designers were Ukrainian (Khrushchev lived in Donbas as a child and governed Ukraine prior to WWII) and familiar to him. It was also a way he could take leadership of military matters within the Soviet Union, like Stalin but with a more progressive, modern approach (these opinions are stated in his autobiography)
@princeofcupspoc90732 жыл бұрын
"Khrushchev was a big fan of missiles and rockets - see the Cuban Missile Crisis" You mean the Soviet response to the US putting missiles in Turkey? The ones that were quietly removed in agreement with the Soviets taking out the missiles in Cuba?
@genes.32852 жыл бұрын
@@princeofcupspoc9073 That is what few Americans were aware of at the time, US missiles in Turkey. Their existence was not disclosed until years later. The entire Cuban Missile Crisis was the result of a misstep by JFK. He had campaigned on a missile gap. In reality, the missile gap was 17:1 in favor of the U.S. McNamara told him this upon the start of the new administration. Rather than admit error, JFK ordered the construction of 500 more ICBMs. This convinced Khrushchev that the Americans were going for first strike capability, which realistically they already had. JFK himself knew nothing about the US missiles in Turkey until told by his advisors of their existence.
@scottkrater21312 жыл бұрын
Khrushcev did such a great job in Cuba, they gave him a retirement dacha, and let him bask in the glory they heaped on him....right?
@MsZeeZed2 жыл бұрын
@@scottkrater2131 He got a nice big garden to grow things in. A better retirement deal than Malenkov or Kaganovich I think
@scottkrater21312 жыл бұрын
@@MsZeeZed and that's the truth.
@peteranderson0372 жыл бұрын
8:10 "Top-Attack ATGMs" This quality analysis is why I watch this channel.
@MilesStratton2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video as always Bernard! Was a pleasure to review the script and help out.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Thanks again!
@vladimpaler34982 жыл бұрын
I think they also wanted to mount anti-tank missiles on other types of armored vehicles that could not support big guns, like the Bradley. Missiles do not have that huge recoil.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Yeah.
@scottmccullough80302 жыл бұрын
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized You can mount a missile on a rowboat, or an anti tank canoe. You cant swim a gun across a river. A tank round is likely better against more things than a missile though. A heat round is cheaper to shoot at a bunker or building. You can fire smoke rounds or flairs from a gun, though I am not sure anyone does. Its also far cheaper to train with real ammunition on a gun than with a missile.
@glenmcgillivray47072 жыл бұрын
@@scottmccullough8030 I am also surprised that folks forget one of the biggest factors in weapon choice Ammunition and logistics. I can print tank shells in their thousands. But anti tank missiles need to be carefully assembled and checked, with delicate electronics that can render the weapon utterly useless. And most missile weapons are larger than tank shells, and when attacking we note there were problems for the KV tanks from world war 2 due to having small ammunition stowage capacity! Modern ammo remains large and limited, if you sacrifice yet more ammunition for a bigger missile you will need to retreat to a ammo truck after even less time fighting on a battlefield!
@user-pq4by2rq9y2 жыл бұрын
You can use a recoiless gun to handle recoil, but weight would still be a issue
@glenmcgillivray47072 жыл бұрын
@@user-pq4by2rq9y you do note that recoilless weapons require a mechanism to discharge sufficient propellant to balance out the kinetic energy of the shell being fired? So they usually have worse back blast than missile weapons? And are poorly suited to confined spaces, like inside a turret. I wonder just how big a blank Shell you might need to balance out a HVAP type round.
@mathiasvernet7632 жыл бұрын
Another point to consider is that the line of sight might no always be clear. An APFSDS will go through a bush or a small wall without deviating or loosing too much penetration, while a missile will probably get deviated by the bush and stopped by the wall
@m0nkEz2 жыл бұрын
Missiles can go over the obstacle, though. I don't think it's practical quite yet, but I doubt there will be much longer before guided missiles are increasingly the obvious choice.
@jintsuubest93312 жыл бұрын
Missile can deal with bushes. Not wall. Also you will not risk shooting AP throught a wall cause you don't know what's behind.
@jintsuubest93312 жыл бұрын
@@m0nkEz The advantage of conventional high velocity projectile is the low time between fire and impact. And there is no realistic way to intercept them, passive or active system. Yes, it is possible with missile, but size of missile required to reach the same velocity would be stuff like losat, very big and limited in carrying capacity.
@gwtpictgwtpict42142 жыл бұрын
@@jintsuubest9331 I think you very much would put an AP round through a wall if you suspected an enemy tank was behind it.
@tyree90552 жыл бұрын
@@jintsuubest9331 There were tank kills in WWII from shooting right through buildings at one another. So I don't think that'll stop anyone from firing through your house at the enemy vehicle on the other side of it. Only some bureaucratic ass-kisser might be stopped by such a philosophy, but not anyone experience in warfare.
@MrDportjoe2 жыл бұрын
this long ago TOW/DRAGON repair tech loved this video. Just as an aside, a design flaw in the Dragon trainer made it very unlikely that any one live firing for the first time would get a hit. The simulator had a weight that shifted when the training blank was fired BUT it did NOT leave the training launcher, thus the weight on the gunner's shoulder never changed. So first live round fired the gunner would tend to rise as the 10 kilos of missile left his shoulder, often causing the missile to drop-if not bounce on it's flight path. I watched as EVERY DRagon round fired by a Ranger company did exactly that at Yakima firing center. Every shot missed the target train-even after a Master Sgt opted to jump on the trains engine to control the throttle.
@Rationalific2 жыл бұрын
My favorite parts of this video were the "Top-Attack ATGMs" (8:11) and the note that anti-tank missiles are still Subsonic (10:56).
