Electric Armor Tested For Light Armored Vehicles 418
joncrie writes "The Telegraph is reporting that British MoD scientists are now testing a new electric armor to protect light armored vehicles against RPGs.
The new electric armour is made up of a highly-charged capacitor that is connected to two separate metal plates on the tank's exterior. When an RPG warhead fires its jet of molten copper, it penetrates both the outer plate and the insulation of the inner plate. This makes a connection and thousands of amps of electricity vaporises most of the molten copper. The rest of the copper is dispersed harmlessly against the vehicle's hull. The initial development was mentioned previously."
NICE MOVE EDITORS. (Score:5, Informative)
By Michael Smith, Defence Correspondent
(Filed: 19/08/2002) "
take a HARD look at that date. the 'initial development' link dates Aug. 22, 2002 PT.
like, wtf???? really?????
sorry for sounding so trollish but REALLY.
ok, at least proves some ways for some poor souls to copypaste stuff from years ago and get modded to the sky.
Just wait... (Score:5, Funny)
Wasn't this covered before here? (Score:3, Informative)
I wonder if you have to ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I wonder if you have to ... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder if you have to ... (Score:5, Funny)
Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:5, Insightful)
However once the initial resistance was swiftly dealt with, the all new threat came from roadside bombs, suicide bombers, and mines. This will make some difference, but most terrorists will strike at the troops outside of their vehicles anyway.
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:2)
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:2)
-
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Links:
Tank destroyed by mysterious weapon [freerepublic.com]
Same story as above
Better story [janes.com]
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Ever tank in the world has the same "flaw" - in order for the engine to work, air has to get in and exhaust has to get out. This means that the armor around the engine compartment will not be as durable as the armor around the turret and engine compartments.
Challenger 2 MBT (Score:5, Interesting)
However, you can apparently stop one with a bucket of sand down the air-intake
I think that we (the UK) could do with, is getting our MBTs to work properly in all conditions as well as providing fancy-pants defence systems.
Re:Challenger 2 MBT (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, those silly tanks and their damn fancy-pants defence systems...
We should just Chobham all up and start again, I say. :-p
Re:Challenger 2 MBT (Score:3, Interesting)
You could get round clogging of paper element filters by having a bypass valve on the outlet of the turbocharger, something like the "dump valve" boy racers have on their Scoobydoo Unimprezivs. Instead of dumping the boost pressure to the atmosphere giving that chees
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:5, Interesting)
You're right, the Abrams was not designed for urban combat. The most lightly armored part of the tank is the top. There's even less armor there than on the hull. This makes the tank susceptible to RPGs fired from rooftops.
M1's are also huge; when patrolling roads, they tear up pavement and will not fit through some streets in densely populated areas. They pose a danger to civilian passerby and vehicles.
For day-to-day patrolling, the Army relies mostly HMMWVs. The HMMWV, or "Humvee," can also be "up-armored" with a kit [globalsecurity.org].
This "electric armor" sounds like a fantastic idea, but I have a feeling it will be too heavy to equip a HMMWV. It could probably work wonders for the roofs of M1's though.
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:2)
This article/solution is about *Light armour*
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:5, Insightful)
WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]
guerilla
adj : used of independent armed resistance forces; "guerrilla warfare"; "partisan forces" [syn: guerrilla(a), guerilla(a), underground, irregular]
n : a member of an irregular armed force that fights a stronger force by sabotage and harassment [syn: guerrilla, irregular, insurgent]
In the early 20th century the fear word the government used to "terrorize" the populace was anarchist. In the 1950's it was communist. Today it is terrorist. In all three cases the words were whipped to death, misused and misapplied. They are the words the U.S. government uses to "terrorize" their population and to tag everyone that isn't on their side.
I would be inclined to say that the Bush administration are as much terrorists as the people they tag with this word, because they are governing by constantly stoking the fears of the American people, are using that fear to stay in power, and are governing by intimidation:
Terrorist \Ter"ror*ist\, n. [F. terroriste.]
One who governs by terrorism or intimidation; specifically, an agent or partisan of the revolutionary tribunal during the Reign of Terror in France. --Burke.
adj : characteristic of someone who employs terrorism (especially as a political weapon)
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:3, Insightful)
i fucking hate the media.
