Posted on Jun 22, 2023
Russia's antique tanks are finding a second life as VBIEDs
277
27
7
6
6
0
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 2
Well, that's a tactic. A not very good one and it's not bringing tangible results. It's obvious the complaints of Putin using troops as cannon fodder have been heeded.
(3)
(0)
CPT Lawrence Cable
Engineer gets his slide rule out.
Lets see, one KT of TNT has a 50% mortality blast radius of 300 yards. The Russian tank was reported to have been loaded with 6 tons and while the blast area is not a linear progression, conservatively 450 yards to 500 yards. I believe that explosion just made a 1/4 mile gap in someone's defenses/offensive line.
Lets see, one KT of TNT has a 50% mortality blast radius of 300 yards. The Russian tank was reported to have been loaded with 6 tons and while the blast area is not a linear progression, conservatively 450 yards to 500 yards. I believe that explosion just made a 1/4 mile gap in someone's defenses/offensive line.
(3)
(0)
LTC Trent Klug
CPT Lawrence Cable Engineer with slide rule. What is the amount of space occupied by 6 tons of explosives?
(2)
(0)
CPT Lawrence Cable
LTC Trent Klug - That one is easier. US Army Demolition Charge 1 lb. of TNT is 2x2x12", so 36 lbs per Cubic Foot. 55 cubic ft per ton. Just for comparison, Russian tanks have a combat load of 43 rounds for the 120mm main gun at 44 lbs each or 1892 lbs total.
I did point out before that the blast radius isn't linear, so if they only actually used 3 tons, it wouldn't make significant difference. That is the reason why no one uses 50 megaton nuclear weapons, they aren't as effective as multiple smaller ones. I don't know where the article sourced the 6 tons.
The item we didn't discuss is that the explosion probably turned that tank into the world's largest fragmentation grenade.
I did point out before that the blast radius isn't linear, so if they only actually used 3 tons, it wouldn't make significant difference. That is the reason why no one uses 50 megaton nuclear weapons, they aren't as effective as multiple smaller ones. I don't know where the article sourced the 6 tons.
The item we didn't discuss is that the explosion probably turned that tank into the world's largest fragmentation grenade.
(1)
(0)
Read This Next