@ilijiamin90532 жыл бұрын
Interesting video. However, I would like to point out that one of the main reasons to use a gun-fired ATGM is to compensate for the fact that Soviet-type tanks have a much lower silhouette and so do their guns. Overall they have a narrower range for elevation and depression. ATGMs don't care. They'll climb or dive where you guide them. This means, for example, they can be fired from the top of a hill at targets downhill where cannons wouldn't have a firing solution. For this same reason, they can be fired at helicopters with a greater chance of success than tank shells would. (In theory.) Still, I find that most of the points in the video concerning the advantages and disadvantages of ATGMs vs shells are valid, I would like to put a little caveat on the travel time difference. In a tank vs tank scenario, even if there is a 1000 m/s difference. The humans operating the target vehicle will still, most likely, be unable to make their 50+ tons vehicle "dodge" the missile in time even if they are aware it is coming. Furthermore. You can correct the trajectory of an ATGM, you can't correct a shell in flight. In conclusion, the question 'Are missiles better than shells?' is just as relevant as the question: 'Is a sledgehammer better than a screwdriver?' Think of that what you will.
@Akm722 жыл бұрын
Agreed regarding physically dodging the missile. However, if they spot the incoming missile in time, it does increase their chance to pop smoke and disappear from the view.
@Ropetor2 жыл бұрын
This is not completely true, soviet gun launched atgms are laser beam riding and they require the main sight to aim at the target, gen 1 atgms like the malyutka can do that but not russian barrel launched ones
2 жыл бұрын
Excellent point. Never thought of this.
@fenriders70082 жыл бұрын
@@Ropetor are the later generation barrel launched atgms like Svir/Invar/Refleks-M exclusively tied to the main barrel sight? I would’ve thought they would’ve added the ability for the commander to guide it in.
@Ropetor2 жыл бұрын
@@fenriders7008 All russian tanks in service except t14 and t90M don't have a citv. They use the same unstabilized night vision sight from with from 1978. Commander in t72/t80 is almost blind with minimal hunter killer capability, the commander can override the traverse and point the gun to a target but the targeting needs to be done by the gunner, he has a monitor that allows him to watch trough the gunner sight and he has his own controls but no CITV Russian tanks mostly use the sosna-u gen 2 thermal sight with a laser rangefinder attached to it, they also have a sight called duplet as a secondary sight but it uses the same laser rangefinder as the main sight. Russian gun launch atgms are all laser beam riding and the only sight capable of emitting is the main sosna-u or pmn-t wich is another thermal seen in use by the T-80BVM
@davidy-t71152 жыл бұрын
Logistics is always the one point that gets missed any time someone comes up with a shiny thing... The very minor point that you may have missed is "how many rounds can you carry?" and once you fire those rounds/missiles off, how easy/hard is it to resupply? Missiles come in their own shipping containers which are extremely bulky, where as a pallet of tank rounds is a heavy but easy cargo unit.. Re-loading a tank with it's basic fire allotment is a well practiced routine for your tank crew... but a re-supply of a vehicle of replacement missiles is a much more complicated thing... Overall, the logistical support for the weapon system really makes it a not very good choice for an tank.
@alexdunphy37162 жыл бұрын
Yeah, something the navies forgets even more, considering VLS systems generally can only be reloaded at specialized ports
@noticing333 ай бұрын
Unless itslike russian tank missiles
@Napalmratte2 жыл бұрын
while games can just come ever so close to reality, I have a clear preference for stabilized guns or at longer ganges even unstabilized gun systems over ATGMs because I always kinda feel betayed if i launch an ATGM, the enemy tank stops, laser range finds me and shoots/kills me and then dodges the missile... - quote from a War Thunder veteran, circa 2022, digitalised :D
@ChipnDalenBlendi2 жыл бұрын
i do absolutly agree, exept if im in the Wiesel 1A2, then no one sees me in the first place, that little thing is a wild Wiesel!
@Jaggaraz2182 жыл бұрын
In real life there's a slightly longer delay on the target tank shooting back and dodging, because only its commander or maybe gunner spots the missile first, and then he has to deliver the order to gtfo to the driver, and try to maybe guide the gunner to aim back at were the missile came from. Source: I did my millitary service as a CV9030 gunner
@Burboss2 жыл бұрын
Its a game bud. Relax )
@fenriders70082 жыл бұрын
Brit ATGM carrier like striker and swingfire Allan also launch while hidden like the Wiesel, just with much worse missiles.
@fenriders70082 жыл бұрын
@Napalmratte also, give us more naval content dude! Keep up the great work, love the channel.
@KRdHaene2 жыл бұрын
Love the Soviet Womble reference for "Fire and Forget".
@modernxenophon15822 жыл бұрын
Another thing we have to take into account is the types of countermeasures available against missiles vs. tank gun rounds. There are several types of active protection systems against ATGMs that can shoot down incoming missiles with something like an automated shotgun (e.g. Trophy, Arena), or use electronic warfare to interfere with the missile guidance. And this is in addition to various types of reactive armor. On the other hand, once a kinetic round leaves the tank gun, there is little you can do about it. Shotguns, smokescreens, and electronic baffles have no effect whatsoever on an incoming APFSDS round.
@Talon30002 жыл бұрын
I mean, there were dedicated missile carriers like the Pereh in use and ATGMs are in frequent use as secondary armament for IFVs like the Bradley or Puma that simply don't have the space and carrying capacity for a full-blown 120 mm cannon.
@brain_tonic2 жыл бұрын
I think the point stands that if your vehicle has the capabiity of carrying a gun you take that over Missiles.
@Talon30002 жыл бұрын
@@brain_tonic True. Come to think of it there are vehicles like the M1128 and the Rooikat that have something akin to a MBT cannon mounted on a wheeled platform.
@martinfiedler43172 жыл бұрын
8:10 You made my day. Highly anticipating the deployment of anti-tank battalions based on the bouncing-plumber tactic!