Re:Using Iraq as an example.. (Score:3, Interesting)
To me a terrorist is one who uses 'terror' as a political tool. By terror in this context I mean primarily violent acts targeting primarily civilians. I'm up in the air whether political leadership counts or not for this definition.
Anyway, just my two cents.
Mycroft
Filed: 19/08/2002 (Score:5, Funny)
This is cool, just hope you aren't the soldier that shorts this device by accident!
Two Shots? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Two Shots? (Score:5, Insightful)
Then it takes 9 shots to take out 3 tanks, instead of one per tank. Meanwhile, the tesla-tank can return fire.
Don'tcha think you're trying a bit hard to find the gotcha in it?
Re:Two Shots? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Two Shots? (Score:2, Funny)
Ask him about his plans for cleaning dust off the Mars landers. I'm sure he thinks he has dozens NASA never considered.
Re:Two Shots? (Score:2)
Re:Two Shots? (Score:2)
this thing will be useful as a complimentary system but it's not really as revolutionary as the 2 year old articles make it to look like.
Soften the vehicle up with small arms fire, maybe? (Score:2)
What if the vehicle is hit with regulare AK-47 rounds prior to the RPG attack? How large would a round have to be to cause the armour to discharge?
I think it would even more ironic if the vehicle went over mine and the crew was killed when the electrical armour discharged through the vehicle's interior.
Always believe that you'll be fighting against an enemy who will learn and exploit your weaknesses.
Re:Soften the vehicle up with small arms fire, may (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Soften the vehicle up with small arms fire, may (Score:3, Informative)
But remember, they want to keep RPGs from immediately destroying or disabling _light_ armored vehicles; e
That's what I was wondering. (Score:5, Insightful)
If you use 1/4 of your carrying capacity for armour, then that means that your convoys are going need 25% more vehicles.
Which means 25% more targets and (at least) 25% more breakdowns.
Which is exactly what you do not want in the "long-lasting, low-grade, hostile civilian population," scenario you mentioned.
Re:Soften the vehicle up with small arms fire, may (Score:3, Insightful)
Like wheels or tracks?
I doubt that this sort of system will eve be applied to moving parts.
Go for the wheels or tracks, its pretty obvious.
(and surely applies to more than just light vehicles? I mean, how many RPG shots would it take to make an M1 Abrams slough a track and thereby immobilise it?)
Re:Two Shots? (Score:2)
RTFA (Score:3, Informative)
This sounds like a tandem warhead (Score:3, Interesting)
The idea of electric armour is new, but armour has been active for a long time. It isn't just a chunk of metal. Tank armour is designed, oddly, to explode in a small scale, controlled way when hit. This tends to break kinetic energy weapons such as DU penetrators.
Warheads which are based on a shaped charge can ordinarily d
Re:Two Shots? (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it's a very legitimate question.
They should be looking at what types of attacks this technology is effective against and which it's not. Then, they should be comparing that with battle experiences to see if the technology is good enough to be deployed as-is, or if it needs more development before it is worth using.
Also, they need to account for the adaptability of the enemy. If the "shiel
Added bonus (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Added bonus (Score:2)
Until the occupants attempt to get out.
Also you have another problem. This might render the tank more susceptible to various miscelanious debres shorting the system. For example, a wire mesh net could be thrown on the tank from a building, thus contacting the treads and the body and shorting the system out.
Or the opponent could jump onto the tank from buildings and thus get only slightly shocked if at all (like a
Re:Added bonus (Score:2)
Interesting... (Score:5, Interesting)
Suppose you made a ship with an insulated two-layer outer hull. The two layers are both insulated from the ship. In between the layers put something like coated metal pellets with a low melting point.
Something breaches the hull and you apply a massize but _localized_ charge around the area to melt the metal and seal the breach.
I think the biggest problem, duh, is how much of the charge gets leached into the water or the internals of the ship when sealing is taking place.
Then there's that whole frying the occupants things...
I never said it was foolproof!
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Besides, if the missile is big enough it won't matter. Either the hole will be too big to "flow into" to seal or it will have hit something vital.
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Seeing as I do very little gaming on my PC that's not a big loss.
Just out of curiosity the refrence was for Battletech or something right? At least that's the only LAM reference I can come up with offhand.
