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Vehicle armour

From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.

A picture of a destroyed M113 armoured personnel carrier showing a section of the armour.

Armour often refers in a modern military context to the armoured fighting vehicle and the formations based around them. The symbol of such being the armoured fist, (as opposed to the strongarm.)

Military vehicles are commonly armoured to withstand the impact of shrapnel, bullets or shells, protecting the soldiers inside from enemy fire. The design and purpose of the vehicle determines the amount of armour plating carried, as the plating is often very heavy and excessive amounts of armour restrict mobility.

The most heavily armored vehicles today are the main battle tanks, which are the spearhead of the ground forces, and are designed to withstand anti-tank missiles, kinetic penetrators, NBC threats and in some tanks even steep-trajectory shells. The Israeli Merkava tanks were designed in a way that each tank component could use as an additional back-up armor to protect the crew. Outer armor is modular and enables quick replacement of damaged armor.

Contents

Technologies

Sloping and curving armour both increase the effective thickness, as a projectile striking at an angle must cut through more armour than one impacting perpendicularly. They also increase the chances of deflecting projectiles. The sloping front armour of a tank is often called the glacis, and provides the best protection as it is assumed to be the easiest part of the tank to hit. It is also made the thickest because the tank is usually considered an inherently offensive weapon, and it is has been assumed by designers since before the Second World War that a tank will be moving directly towards the enemy almost all the time; even on the defensive, a tank will be deployed in such a way as to have the glacis oriented in the direction from which the enemy is expected to attack.

Recently, many manufacturers have added a spall liner to the inside of the armour, which is designed to absorb fragmentation (spallation) released from the impact of an enemy shell, protecting soldiers and equipment inside. They tend to be made from kevlar or similar materials.

Spaced armour

Spaced armour, already used in WWI on the Schneider CA1 and St Chamond to defeat bullets, but reintroduced in the 1970s on the German Leopard 1, uses the fact that a shaped charge makes a jet of plasticised metal that dissipates after it travels a metre or two. There are hollow spaces inside the armour, increasing the length of travel from the exterior of the vehicle to the interior, in hopes of reducing the shaped charge's penetrating power; in some cases the interior surfaces of these hollow cavities are sloped, presenting angles to the anticipated path of the shaped charge's plasma jet in order to further dissipate its power. Thus instead of having a single 30cm layer of steel armour, it is possible to have two 15 cm layers half a meter or more apart, giving far greater protection against shaped charges at no penalty in weight.

Composite armour

Composite armour (aka Chobham armour) was developed in the 1970s by the British and first used on the American M1 Abrams but not, as is often presumed, on the german Leopard 2. It consists of layers of steel, ceramic, and plastic honeycomb, sometimes with layers of depleted uranium added. Composite is effective against both kinetic and shaped charge munitions. Against kinetic penetrators, the brittle ceramic blunts the projectile while the softer steel layers absorb its kinetic energy. Still, it is significantly less effective against KE-munitions, so sometimes depleted uranium layers are added to provide extra protection against these warheads.

An alternate description of Chobham is that it combines spaced armour with composites. Supposedly the interior layer is a cast aluminum slab with rods of tungsten (encased in titanium) or depleted uranium running perpendicularly through it, intended to cause the points of high-velocity long-rod penetrator armour-piercing projectiles to deform, which sometimes causes the projectile to tip and strike the armour at an angle, presenting far greater surface area to the armour and therefore greatly increasing the resistance. An other possible type is perforated steel - spaced armour, with hollow spaces serving the same function that they do in spaced armour, often filled with ceramic foam and backed by layers of Kevlar or similar material to trap and reduce fragmentation. This is the type used in the original version of the Leopard 2.

Reactive armour

Reactive armour, initially developed by Israel, uses layers of high explosive sandwiched between steel plates. When a shaped-charge warhead hits, the explosive detonates and pushes the steel plates into the warhead, disrupting the charge's plasma flow. It is less effective against kinetic penetrators.

Electrically charged armour

A recent development in the UK is of electrically charged armour. A vehicle is fitted with two thin shells. The outer shell of the vehicle contains an enormous electric charge, the inner shell is a ground. The shells are separate. When an incoming round arrives, it penetrates the outer shell and in doing so forms a bridge between the outer shell and the inner shell. The enormous electric charge in the outer shell discharges through the round and destroys it. Trials have so far been extremely promising.

See also

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Vehicle_armour (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_armour) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vehicle_armour&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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