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M1 Abrams

The M1 Abrams is a third-generation American main battle tank designed by Chrysler Defense (now General Dynamics Land Systems)[6] and named for General Creighton Abrams. Conceived for modern armored ground warfare and now one of the heaviest tanks in service at nearly 68 short tons (almost 62 metric tons), it introduced several modern technologies to US armored forces, including a multifuel turbine engine, sophisticated Chobham composite armor, a computer fire control system, separate ammunition storage in a blow-out compartment, and NBC protection for crew safety. Initial models of the M1 were armed with a licensed-produced 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7 gun, while later variants feature a licensed Rheinmetall 120 mm L/44.

M1 Abrams
U.S. Army M1A2 Abrams with production TUSK explosive reactive armor package installed
TypeMain battle tank
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1980–present
Used bySee Operators below
WarsGulf War
War in Afghanistan
Iraq War
2011 Egyptian revolution
War in Iraq
Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen
Production history
DesignerChrysler Defense (now General Dynamics Land Systems)
Designed1972–1975
ManufacturerLima Army Tank Plant (since 1980)[citation needed]
Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant (1982–1996)
Unit costUS$6.21 million (M1A2 / FY99)[citation needed] Estimated in 2016 as US$8.92 million (with inflation adjustment)
Produced1979–present
No. builtapprox. 10,400[1]
VariantsSee variants
Specifications
MassM1: 60 short tons (54 t)[2]
M1A1: 63 short tons (57 t)[2]
M1A1 SA: 67.6 short tons (61.3 t)
M1A2 SEP v2: 71.2 short tons (64.6 t)
M1A2 SEP v3: 73.6 short tons (66.8 t)[3]
LengthGun forward: 32.04 ft (9.77 m)[4]
Hull length: 26.02 ft (7.93 m)
Width12 ft (3.66 m)[4]
Height8 ft (2.44 m)[4]
Crew4 (commander, gunner, loader, driver)

Elevation+20° / -10°[2]
Traverse9 seconds/360 degrees[2]

ArmorComposite armor
Main
armament
M1: 105 mm L/52 M68A1 rifled gun (55 rounds)
M1A1: 120 mm L/44 M256A1 smoothbore gun (40 rounds)
M1A2: 120 mm L/44 M256A1 smoothbore gun (42 rounds)
Secondary
armament
1 × 0.50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2HB heavy machine gun with 900 rounds
2 × 7.62 mm (.308 in) M240 machine guns with 10,400 rounds (1 pintle-mounted, 1 coaxial)
EngineHoneywell AGT1500 multi-fuel turbine engine
1,500 shp (1,120 kW)
Power/weightFrom 26.9 hp/t (20.05 kW/t) to 23.8 hp/t (17.74 kW/t)
TransmissionAllison DDA X-1100-3B
SuspensionHigh-hardness-steel torsion bars with rotary shock absorbers
Ground clearanceM1, M1A1: 0.48 m (1.6 ft; 19 in)
M1A2: 0.43 m (1 ft 5 in)
Fuel capacity504.4 US gallons (1,909 L)
Operational
range
M1A2, road: 265 mi (426 km)
Cross country: 93–124 mi (150–200 km)[5]
Maximum speed M1A1, road: 45 mph (72 km/h) (governed);
Off-road: 30 mph (48 km/h)[citation needed]
M1A2, road: 42 mph (67 km/h) (governed);
Off-road: 25 mph (40 km/h)[5]

The M1 Abrams was developed from the failure of the MBT-70 project to replace the obsolescent M60 tank. There are three main operational Abrams versions, the M1, M1A1, and M1A2, with each new iteration seeing improvements in armament, protection, and electronics. Extensive improvements have been implemented to the latest formerly designated M1A2 System Enhancement Package version 3 or SEPv3 and M1A2 SEPv4, respectively versions such as improved composite armor, better optics, digital systems and ammunition.[7] The Abrams was due to be replaced by the Future Combat Systems XM1202 but due to its cancellation, the U.S. military has opted to continue maintaining and operating the M1 series for the foreseeable future by upgrading with improved optics, armor and firepower.

