but I guess this is a true statement,
'tanks rarely live to see the next war', is the statement and I guess it is true, the first of the
armoured lumbering war machines were obsolete as soon as World War I’s armistice
was signed, after World War II, the United States tried to reuse Sherman tanks
in Korea, and found them horribly outmatched by new Russian designs, on to
today Russia is about to start using a brand-new tank, here’s how the
country’s new 'Armata' will work, according to a translation by the U.S. Army’s Foreign Military Studies Office, the Armata’s
stats are roughly comparable to the U.S. Army’s M1 Abrams main battle tank,
though the Armata is slightly faster and slightly lighter, more interesting
than the raw numbers of the vehicle are the defencive systems installed on the
tank, one, the 'Afganit active protection complex' is, in theory, 'capable of
intercepting shaped-charged grenades, anti-tank missiles, and sub-calibre
projectiles,' which it will likely do by shooting rockets at incoming
projectiles, which is a tad in the future, however it could be using
a force field type of defence, like this shockwave attenuation
system, the patents that Boeing have filed seem to be
pretty much up to the job, it basically uses an
electric arc, a laser-induced arc and a microwave-induced
arc,
in
the patent illustration, the force field protects a military HMMWV, but the
design is written broadly enough that it can potentially protect everything
from ships to submarines, offshore platforms, ground vehicles, buildings, and
even humans, we have come a long way from a sling shot and a bow and arrow.
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