@ChipnDalenBlendi2 жыл бұрын
15:40 a wild SovietWomble appears! How did his pictogram made it into this video?!
@JakeInaitor50002 жыл бұрын
I was like is there a reference I'm missing, cause I've watched most of his KZbin stuff more than one and I couldn't think of anything?
@Crallux2 жыл бұрын
@@JakeInaitor5000 Me neither... might be just a funny coincidence. I don't get it either and I would consider myself well versed in the womble madness.
@wytfish48552 жыл бұрын
it's a recurring joke in MHV. not often, but womble's icon is usually attributed to generally wonky things.
@ChipnDalenBlendi2 жыл бұрын
Ah thx, I was really wondering how he endet up there :D I like it !
@chrisdominguez74852 жыл бұрын
This guy is GREAT!!! His facts are impressive - numerous, on point, and INTERESTING!!! Thank you for your encyclopedic presentations!!!!
@ycplum70622 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of the old "Sagger" drills back in the late 80s and early 90s. If you see a puff of smoke, the driver drives in a random zigzag pattern while the gunner fires in and around the puff of smoke. You done need to kill the sacred operator, just make him flinch and jerk the missile off course.
@orbitalair21032 жыл бұрын
not so useful anymore, NLAW, Javelin, etc are fire and forget. NLAW procedure is to track target for 3secs and fire, it tries to predict where the vehicle will be in 5 secs. (it only has a 800m range, which is pretty short to be on the receiving end of a 125mm HE shell).
@demonprinces172 жыл бұрын
Forgot about those, but was 40 years ago
@ycplum70622 жыл бұрын
@@orbitalair2103 I believe the NLAW is not guided per se. It simply predicts a path based on prior movement. In theory, if a driver sees the launch, eratic maneuvers may evade the NLAW.
@ycplum70622 жыл бұрын
@@demonprinces17 It is still effective if the missile is not a guided fire and forget missile. The US TOW is still command controlled. Same for some Russian AT missiles. Many of them are beam riding.
@cnlbenmc2 жыл бұрын
1:40 I think a big reason why the US doesn't peruse gun launched Anti-Tank missiles anymore was the debacle that was the Shillelagh system soured them to the idea.
@jamesharding34592 жыл бұрын
Odd, considering that the system showed the potential, just held back by technologies of the time.
@cnlbenmc2 жыл бұрын
+@@jamesharding3459+ It suffered from So Many problems that the Pentagon just chose to retire the platforms early than bother improving them after they Finally got a mediocre level of effectiveness that took Decades to achieve. Them trying to use caseless ammo for the gun rounds probably didn't help along with how in early models firing a shell would break the missile guidance components.
@jamesharding34592 жыл бұрын
@@cnlbenmc True. But those were engineering problems, not inherent to the concept.
@stansmit53442 жыл бұрын
A thing to consider is also that vehicle mounted missiles are often mounted on the side or top of a tank, making them hard to reload and easy to damage. While light artilery fire could not take out the main gun, it can make external missile launchers inoperable
@Blockio19992 жыл бұрын
Very informative video, thank you! Did not expect the Mario/Womble icons. Well played, those got me good.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed!
@slartybartfarst552 жыл бұрын
Thank you for a nicely thorough but concise summation of this topic. Always enjoy your videos.
@SnowmanTF22 жыл бұрын
That subsonic icon is great
@jlvfr2 жыл бұрын
Small quibble: you should have specified, in the tittle and in the beginning, that this video relates to guns vs missiles as _tank armament_ . Otherwise, a viewer comes in thinking it's an overall comparison.
@nemiw44292 жыл бұрын
I cant say exactly why but I feel like guns are more accurate, less proned to errors, more simple, cheaper, less fancy. More of a "boom, problem solved". Edit: in more accurate I ment close range, because they are faster, you can hit a target almost instantly. A missile uually needs some time to gain speed.
@alexxu30042 жыл бұрын
ya, thanks to fancy stabilizers, range finders and ballistic computers
@Jaggaraz2182 жыл бұрын
And don't fail because some debree or branches were in the way
@exploatores2 жыл бұрын
if I am having a normal gun. with a AT shell and discovers a enemy truck. I can allways fire. what I got and load a HE. it´s not like I am going to fire of something that is more expensive then the truck I am shooting at. I am kind of shure my commanders wouldn´t like if I use the firecontrol system to clear the breach from a rather expensive and rare missile.
@piscessoedroen2 жыл бұрын
@@alexxu3004 it's not like those tech aren't already commonplace by the 70s. A fancy FCS will always be more cost effective than throwing a sophisticated system onto the enemy everytime you fire
@alexxu30042 жыл бұрын
@@piscessoedroen ya, and ATGMs are common since 1950s too, long before any reliable high penetration apfsds came to world. also you overestimate how much missiles cost, a typical cold war era tank launched missile cost only about $5000-20000, and your modern day tank rounds cost 4000-10000 per shot anyway not including the cost of the high pressure gun barrel itself. You would think missile is more complicated but it's pretty much just a rocket-powered RC drone with explosives, on the other hand tank apfsds are super hardened material with high requirement of dimensional accuracy. cost is never the issue here.
@Sputnik57902 жыл бұрын
8:05 the mario symbol for the top attack of Javellin was a really nice touch.
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer2 жыл бұрын
I have always wondered about barrel erosion from the rocket propellant. In the Soviet system does the rocket have a small kick out charge like an infantry weapon or does it go full bore no pun intended with the main propulsion out the barrel? What if any residue might be left in the barrel? Is there any issue with increased barrel wear or pitting of metal?