Re:Interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
This leads to our second problem: a frigging bomb just went off next to (or within) the plating. The hull, and pellets contained therein, are no longer on their original plane. The pellets that were in the positions now left empty (the hole), are going to be either vaporized or massively displaced. More specifically, many weapons detonate after penetration. The result being an outward blast that creates a bulge in the hull, and distorts the original shape of the hull into a roughly conical form.
Which leads to the third problem: the metal will need to be in place before it cools and solidifies. In our hypothetical scenario, we have a large gap in the hull, a temporarily displaced sea, and ragged edges of now-melting liquid metal. If the pellets could move into place, melt together, then solidify within a tenth of a second or less, the idea might work. And longer than that, and water pressure will act like a machine gun and a grindstone at the same time, moving with enough force to rip away anything that isn't extremely solid and secure.
Ultimately, while an interesting idea it just won't work. If anything it might well weaken the ship, both on the long term and in case of attack. Sorry.
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Just like RIAA vs. File traders (Score:5, Interesting)
Napster - centralized server (shut down)
Kazaa - Decentralized server (lawsuits pending)
Encrypted p2p networks (riaa = screwed)
Bazooka - (heavy plating neutralized)
RPG - (liquid copper spewing heads!)
Electric Field - (emp? = screwed)
Once you come up with a fix, you force the technology to evolve to its next form faster tahn it would have on its own.
Just MHO.
Re:Just like RIAA vs. File traders (Score:5, Funny)
Unless you mean all armoured assault vehicles share targeting information and fire many small projectiles instead of one big one?
Good grief, that would be deadly. Hope the army don't think of it.
Re:Just like RIAA vs. File traders (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Just like RIAA vs. File traders (Score:2, Insightful)
Absolutely, which is why arms races are so fucking *dangerous*. There's still lots of talk about the militarization of space, to use a contemporary example -- the only result this will have is the development of more powerful weapons to launch into orbit. When one nation does something like that, it forces every other nation that doesn't want to be routinely threatened to jump in and star
Re:Just like RIAA vs. File traders (Score:2)
Though, virii often evolve to become resistant to current treatments, so the logic still applies. Cancer does not "evolve" as it is a pre-encoded abnormality/mutation that exists in RNA/DNA.
While this is helpful... (Score:2, Interesting)
These DU shells have become a large problem because of the amount of R&D that went into these weapons - weapons that were subsequently banned by most of the western world for their hazardous pr
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:2)
Consider it genetic algorithms in action. The terrorists will try everything and anything they know about. They'll drop the methods that aren't successful. For those methods that are successful, they'll reuse.For those methods that are partially successful, they'll try something slightly different: use more explosives, heavier chunks of metal, better concealment or more accurate ti
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:2)
What? Could you cite references to terrorists using tank-busting weapons? At least having them? The army of a country you're at war with does not count as terrorists...
Where's the pudding? (Score:2)
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:5, Informative)
(A little light reading on the subject) [osd.mil]
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:5, Interesting)
This is just another example of environmentalist propaganda that isn't based on fact.
Uh huh. There is a lot of research [umrc.net] to the contrary [guardian.co.uk].
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:3, Funny)
This is slashdot, anything that claims to harm the environment in any way is immediately classified as propaganda.
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:2)
I doubt it is dangerous even then. I see no warning on my box of Chocolate Frosted Uranium Crunchies breakfast cerial. So don't worry, be happy!
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:3, Insightful)
And for that matter, do you trust a
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:2)
The deaf ear may have something to do with you being illiterate on the basic facts of the issue.
First, depleted uranium is "depleted", meaning that the active and interesting isotopes have been
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:5, Informative)
Not Radio Active but a poison! (Score:2)
Re:While this is helpful... (Score:3, Insightful)
Foiled By water balloons? (Score:5, Interesting)
Protected against RPGs? (Score:5, Funny)
I just know you'll come and bitchslap this post... (Score:3, Informative)
But godammnit, michael, how hard would it have been to actually read the fucking article and realise - "Hey! This is a couple of years old! Maybe this isn't worth posting!" - and this is also a dupe . Isn't that what an editor's supposed to do? Check the leads people give them to make sure they're not bullshit ? You get paid to do this, for God's sake, and you're just not taking it seriously. Not at all. And as soon as anyone points it out you bitchslap them to shut them up. Who the hell do you think you are?