The M1 Abrams entered service in 1980 and currently serves as the main battle tank of the United States Army and formerly the Marine Corps. The export version is used by the armies of Egypt, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Australia, and Iraq. The Abrams was first used in combat in the Persian Gulf War and has seen combat in both the War in Afghanistan and Iraq War under U.S. service, while Iraqi Abrams tanks have seen action in the war against Islamic State and have seen use by Saudi Arabia during the Yemeni Civil War.

History

Previous developments

Through the 1960s the US Army and West German Army had collaborated on a single design that would replace both the M60 tank and the Leopard 1. The overall goal was to have a single new design with improved firepower to handle new Soviet tanks like the T-62, while providing improved protection against the T-62's new 115 mm smoothbore gun and especially high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) rounds.[8][failed verification]

The resulting design, the MBT-70, incorporated new technologies across the board. A hydropneumatic suspension provided excellent cross-country ride quality and also allowed the entire tank to be raised or lowered by the driver, with the lowest position placing the top of the tank only 6 feet (1.8 m) off the ground. New 1,500 hp-class engines powered the designs which could both reach 43 miles per hour (69 km/h), two new guns were introduced, a US 152 mm design whose primary long-range weapon was the Shillelagh missile, while the Germans introduced a new 120 mm smoothbore design.[8]

While the design was highly capable, its weight continued to grow, as did its budget. By 1969, the unit cost stood at five times the original estimates, causing the Department of Defense to suspend the program.[9] Development of the tank continued on an austere basis until January 1970, when the DoD ended its tank partnership with Germany.[10]

As a result of the problems with the MBT-70, the U.S. Army introduced the XM803, using some technologies from the MBT-70 but removing some of the more troublesome features. This succeeded only in producing an expensive system with capabilities similar to the M60.[citation needed] Congress canceled the XM803 in December 1971 but permitted the Army to reallocate $20 million remaining funds to develop a new main battle tank.[citation needed]

Starting afresh

The Tank-automotive and Armaments Command (TACOM) began examining specific goals. After several rounds of input, the decision was made to provide armor to defeat the "heavy threat" posed by the T-62's 115 mm gun using projected improvements of their armour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot (APFSDS) ammunition through the 1980s, and the new 125 mm gun of the T-64 and T-72 firing high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) rounds.[11] To this end, a new design basis emerged in February 1973. It had to defeat any hit from a Soviet gun within 800 meters and 30 degrees to either side. The tank would be armed with the 105 mm M68 gun, a licensed version of the Royal Ordnance L7, and a 20 mm version of the M242 Bushmaster.[12]

In May 1973, Chrysler Defense and General Motors submitted proposals. Both were armed with the 105 mm M68 gun, the licensed L7, and the 20 mm Bushmaster. Chrysler chose a 1,500 hp gas turbine Lycoming AGT1500. GM's model was powered by a 1,500 hp diesel similar to that used on the American MBT-70 and XM803.[11]

Examining the experiences of the Yom Kippur War that year, a number of design changes were made. The newly created "Burlington" armor from the British Army's labs was incorporated to improve protection, especially against HEAT, and to incorporate the new armor package, the original goal of keeping weight under 50 short tons (45 t) was abandoned. The Bushmaster was seen as superfluous and was deleted. As TACOM continued to improve the detailed design, initial samples of the armor system were sent to the Ballistic Research Laboratory for testing.[11]

At the time, the Pentagon's procurement system was beset with problems being caused by the desire to have the best possible design. This often resulted in programs being canceled due to cost overruns, leaving the forces with outdated systems, as was the case with the MBT-70. There was a strong movement within the Army to get a new design within budget to prevent the MBT-70 experience from repeating itself. For the new design, the Army stated the unit cost was to be no more than $507,000 in 1972 dollars (equivalent to $3,280,000 in 2021).[13]

The Pentagon's approach to control of research and development was modified with the XM1. Previous acquisition strategy called for a significant amount of the design work be done by the government. Under the new framework, contractors would competitively bid their own designs rather than compete solely for the right to manufacture the end product.[14]

More changes

 
The Ballistic Research Laboratory (BRL) used computerized tools during the development of the M1, which led to the development of BRL-CAD. Here, a Vector General 3D graphics terminal displays a model of the M1.