@orbitalair21032 жыл бұрын
As I understand it has a small kick charge that is just like the gun round propellant, just smaller, enough to get the round out of the tube, then the flight motor starts up. So theres no real difference in barrel or gun wear. Russian engineers and designers are generally pretty thoughtful about such things.
@0sm1um762 жыл бұрын
I am not knowledgeable about this so take my words with a grain of salt. But I would imagine the stresses of a rocket and a smoothbore cannon round would be comparable in overall "wear" but very different in terms of how. The cannon obviously would involve extremley high chamber pressures and velocities. In other words an extremley brief but intense impulse. The rocket would involve much lower pressure but much higher heat and much more propellant/residue left in the barrel which could be damaging. I'd certainly like to hear an engineer/knowledgable person's take
@MarkoLomovic2 жыл бұрын
@@0sm1um76 Well going from orbitalair said you would use same principles of firing the round to make missiles leave the gun then missile would ignite its engines. So that would mean it would be no different then firing regular round.
@orbitalair21032 жыл бұрын
@@0sm1um76 I used to make rocket motors. All tube launched missiles use small kick charges. Watch the javelin and nlaw videos closely at launch.
@duytranuc40252 жыл бұрын
Soviet system barrel-fire missle do have a kick out charge, similar system like Israel LAHAT also have kick out charge
@christopherg23472 жыл бұрын
One has to appreciate the kind of gamechanger hollow charges were. During WW1 and most of WW2, AT warfare was "Fire a really hard projectile really, really fast". Speed was the one property for deciding if you made a kill. Shaped/Hollow charges do not need speed for killing. That is what makes them man portable and easily added to IFVs. Of course you can also put a S/H charge into a tank gun round. ATGMs not fired from the barrel are propably best left as secondary weapon for those vehicles that can bot fire modern AT rounds.
@gimmethegepgun2 жыл бұрын
Also interesting is that tank-fired antitank rounds have largely reverted back to firing something hard and fast at the enemy instead of shaped charges lol
@christopherg23472 жыл бұрын
@@gimmethegepgun I think that was due to ERA developments getting too good. But right now ERA is pivoting towards AFDPS defeating too.
@iowars85922 жыл бұрын
Has any army ever considered a gun-launched surface-to-air missile ? It would certainly be a very useful self-defense capability for tank formations, especially against attack helicopters. Also, love the Soviet Womble reference.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
The LAHAT mentioned at the end of the video should also be able to deal with helis, I considered adding that line, but didn't.
@TheChieftainsHatch2 жыл бұрын
@@Laotzu.Goldbug That was one of the advantages of the Soviet missile systems. Their missiles were much faster than the TOWs coming back the other way, and at long range, their accuracy simply couldn't guarantee a hit on a target. Of course, you'd need to hope you had a missile in the tube at the time.
@fluffly36062 жыл бұрын
...At the typical range from which an armoured vehicle would engage aircraft would a guided SAM have a significant advantage over, say, a proximity fuse round? (IIRC the M1 Abrams is capable of firing such ammo) Legitimate question, as a non-expert I am intrigued
@causewaykayak2 жыл бұрын
Another superb presentation.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Many thanks!
@daddysempaichan2 жыл бұрын
A missile is a expensive, sophisticated piece of rock capable of precise and minute movements to accurately hit it's target for maximum damage. A tank shell is a big fucking rock thrown at incredibly high speeds at relatively low cost. There're many different kinds of rocks that can be thrown, but they're all still cheaper and easier to use compared to missiles. Not to mention, tank rounds are easier to handle, maintain, and takes up less space, which means you can carry more ammo, which means gun goes boom boom more. Man humanity really hasn't changed much now has it?
@fortusvictus82972 жыл бұрын
Going into the video I'm going to say the one thing: Cost! People are talking alot now about the Javelin vs cold war tanks, completely forgetting that Javelins are 120,000 USD each and against tanks 2x older than the soldiers fighting.
@whya2ndaccount2 жыл бұрын
Two additional points, if I can. 1. A gun is more flexible. As soon as I pull the trigger I can traverse onto a new target as the round is "fire and forget" whereas most ATGMs require a beam rider or optical tracking (i.e. keep the gun pointing at the first tgt until you hit/miss). With the gun, you can shoot at targets at 12 O'clock, then 9 O'clock then 3 O'clock (esp. if the tank has CITV or similar Hunter/Killer equipment), while the missile is still looking at the 12 O'clock target. 2. The gun can fire many different natures (types) of ammunition (anti armour [Kinetic or Chemical], smoke, HE, Canister or similar anti personnel rounds, ...). Having only an ATGM forces you to shoot at say a truck with an ATGM rather than say HE.
@CalinCETERAS2 жыл бұрын
While I can't say anything about gun-launched ATGM missiles, but - for example - the RPG-7 shoulder-launcher can use several types of HEAT (normal and tandem), fragmentation and thermobaric ammunition. The reason why tanks don't carry multiple types of gun-launched missiles is that their gun-ammunition is already good enough for the task. As for shooting at trucks, Russian tanks usually have a heavy machine gun (12.7mm, similar to the US .50 caliber).
@whya2ndaccount2 жыл бұрын
@@CalinCETERAS I was using a truck tgt as an example. Ideally you would use coax on transport. But there is no "smoke" ATGM, nor a Cannister ATGM, etc. This is one reason why the "ATGM only" (note only) option wasn't adopted.
@kirk_76322 жыл бұрын
another factor to consider is equipment such as hard kill anti APS and missile dazzlers, which along with ERA are much more useful against shaped charges than AP rounds.
@USALibertarian2 жыл бұрын
Tanks need to have a gun for fast shooting and ammunition capacity (and cost). And once you have to have a gun, then why complicate things in the tank when a different vehicle can carry the ATGMs? The missile vehicles can fire overwatch from longer ranges out of range of enemy tanks and thus don't need as heavy of armor. They basically act as attached tank destroyers. As a bonus they can carry infantry.