By the time you read this my subscription will have been cancelled. I'm fed up, michael. I'm not subsidising this site so you can post this trash.
Re:I just know you'll come and bitchslap this post (Score:2, Funny)
MOD PARENT UP! (Score:2)
Re:I just know you'll come and bitchslap this post (Score:3, Interesting)
Heh you think Michael did it? Doubtful.
A.) You should just email him or the staff directly.
B.) Bitching about it here can only cause other people to bitch, and really the discussion is about the armor. Go through the right channels before making a public stink. This little lesson in life will help you down the road.
"But godammnit, michael, how hard would it have been to actually read the f
Re:Posting AC so I don't get smacked down... (Score:2)
Sure you are. The problem is, you're withdrawing your cashflow as a consequence of your own actions.
"Nice job on the ad hominem."
If you cannot acknowledge your own contribution to your dissatisfaction, then you cannot expect anybody there to take you seriously. You never ever needed to pay them money. It's yo fault. Grow up.
Field-of-battle electronics (Score:2)
I wonder how well a wireless computer works when sealed within a highly polarised electronic cage? None too well, I suspect.
Re:Field-of-battle electronics (Score:2, Informative)
The current only flows when the circuit is closed by the impact of weapon.
The current only flows for an instant until the capacitor is drained.
Otherwise there IS NO elecromagnetic field or 'polarization' present to affect the electronics.
Only works with conductive charges (Score:3, Interesting)
One would need material that is as dense as metal, can be vaporized easily but is still a poor conductor. Any slahdotters aware of something like this?
Re:Only works with conductive charges (Score:5, Interesting)
Granite. There's no technical reason I can imagine that would stop you using a stone warhead on a rocket.
Re:Only works with conductive charges (Score:5, Funny)
Of course there are still problems with the thermal capacity and density of granite when compared to copper, but I feel sure they can be overcome
Re:Only works with conductive charges (Score:5, Informative)
The liner material has to be very ductile so it will flow from its initial hollow cone shape to form the slug and penetrating jet. The wavefront of explosives detonating behind the cone (explosive is on the pointy side of the cone) forms the slug and jet.
You can demo this for yourself by putting shaving cream between your palms, holding your wrists together, and then claping your hands. The foam will shoot out at a velocity much higher than the speed you push your hands together.
Most very ductile materials are metals, so a non-conductive liner is unlikely.
Some other posts have mentioned discharging the system with the first hit, but this may not be a problem because the the full charge is not necessarily used up, since the current flow will cease when the jet is burned away.. In fact the system might work with two paralell screens, without the need for solid sheets.
The older anti-shaped-charge system is called reactive armor, which means the tank is covered with many explosive sheets, whichever one is hit detonates, thus disrupting the jet when it explodes.
The problem there is that the sheet must be replaced manually after a hit. This electrical system should keep on working.
And you all laughed when Archer said it (Score:5, Funny)
evolution (Score:2)
The latest weapon from the U.S. Air Force (Score:5, Interesting)
Its an execeptionally good riot control device since it leaves no physical evidence, especially if the antenna is somewhat concealed. No clouds of tear gas, no protesters eyes burning from mace, no batons swinging, no soldiers shooting rubber or lead bullets to stoke sympathy from TV viewers. The protester will just start screaming in pain and running away. Sure to be a big hit in Israel and Iraq.
I'm wondering if they are working on an indoor version since it is a perfect tool for torture, it leaves no marks. The victim wouldn't even know what was happening to them.
It appears I now have a good reason to wear a tin foil hat, or really a full body suit like everyone keeps telling me I should. Its not just a Bush Big Brother Weapon either. I believe it was started by Clinton and is roundly endorsed by John Kerry [counterpunch.org].
This weapon is perfect for a dictatorship wanting to keep its people in line.
Re:The latest weapon from the U.S. Air Force (Score:5, Informative)
This weapon is perfect for a dictatorship wanting to keep its people in line.
Well, not that I'm particularly disagreeing with you, but that's true of most weapons--there are ways to use them for good, and ways to use them for evil.
