Tthe M1 Abrams – amerykański czołg bojowy trzeciej generacji, nazwany na cześć generała Creightona Abramsa. Bardzo mobilny, zaprojektowany do nowoczesnej opancerzonej walki naziemnej, M1 jest dobrze uzbrojony i ciężko opancerzony. Godne uwagi cechy obejmują potężny silnik turbiny wielopaliwowej AGT1500, wyrafinowany pancerz kompozytowy i oddzielne przechowywanie amunicji w przedziale wydmuchiwania dla bezpieczeństwa załogi. Ważący prawie 68 ton (prawie 62 tony metryczne), jest jednym z najcięższych głównych czołgów bojowych w służbie.
Tthe M1 Grizzly Combat Mobility Vehicle (CMV)was an ambitious Cold War-era project designed to create the most capable armored engineer vehicle in history. Built on a modifiedM1 Abramschassis, the Grizzly was intended to clear complex obstacles—mines, tank ditches, berms, and wire—at the same pace as a fast-moving armored division. While highly advanced, its extreme complexity and high cost led to its cancellation in 2001, leaving the role to the simpler M1150 Assault Breacher Vehicle (ABV).
Attribute
Technical Specification (M1 Grizzly)
Roli
Combat Engineering / Breaching Vehicle
Załogi
2 (Driver and Commander)
Stan
Canceled (Prototype only)
Zespół napędowy
1 × Honeywell AGT1500 gas turbine
Horsepower
1,500 hp (1,120 kW)
Prędkość maksymalna
45 mph (72 km/h)
Excavator Arm
Powered telescopic arm with 1,814 kg (4,000 lb) lift
Zbroja
Abrams-equivalent composite armor
Specialized Engineering Tools
The Power-Driven Arm (PDA):The Grizzly’s most distinctive feature was a massive, telescopic excavator arm mounted on the right side. It could reach out over 9 meters (30 ft) to dig out tank ditches or lift heavy obstacles, allowing the vehicle to work while staying behind cover.
Full-Width Mine Plow:Unlike many tanks that use individual rollers, the Grizzly featured a heavy, full-width plow designed to push buried mines and obstacles out of the way, creating a “safe lane” in a single pass.
Remote Weapon Station:For self-defense, the crew sat in a protected “citadel” and operated a remote-controlled weapon station armed with a .50 cal machine gun or a 40mm grenade launcher.
Automatic Depth Control:The Grizzly featured advanced sensors that automatically adjusted the plow depth to follow the contours of the ground, ensuring mines were cleared without the plow digging too deep and getting stuck.
Why it Failed and its Legacy
Complexity vs. Cost:The Grizzly was an “all-in-one” solution that became too expensive for the post-Cold War U.S. Army. Each unit was projected to cost significantly more than a standard M1 Abrams tank.
The “Shredder” Successor:After the Grizzly was canceled in 2001, the U.S. Marine Corps took the lead in developing theM1150 Assault Breacher Vehicle (ABV). The ABV is simpler, omitting the excavator arm in favor of MICLIC (Mine Clearing Line Charge) rockets.
Survivability:The Grizzly was designed to be just as tough as the tanks it supported, featuring the same Chobham-style armor so it could operate under heavy enemy fire at the front of a breach.
Where are they now?Only two prototypes were built by United Defense. They served as critical technology demonstrators that proved “under-armor” breaching was possible.
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