@dragonace1192 жыл бұрын
Basically, why have a tank that has ATGMs in place of a gun when you can either have IFVs with ATGM launchers or another lightly armored transport vehicle with one sitting a bit off in the back.
@andyf42922 жыл бұрын
i love all the little icons,,< devil in the details,subsonic>
@theskilllessgamer57952 жыл бұрын
About the propability to hit with a tank gun: In the 90s a Leopard 2A4 crew was supposed to hit and kill enemy tanks up to 3000m with the first shot, at least that was the training requirement/goal. Also, a tank gun is rather easy to use. Advanced targeting systems make that easier, not more difficult. The gunner keeps the sight on the target, uses the laser for the distance, maybe has to hold an extra button if the target is moving, then uses the trigger. To avoid detection by enemy laser detectors and thus warn the enemy, the gunner can laser the ground next to the enemy tanks. While laserguided missiles operators have to keep a laser on the enemy the whole time, or at least for every course correction during flight. (not sure how technology progressed there) Id use a tank gun anytime unless you got a ATGM for ranges, say 4km+, where the enemy tank cant reliably shoot back at you.
@ericsmith71492 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the excellent overview and content, very much worth the view.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@rimmerblues15862 жыл бұрын
Informative, thanks. Luv the icons, inc. Super Mario attacks and unicorns are hybrids.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Glad you like them!
@JustSomeCanuck2 жыл бұрын
Shillelagh is pronounced "Shil-ay-lee". Throwing that in there before The Chieftain has a hernia ;)
@TheChieftainsHatch2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for getting there first. My emotional support missile also thanks you.
@crazywarriorscatfan90612 жыл бұрын
Quite interesting!
@acctsys2 жыл бұрын
Drones and missile trucks/technicals may be the future though at least defensively.
@Schwarzvogel12 жыл бұрын
Both of those exist already, and both have been used with some success. However, neither is a complete replacement for actual tanks. Missile trucks are _extremely_ vulnerable to artillery (which generally won't do too much to actual tanks except in the case of direct hits) and small arms fire. Drones have the limitations of aircraft in general (they don't like bad weather).
@julianmorrisco2 жыл бұрын
Vee-hikill! Love it, B’s accent is a delight to my ears.
@testinghydra56522 жыл бұрын
In the words of TF2 heavy, “Some people think they can outsmart me. Maybe, maybe. I've yet to meet one that can outsmart bullet.”
@witlove1152 жыл бұрын
I love the little memes you put in your videos.
@andyc30882 жыл бұрын
With the American Army thinking of replacing the gun with missles didn't stop with tanks. The US Navy and Airforce thought the samething with the F4 Phantom had no gun and used missiles instead. Until it was realised the aircraft had to have a gun. One other thing more rounds could be carried on a tank.
@wojtekimbier2 жыл бұрын
My shot at it: You can't shoot an ATGM in 2 seconds and you can't shoot 10 ATGMs in a minute.
@Masada19112 жыл бұрын
Not with that attitude you can’t
@cowgoesmoo22 жыл бұрын
Possibly the best image to use mario for javelin top attacking atgm
@johanmetreus12682 жыл бұрын
I must strongly object to higher complexity require more training per default. Starting out with the GrG m/48 (Carl-Gustaf), it takes months of training to become proficient and reliably hit a moving target. First generation of missiles took weeks to learn how to effectively guide the missile to the desired impact point. Learning how to use Rb 56 Bill could be done in a week, while learning how to use a Javelin can be done in a couple of days. (Note that this does not include the tactical skills necessary, as to which firing positions to select, concealment and so forth). Another aspect not brought up is that after WWII, the main focus in gun munitions was HEAT, which has a much lower velocity making them far more difficult to correctly lead on moving targets at longer ranges. This trend was not changed until the 1970's with the long rod penetrators. These projectiles did not see the sharp decline in armour penetration over range as the previous kinetic penetrators had, and thus removed the need for chemical penetrators for long range engagements.
@dsdy12052 жыл бұрын
Something that hasn't been discussed here is that conservation of momentum dictates that a missile system delivering the same momentum (weight x speed) of ordnance on target will always weigh more than an equivalent load of tank shells, which biases logistics in favour of tank shells. Guns and rockets both work by conservation of momentum - the forward momentum of the projectile / rocket is matched by the rearward momentum of whatever materials it pushes off, called the reaction mass. In the rocket's case, it carries all the reaction mass it needs for forward flight on-board, which it then pushes off by burning them in its motor and ejecting it out the back as exhaust. It needs to carry enough of this reaction mass to provide enough momentum to reach the target, which of course makes it very heavy, especially since some of that reaction mass is used to push the remaining unburnt reaction mass forward along with the missile body. For a tank shell, the tank shell reacts against the propellant gas, which reacts against the gun breech, which reacts against the tank, which reacts against the Earth itself. So in a very real sense a tank shell cheats by dumping all of its reaction momentum into the Earth, which it (and the tank / truck / ship / C17 carrying it) doesn't need to carry around, making tank shells in general much lighter than an equivalent momentum missile.
@JGCR592 жыл бұрын
Great Video as always :) I'm not Irish but with St. Patrick's day upcoming, Shillelagh is pronounced "Schelela" for german speakers like us ;) Gaelic pronounciation makes no sense to me but competent people actually speaking the lingos told me it is perfectly logical ;)
@gwtpictgwtpict42142 жыл бұрын
My Dad, born in Waterford, pronounced it Shi-Lay-Lee.
@DwarfElvishDiplomacy2 жыл бұрын
I have no idea why im not subscribed to you anymore but i just found you again
@fazole2 жыл бұрын
Great topic! I've wondered about this for a long time.