Personally, I think that this can be a much more humane method of breaking up protests gone violent than tear gas or rubber bullets. Note that this is all assuming that the protestors have gone beyond civil disobedience into violence. So long as it is, indeed, nonlethal, it won't (obviously) kill anyone--which tear gas can do if you inhale too much of it or if you have a nasty reaction to it, and rubber bullets can do if they hit in the wrong places--or even leave scars or bruises. Using this could help keep violence down more, too, as you wouldn't have to send out policemen, who could be shot at (if anyone in the mob had a gun), just turn the devices on. It could also be useful to keep protestors outside a certain area--for instance, keep a buffer zone around the embassy or whatever that if they come inside it, they get a nasty shock.
I can certainly see how it could be dangerous in the hands of a despot, but so can guns and tear gas. If they want to stop protests, they're going to do it, and if they use this rather than "policemen" armed with machine guns, it could save lives. If this device can decrease injuries and deaths in protests, of which there are not huge numbers, but some, it sounds like a good thing in my book.
In the end, it is a tool, whose purpose is only determined by the person using it. It's not even one designed to kill, only to hurt, and therefore keep someone away.
Dan Aris
Re:The latest weapon from the U.S. Air Force (Score:2)
Re:The latest weapon from the U.S. Air Force (Score:2, Insightful)
Why do you
Re:The latest weapon from the U.S. Air Force (Score:2)
Of course it will also prove extremely effective at knocking out the police and military who are trying to stop people from demonstrating.
I suspect muggers,rapists and other criminals will find a few uses for it too...
Here are some other protective measures (Score:2, Informative)
Certainly it will cost some billions... (Score:2)
How long it take to desert people go figure they just need to fire two rpgs at once?
Re:Certainly it will cost some billions... (Score:2)
The USSR then deployed two stage charges where the first one triggered the defensive response and then the second main charge went on, unimpeded, to wipe out the tank.
by analogy the same response would seem to be possible with RPGs.
Of course, I presume the c
Isn't it curious (Score:2, Interesting)
And we call ourselves the most intelligent species on the planet
[/cynicism]
Why just copper? (Score:2)
Just think of the practical joke potential! (Score:5, Funny)
Specialist Sparks: 'He just climbed out on the deck to take a leak.'
Corporal Capacitor: (Charging plates) 'Oh really?'
Obligatory Star Trek quote (Score:3, Funny)
Shields up, Mr Sulu !
against RPG ? (Score:3, Funny)
never though RPG could be so dangerous...
* hagnat throws away his shotgun and hides his D&D books under the bed
* hagnat places several d20 dices as ammo in his drawer
lol
M1A1 taken out by 'Mystery Projectile' (Score:5, Interesting)
Army officials still are puzzling over what that "something" was.
According to an unclassified Army report, the mystery projectile punched through the vehicle's skirt and drilled a pencil-sized hole through the hull. The hole was so small that "my little finger will not go into it," the report's author noted.
The "something" continued into the crew compartment, where it passed through the gunner's seatback, grazed the kidney area of the gunner's flak jacket and finally came to rest after boring a hole 1½ to 2 inches deep in the hull on the far side of the tank.
As it passed through the interior, it hit enough critical components to knock the tank out of action. That made the tank one of only two Abrams disabled by enemy fire during the Iraq war and one of only a handful of "mobility kills" since they first rumbled onto the scene 20 years ago. The other Abrams knocked out this year in Iraq was hit by an RPG-7, a rocket-propelled grenade.
Experts believe whatever it is that knocked out the tank in August was not an RPG-7 but most likely something new -- and that worries tank drivers.
Here is the full article [armytimes.com]
Re:M1A1 taken out by 'Mystery Projectile' (Score:3, Informative)
In this case though the M1 does not have reactive armour. It has an advance form of Chobham armour which uses ceramic plates laminated
Sure, it might protect against RPGs (Score:3, Funny)
But what about RTSs, FPSs, and TBSs? They can also do a lot of damage to one's social life.
Re:How many hits can it take? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How does it work? (Score:4, Interesting)
I have no faith in /. peer moderation. (Score:3)
Seriously, your post reads like a manual for how to be a completel jackass with absolutely no base in reality....
It sure is good you posted ANYTHING to back up those wonderfull images of allies running over crops, raping wives and daughters and basicly being horrific monsters....I really hate you.