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#16 (permalink) | |
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Resident Mythbuster
Senior Contributor
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NO, the Pakistani Pattons DIDN'T have laser rangefinders back in 1965.
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Last edited by Shipwreck : 09-01-2007 at 06:53 AM. |
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#17 (permalink) | |
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Postmaster General
Military Professional
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It shows how much you know! I accept your view since you were the stripping the tanks destroyed and found that they don't have the rangefinders! I hope the engines were more powerful and so the 'turning around'!
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![]() "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination." I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to. HAKUNA MATATA Last edited by Ray : 09-01-2007 at 07:28 AM. |
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#20 (permalink) | |
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tankie
Military Professional
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The 5.0 ranging m/g ( bop bop bop ) set alongside the co,ax m/g so the loader could sustain maximum nuckle rash from x cent gunner / driver /loader/operator , scimitar commander , the rules governing the engagment of targets were the same on scorpion and scimitars as well as cents , ie , the target must 1st be bracketed , basic standard gunnery ![]()
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TANKIE , WITHOUT WAX Last edited by tankie : 09-01-2007 at 08:27 AM. |
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#25 (permalink) |
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Senior Contributor
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The Patton in 1965 was believed to have more advanced fire control, better ammunition and better armour. In conflict, the Indian crews turned out to have better training, the Pakistanis hadnt drilled enough on their ballistic computer equipped tanks, while the Indian side was adept at ranging and putting rounds on target quickly. Tactics also counted, India demonstrated integration with infantry (Tanking 101) and proper use of terrain for ambushes. When Indias tankers discovered that APDS was not penetrating at range, it was quickly decided to hold fire till half range (iirc) and then fire- that worked. Before the conflict, the Patton had built up a very solid mythos- including amongst Indian tank crews who regarded it as a modern tank than what they had. Post conflict, it became a symbol of how technology alone would not suffice in the Indo-Pak battlefield.
Another example of the above was the Gnat vs F.86 Sabre issue. The Gnat, a much lighter, smaller and generally more "basic" aircraft - when well handled- proved to be a match for the Sabre in air to air combat.
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Karmani Vyapurutham Dhanuhu My bow is stretched for its task |
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#26 (permalink) | |
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Military Professional
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Semper in excretum. Solum profunda variat. |
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#27 (permalink) | ||||
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Senior Contributor
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The two are not always hand in hand, for instance you would have yourself seen that a more conservative design often performs flawlessly while a more ostensibly modern one, is a boondoggle. In the case of the Patton vs Cent, I think the general thinking at the time (and pardon me if I miss any point or am incorrect, I am going purely from memory here)- was that the Pattons Fire control system was state of the art (for the time). Similarly, the US had repeatedly stated that its armor was the best they had made, ditto for its ammo etc. All this combined to create a general "image" of the tank, which it didnt live upto- partly due to the inefficacy of its crew, and of course because the Cent itself was a fine weapons system.Incidentally post '71, the British stopped spares support for the Cents, as a result of which India took all of its Cents and sold them off for a pittance abroad- I believe several landed in South Africa and some even made their way to Singapore, where all these were upgraded and served for a long time. The Arjun incidentally falls into the Cent category- a heavy tank able to take punishment and dishes out far more than it gets. But thanks to the Cents leaving the IA, the collective memory of this wonderful tank has dissipated, and the T series units have taken over, with doctrine and employment all standardized around what these can do (and cannot). Quote:
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Yes indeed- a delightful aircraft, even if it was quite tricky in the initial years. The Ajeet was a variant intended for ground attack and had wet wings. I had occasion to closely see a rather decripit survivor, and I cannot begin to describe how small the thing is. Its literally as if the aircraft is "made" around the pilot, as in the old days, tailors used to literally stitch a suit onto a man. The whole thing looks so small and dainty, its hard to imagine its a combat aircraft till one looks at the rather wicked gun emplacements built into it. |
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#28 (permalink) |
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Senior Contributor
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I must also add that several Cent officers believed their kit was every bit as good - as the Patton.
But Indias standard tank -more or less- was the Sherman and then there was the AMX at the time, both of which were definitely inferior to the Patton. And hence the perception that the Patton could be a war winner etc. |
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#29 (permalink) | |
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Military Professional
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The Ajeet would have been a tiny, rapidly moving dot in a big big sky. |
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