2 жыл бұрын
First: Brilliant Icon for Top Attack :) As well as for Subsonic :) With the Russian invasion of Ukraine I recently thought about this very question. Always interesting to see different nations come to differenty conculsions for differenty reasons. Thanks for the very well researched video. Good that you got some proper Video of the Panzerjägers together before the rearrangament. One point that I think you didnt make that will likely degrade the viability of ATGMS against the top of the line MBTs, will be or already is in some cases, the addition of a hard kill system like Trophy. As far as I could find out, those systems cant currently intercept APFSDS arrows and that should give the tank gun a comparative advantage for some time. Until the pendulume swings again.
@robertfrost1683 Жыл бұрын
I sat in a gunners seat on a M60 with a 105mm gun. The gun round is so fast that I could see the round strike the target at 2,000 meters BEFORE I heard the sound of the gun going off. The speed of a gun round is almost instantaneous !
@michaeldwyer34662 жыл бұрын
Great video as always, thanks.
@javierpaz79542 жыл бұрын
That's a thing: Although some of the most advanced missiles have fire-and-forget systems, the target adquiring still needs line-of-sight. However, there isn't any technological reason to not be able to adquire the target indirectly, via a small drone, for example. I'm not talking about the drone launching the missile. I'm talking about a small drone that can adquire the target, send the info to the missile so the operator can safely launch it from behind a hill or something.
@alexdunphy37162 жыл бұрын
You need secure coms then, and that's hard. Opens the door for EW interference.
@waverly24682 жыл бұрын
Ships face the same choice. There was a time in the 60's when it looked like missiles might replace guns on ships. It didn't happen. Missiles cost more and artillery shells have a "repeatability" that ensures they fire with the same force every time.
@jamesharding34592 жыл бұрын
They have largely supplanted them for most purposes, though.
@wojtekimbier2 жыл бұрын
Poor example. The guns have been replaced by missiles as the main armament, both anti-air and anti-ship. Only a small number of guns remain on modern ships as auxilliary weapons or CIWS.
@AldanFerrox2 жыл бұрын
Well, but they aren't the main anti-ship weapon anymore. But they are still useful for AA, smaller targets at closer ranges and shore bombardment.
@Pikilloification2 жыл бұрын
@@AldanFerrox Shore bombardment? Hardly. Tomahawks for example are much more effective.
@AldanFerrox2 жыл бұрын
@@Pikilloification During the Falklands War, the 1991 Gulf War, the 2003 Iraq War and during the current Russian invasion of Ukraine modern destroyers and frigates used their DP guns to effectively bombard shore targets.
@nk_33322 жыл бұрын
There's also that hollow (shaped) charge the penetration is dependent on the diameter of the warhead. That's why the 152 mm Shillelagh (love hearing a German try to pronounce a Gaelic word Shil- lay- lee), not one for the 105mm L1 was the missile chosen.
@terranempire2 Жыл бұрын
I thank you sir, using Mario as the symbol for top attack missiles.😂 pure genius. “It’s a me Mario!!” Tank go boom!
@stevefreeland92552 жыл бұрын
Well done and thank you!
@CharlesFlahertyB2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@Ironclockwork2 жыл бұрын
My (flawed) interpretation of the entire outcome of this discussion: MOAR DAKKA.
@robbabcock_2 жыл бұрын
Great episode!
@Deathbykittens112 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't be surprised to see any future MBT development include a tandem or top-attack option for ammo in addition to more conventional ammo like APFSDS and Multipurpose rounds. The development of APS and soft kill systems might further complicate the choice and the logistics/requisition of ammo. Weapons like the Starstreak and Fin-Guided ammo are also irons in the fire, worthy of consideration.
@Cptshad0012 жыл бұрын
barrel launched ATGMs are a good idea I think, additional options at longer ranges, able to target helicopter (in some cases) and a tank is generally a safer place for the operator
@dointh41982 жыл бұрын
The "e" in the standart Latin transcription of the Cyrillic letters is pronounced "o" (sometimes "jo"). Hence "Krushchev" is spoken "Crushtshow" - wich is actually correct.
@GeneralGayJay2 жыл бұрын
I think a solution would be fire-and-forget missiles. Coupled with an auto-loader you could maybe be able to engage several ground and air targets simultaneously.
@michaeldenesyk31952 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, as usual. Thank you for this analysis. There is nothing more fearsome and morale-boosting than to hear your own MBTs firing off high velocity 120 mm main gun rounds. Missiles are also a necessity to a well-rounded armed force do have their place too. This is especially being demonstrated against so-called well-protetced and ERA-clad Russian MBTs falling victim to infantry teams armed with Javelin, RPG, NLAW, and even Molotov cocktails. This is not one system that takes all types of questions, it is finding the balance and proper application of weapons and tactics to win a conflict.
@notmynameanymore9412 жыл бұрын
How yall doing bro long day at work need something to focus my adhd on
@ViceCoin2 жыл бұрын
Electromagnetic railguns can fire at 4,000 meters/sec.
@rick74242 жыл бұрын
Very relevant right now.
@noahway132 жыл бұрын
Why have I not seen anyone develop a tank 'drone'. It would be so much better than having people crammed inside an increasing vulnerable tank. I know they have little ones that shoot guns, but I'm talking full sized, cannon shooting tanks.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure there is something in development, but you need also consider that almost all main battle tanks nowadays are upgraded versions of Cold War tanks: M1 Abrams, Leopard 2, Challenger 2 (produced since 1993, but development goes back), T-90 (upgraded T-72), T-80, etc.
@klonik792 жыл бұрын
I would argue that Infantryman AT missile is better than towed gun. Just poking at you, in context you present, as tank on a tank, I agree with your arguments :P As everything it is about a cons and pros. Missiles are good for infantry or scout cars, helicopters or if you do not need direct view for fire. Fire and forget missiles took away one great weakness, ie need to guide missile to target, not being able to move on another target or into cover. Other one, projectile speed will take some time to overcome, Good video, thanks for the effort.
