Strv 128: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox weapon
{{Infobox weapon
| name              = Stridsvagn 128
| name              = Stridsvagn 128
| image              = Strv128Render.jpg
| image              = AGCSRender.jpg
| image_size        = 400px
| image_size        = 400px
| alt                =
| alt                =

Revision as of 13:33, 13 June 2022

Stridsvagn 128
AGCSRender.jpg
TypeMain Battle Tank
Place of origin Acrea
Service history
In serviceIn development
Used by Acrea
Production history
DesignerLandrut AB
Rjukan Industrier ASA
Kobalt-Zeiss ASA
Thyssen AB
Designed2015-Present
ManufacturerLandrut AB
Produced2018-Present
Specifications
Weight65 tonnes
Length7.7 metres (hull)
Width3.85 metres
Height3.24 metres
Crew3

Main
armament
KvK M181 120mm smoothbore gun
Secondary
armament
6.8mm MG 59
30mm RWS
Various Top-Mounted 6.8x51mm and 12.7mm machine guns
EngineThyssen MFH-160HP hydrobar diesel engine
1,270 kw (1,703 hp)
Power/weight18.6 kw/t (25 hp/t)
TransmissionThyssen CVTM-TC Continuously Variable Transmission
SuspensionHydropneumatic suspension
Operational
range
500 km
Speed65 km/h (Road)
~50 km/h (Cross-Country)

The Stridsvagn 128 or Advanced Ground Combat System (AGCS) is a main battle tank under development by Landrut AB for the Acrean Armed Forces, intended to replace or supplement the Strv 126 in Acrean service. Although no vehicle design has been accepted to receive the designation Strv 128, the designation was reserved for the AGCS in 2021. It began development in 2015, with the first concept demonstrators produced in 2018. A field trials prototype of the AGCS was first presented by Landrut in 2022.

Design

The AGCS is intended to be a "next-generation" network-capable ground combat vehicle, due to enter service by at least 2030. Basic requirements outlined in the contract tender, first issued in 2014, stipulated a loaded combat weight of no more than 62 tonnes, unspecified protection requirements believed to equal or exceed that of the Strv 126, a minimum road speed of at least 65 km/h. The vehicle was also required to be equipped to accept an integrated active protection system and laser warning system, designed to accept either a 120mm or 130mm main gun, and to be network-capable.

The prototype AGCS introduced in 2022 meets most of the Acrean Army's requirements, coming in overweight with a loaded combat weight of 65 tonnes in exchange for increased protection. Increased situational awareness and crew efficiency was one of the primary design goals set out in the requirements, and to meet this objective the AGCS prototype incorporates a wide array of integrated technologies. The vehicle incorporates the required integrated active protection and laser warning systems, augmented by the addition of an acoustic gunshot detector mounted on top of the turret. To improve crew visibility of the vehicle's immediate environment, the AGCS uses a Local Situational Awareness System (LSAS), consisting of an array of up to twelve camera sensors routed to internal crew displays. The camera sensors incorporate low-light and thermal imaging with varying fields of view depending on position, with two of the twelve available sensor inputs reserved for dedicated driver's forward and reversing cameras.

Armament

The Strv 126 was originally produced with the conventional 55 calibre M171 120mm smoothbore cannon, identical to that used on the Strv 124. Beginning in 2020, the Strv 126 has been produced with the M181 120mm smoothbore gun, an ETC-derivative of the conventional M171.

Electrothermal-chemical propulsion began development as a joint project between the government Royal Army Defence Research and Development Laboratory and Landrut Systems in 1984. The first successful test firings of the pre-production gun took place in 2019, and the gun entered production in late 2019 after being fitted to a production Strv 126. Mass of the M181 is slightly greater than that of the M171, and the system is further modified by a longer recoil mechanism to accommodate the greater muzzle energy of the M181.

The gun does not produce the originally desired muzzle energy equivalent to that of 140mm guns, however the maturity of the technology provided a performance increase considered suitable to being put into a production cannon. Specifications regarding the cannon remain unreleased and classified, however reports indicate that its performance compare favourably to both the Acrean-designed 130mm main gun, and estimates of performance of the Azurlav Mammut 3's 130mm main gun in testing.

The Strv 126 utilises an autloader fitted with an automatic magazine in the turret bustle, directly developed from the automatic magazine fitted to Landrut's proposed compact autoloader which is fitted to "V"-variant Strv 124s. A moderate increase in the size of the turret bustle and modernisation of components for the magazine allowed the stowed ready ammunition within the bustle to reach 38 rounds.


Mobility

The Pantera II is equipped with a 1600 horsepower MFH-160HP hybrid diesel powerplant. The HP indicates that the powerplant utilises a hyperbar system, in which the primary diesel engine's turbocharger is replaced with a gas turbine which acts both as the engine's supercharger and auxiliary power unit. Engine exhaust which is redirected to the top of the vehicle is cooled to reduce the thermal signature, and the hull design integrates other materials to reduce the engine's thermal signature.

The suspension system as originally designed technically allows independent control of each road wheel, however this capability was considered unnecessary and so the final design implemented on Strv 126 is a simplified hydropneumatic suspension system akin to the Strv 124's, and simply allows the tank to change the angle of the hull relative to the terrain with ease. Leaning the hull forward or back to gain gun depression and elevation, or tilting the hull on sloped terrain to level the gun were features well-regarded by crews during testing and so this feature taken from the Strv 124's hyrdopneumatic suspension were maintained. Likewise, the overall height of the tank can be adjusted, although the tank is either limited in movement or forced to be stationary when not at standard ride height depending on the attitude. An automatic track tensioning system was tested and implemented on some early prototypes, however added complexity, cost, and maintenance required by this system was not considered efficient and so the same simple tensioning system of the Strv 124 was retained.

Protection

The armour composition of the Pantera II is classified, but is reportedly a development from that of the Strv 124C. The composition is reported to provide equal protection at 60% of the weight as the armour of Strv 124 according to Landrut. The Strv 126 is occasionally referred to in media as a "heavy tank" due to its increased weight in spite of its new armour composition, which suggests increased armour protection. The internal redesign of the tank matching those changes made to the Strv 124C mean that it retains the same increase in space available to increase the frontal hull armour, alongside a new frontal geometry that steepens the front slope of the tank and increases protection along the frontal arc of the hull with the upper hull angled to shatter monobloc penetrators and the lower hull thickened.

Variants and upgrades

  • Strv 126A: Initial production variant introduced in 2015.
    • Strv 126A2: Upgraded variant equipped with the M181 cannon and accompanying improved fire control system
  • Strv 126NI: Test production variant equipped with an M187 cannon, a shortened variant of the M181 with an overall length of 46 calibres

Operators

Current Operators