@TheDude504472 жыл бұрын
There is a constant strive to make armor more effective against both chemical and kinetic penetrators. In general ERA has only in recent years seen a focus on better protecting from kinetic penetrators. There have also been significant developments towards jamming different kinds of missile tracking systems which in cases of laser warning receivers also offer a heads about a gun targeting system. Active protection systems are also being installed on several vehicles from many nations and they also mostly protect against missiles. On the other hand missiles like the TOW offer effective ranges in excess of 4 km where current anti tank guns are of very limited use.
@happysalesguy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, that was really interesting.
@thedungeondelver2 жыл бұрын
Ayy 15:40 - SovietWomble! :D
@Crallux2 жыл бұрын
haha, but why though? What reference is it? Can't remember of any bullshittery where fire and forget was a prominent feature.
@AdurianJ2 жыл бұрын
In the 1960's the High Explosive Anti Tank warhead was so ahead in the armor/anti-armor contest that western tanks like Leopard 1 and the AMX 30 gave up on defeating them, or they went to extreme concepts like the Swedish S tank. Because if you have to use steel armour you need ridiculous thicknesses to defeat a HEAT warhead making the tank almost immobile. What then happened was the composite armor and the smoothbore gun, not the gun itself but the projectiles it could fire the APFSDS esentially a long dart of a hard and heavy metal like Tungsten or Uranium. These projetiled don't care about sloping armor something the T-34 made famous in the second world war, they are also better at penetrating than HEAT because it's harder to defeat a projetile thant long that fast and of that mass. Essentially a 120mm tank gun puts all of it's energy into a 40mm wide dart.
@jintsuubest93312 жыл бұрын
Emm... Nope. The fusing technology of 50, 60, or even 70 shows that scj warhead has high probability of failure if impact at angle that's greater than around 60 degree. Strv103 armor is design mainly to stop conventional AP. Earlier rod are made out of steel, some with WC slug. Those earlier rod has hard time with angle because the projectile geometry. Althought ricochet with angle is not practical with modern rod, angle still plays a role in defeating rod type projectile, but throught different mechanism. Rod are better at dealing with complex target, while scj are better at dealing with simple target. And both type of target exist in modern battlefield.
@brianreddeman9512 жыл бұрын
Neat...so now let's cover tube artillery missiles...like the copperhead which I totally forgot about for ages until this video. 😁
@bryangrote87812 жыл бұрын
Missiles are bulky which is why most vehicles carry them outside the vehicle. Hard to protect the crew from cook offs and round count is very low. They are also much more expensive per shot. When you’re at the front of the line you may have a lot of potential targets and many of these are lower value targets that can be dealt with quicker and just as effectively with a gun with less risk to the crew and less need for resupply of ammo.
@alanshackelford64502 жыл бұрын
These debates rarely come down to better. They almost always come down to context.
@memofromessex2 жыл бұрын
Video idea - drones. I believe they were beginning development in WWII, if you include Fritz X as a drone (theres some very similar US kamikaze anti-tank drones today that operate in a very similar way but are launched like a mortar).
@yjfuykyil2 жыл бұрын
For MBTs I completely agree. For vehicles like IFVs, however, I'd say an ATGM is a valuable addition. I don't see huge value in gun-launched ATGMs. I can't think of many situations where I'd take one over a sabot.
@Chilionloppu2 жыл бұрын
In my opinion, gun launched ATGMs for MBTs seem a bit redundant since they don't exactly increase the practical engagement range too much and has the advantage only at or past the gun's range, but then the problem is fact that the target has around easily around 10 seconds to use countermeasures or find cover. ATGMs for autocannon armed IFVs like BMPs still seem like a decent idea to give capability to engage enemy tanks, but hard mounted solutions like BMP-3 gun launched missiles and Bradley's TOW (which can't be dismounted as far as I know) feel a bit bad to me since IFVs can't really take hits from MBTs at any range. Do you know if the gun launched missiles could be used in a "one two punch" fashion, by first launching a missile and loading a new round while the missile is in air to hit the target with a regular round almost at the same time as the missile?
@austinduong-van60712 жыл бұрын
Note that only Soviet/Russian MBTs can fire missiles through their gun, whereas Western MBTs don't. One design constraint of the Russian 'pancake' turrets and extremely low profile coupled with carousel-type autoloaders is the lack of gun elevation that's possible. The breech, compared to Western MBTs, has very little room to go down, resulting in lower in elevation angles and a corresponding reduction in possible gun range. They designed barrel-launched missiles because they needed something to match Western MBT engagement ranges without completely replacing their tanks: an expedient (kinda jank) solution to an unavoidable problem.
@EstellammaSS2 жыл бұрын
The Soviet tanks are designed mainly around combat in the East European Plain(yes, the Soviets think NATO will attack first). Which meant the stand off distance provided by the missiles can actually be achieved. With the carousel auto loader limiting the length of ammunition it’s almost impossible to upgrade old Soviet tanks over a certain point since their APFSDS rod simply couldn’t be any longer. This means the effective range of the 125mm on the T-72 against M1A1/Leopard2A5 would be almost suicidal, whilst Svir/Refleks gives them the option to plink away at 4~5km.
@Fuhrerjehova2 жыл бұрын
In theory some smart ATGMs could let you hit targets that are obstructed from the gun, if you for example have a drone detecting the enemy tank. It could also let you fire on something that the gun is not pointing at. But the production costs would be high and the system very complex with full drone integration etc.
@CalinCETERAS2 жыл бұрын
@@austinduong-van6071 How do you explain the range of 8,200 meters in indirect fire (artillery-style)? See wikipedia link for 100mm tank gun: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/100_mm_anti-tank_gun_T-12#HE-FRAG That 8200 meters is the range possible with 700 m/s HE shells, it shoots faster HEAT and even faster APFSDS
@jintsuubest93312 жыл бұрын
Unless the guidence unit is integrated into the missile itself, you can load but cannot fire the round before the missile hit the target.
@juke90772 жыл бұрын
Is there a noticeable difference between missiles and tank guns in term of value against soft targets?
@RoberttheWise2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. Didn't naval armament go through the same gun vs missile choice and came out on the opposite side? From what I understand guns are just a backup armament on a warship and the main workhorse is the missile, right? So what were the factors that made the difference?
@talltroll70922 жыл бұрын
Range. Whatever the theoretical range of a tank gun, it's pretty rare to be able to engage a target at more than a mile, maybe 2, even in a desert, because there are places to hide. There's no cover on the open ocean, so it is entirely realistic to expect to be able to detect and localise a target at hundreds of miles
@simonnance2 жыл бұрын
Radars and BVR engagement. Also non-overlapping use cases. Both gun and missile armament of ships are tailored to beyond visual range engagement nowadays, the UK 4.5 inch will fire 17 miles (3 miles is visual range at sea level). But a missile will fire closer to 200 miles. It's not even a comparison, missiles have capabilities that naval guns simply don't have, so you have one or the other, or both depending on your need. At maximum gun range you have to factor in thing like the curvature and spin of the earth to your aiming calculations.
@jonathan_605032 жыл бұрын
@@talltroll7092 And even within gun range by the end of WWII you had ships able to range out to 39 km (over 42,000 yards) at which point the time of flight is about 90 seconds, and that plus the little variations in pointing, velocity, shell, etc. all multiplying over that time/range meant you're unlikely to hit another ship without firing off a ton of shells hoping to get lucky or some kind of course correction or guidance on the shell (which wouldn't be developed until long after anti-ship missiles) So you could be within (extreme) gun range of the enemy and your slow anti-ship missile is still reasonably likely to make the first hit.
@doomedwit10102 жыл бұрын
A ship uses a missile to kill a $100 million dollar aircraft or $1 billion ship. A tank might use its gun to suppress infantry. Conscripts even. Also modern ships are basically unarmored because ship based missiles (which are huge) make armor a waste of tonnage. And as others have pointed out- not-tanks tend to use missiles. Armor is basically what defines a tank. Also the range issue. Even a smart missile has trouble killing a target it can't see when launched. All naval radar outranges an 18" gun. And remember the gun on the Zumwalt? The point was supposed to be cost. Then the round became as complex as a missile. It really was a gun launched missile. Railguns only matter if stealth or active defenses let you get in gun range. Although if they can shoot down ship killers they are again more armor than missile replacement. Also shore bombardment. But then you're kind of doing a tank's job. Of course if ATGMs get light and powerful enough (or javelins) people have long hypothesized the could make tanks and attack helicopters obsolete. But I think modern tanks are designed to operate with infantry. So the armor is as much for not-tanks as opposing tanks. I like others points. Tanks carry guns. Other things carry missiles. But then let's talk about artillery... which interestingly are guns. But in NATO combined arms if it's outside of tank gun range the tank can help something else kill it. Either missiles or aircraft or artillery. But note the marines have now ditched tanks. And thus tank guns. Make of that what you will.
@dragonace1192 жыл бұрын
@@doomedwit1010 On the point of shore bombardment, ships usally tend to have cruise missiles exactly for that purpose. Look at the invasion of Iraq for an example.
@letscheck5640 Жыл бұрын
On a tank, a gun is more verstaile than a missile to achieve different missions than just killing a tank. Also, even if some ATGMs have a marginal or sometimes entire capacity of defeating buildings and bunker, a gun can still do something similar. From the perspective of a turret, you don't want your ammo to wait 10 seconds before hitting the ennemy. The actual usefulness of ATGM comes that they could be used from light vehicles and by infantry teams, to attack a tank, as well as be carried on nearly all platforms (while putting a RH120 gun on a vehicle needs a chassis and some adaptatins to be usable).
@johnlansing29022 жыл бұрын
Very good Thank You .
@len20632 жыл бұрын
Good points.
@michael_1772 жыл бұрын
Nice touch with using Mario for "top attack" icon, lmao
@arpioisme2 жыл бұрын
I wonder what software you use to make the presentation?
@heinerheise7032 жыл бұрын
@kamiskub74092 жыл бұрын
Despite these experiences both sides have used and still have tanks equipped with only ATGMs with intent of using these vehicles as tank hunters ( M901 and Khrizantema-S or Shturm-S). It would be nice to mention that not all tanks are created equal especially if we take loose definition of a tank as armoured tracked vehicle. The purpose and task dictate what armament are going to be used on the vehicles and many IFV's are great examples of tanks equipped with ATGMs.
@simonnance2 жыл бұрын
Given the discussion is of gun Vs missile, that only really applies to armoured vehicles capable of carrying large guns - main battle tanks. It's not really fair to compare an ATGM against a 23/30mm cannon, and most armies don't consider AFVs or tank hunters as "tanks" in terms of their tactical doctrine. Dedicated ATGM systems, or AFVs with ATGMs, also have have different usage scenarios and are deployed differently to an MBT. They tend to be in scouting (AFV), infantry support or other ancillary roles rather than taking the place of an MBT. They are also significantly easier to knock out with other weaponry given their much reduced armour, and in the case of tank destroyer equivalents are usually less mobile.
@bucherwurm53442 жыл бұрын
I find your videos very interesting, but I think they could be more entertaining and pleasant to watch, if you added some music!
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Not gonna happen, music distracts etc. This channel is first about information.