Through the period while the initial prototypes were being built, a debate broke out between Germany and US about the use of the 105 mm gun. The Army was planning on introducing several new types of ammunition for the 105 that would greatly improve its performance, notably, the XM-774 using depleted uranium. These rounds would give it the performance needed to defeat any Soviet tank with ease. There was some concern that depleted uranium would not be allowed in Germany, perhaps just in peacetime, so improvements to the tungsten cored M735 were also considered.

Through this same period, there was an ongoing effort to improve NATO logistics by standardizing ammunition to the maximum possible degree. The Germans were moving ahead with their 120 mm gun on the Leopard 2K, and noted that the British had also introduced a 120 mm gun of their own in keeping with their long-range combat doctrine.

By 1977 the decision had been made to eventually move the new tank to a 120 mm gun. After head-to-head testing between the Royal Ordnance L11A5 and the Rheinmetall Rh-120, the latter was chosen. The turret designs of the two prototypes were modified to allow either gun to be fitted. Although the L11/M256 120mm gun was chosen to be the main weapon of the M1 Abrams in 1979, the improved ammunition for the gun still was not fully developed, thus delaying its fielding until 1984.[15]

The early production versions of the M1 Abrams (M1 & IPM1) were armed with the M68A1[16] for two reasons. First was due to the large number of M60 tanks with the M68E1 gun still in widespread US service in the 1980s and a large on-hand stockpile of 105mm munitions. Fitting the M1 with the M68A1 gun was viewed as an economical and practical solution that allowed for commonality in ammunition among the two types of tanks.[17] Secondly was that the M68A1 could employ the newly developed M900 APFSDS[citation needed] depleted uranium round that had improved penetration performance in comparison to the M774.[18]

Prototypes

XM1 prototypes
 
Chrysler
 
General Motors

Prototypes were delivered in 1976 by Chrysler and GM armed with the license-built M68E1 version of the 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7. They entered head-to-head testing at Aberdeen Proving Ground, along with a Leopard 2 AV prototype for comparison. The Leopard 2 was found to meet U.S. requirements but was thought to cost more.[11] The testing showed that the GM design was generally superior to Chrysler's, offering better armor protection, and better fire control and turret stabilization systems.[13] These early preproduction prototypes were provisionally armed with the M68E1 105mm main gun while a preferred 120mm gun and its ammunition were in their design and component development phase. These prototypes used a combination mount that allowed for evaluating both 105mm and 120mm guns.[19]

During testing, the power packs of both designs proved to have issues. The Chrysler gas turbine engine had extensive heat recovery systems in an attempt to improve its fuel efficiency to something similar to a traditional internal combustion engine. This proved not to be the case: the engine consumed much more fuel than expected, burning 3.8 gallons per mile. The GM design used a new variable-compression diesel design.[13]

By spring 1976, the decision to choose the GM design was largely complete. In addition to offering better overall performance, there were concerns about Chrysler's engine both from a reliability and fuel consumption standpoint. The GM program was also slightly cheaper overall at $208 million compared to $221 million for Chrysler. In July 1976, Lt. Colonel George Mohrmann prepared a stack of letters informing Congress of the decision to move ahead with the GM design. All that was required was the final sign-off by the Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld.[13]

Chrysler is chosen

 
The finalized M1 prototype

On 20 July 1976, United States Secretary of the Army Martin Hoffman and a group of generals visited Deputy Defense Secretary Bill Clements and Director of Defense Research and Engineering Malcolm Currie on their decision. They were surprised when Clements and Currie criticized their decision and demanded the turbine be selected. Donald Rumsfeld heard arguments from both in the afternoon and asked for twenty-four hours to review the issues. The Army team spent the night writing briefs and presented them to Rumsfeld the next morning, who then announced a four-month delay.[13]

Within days, GM was asked to present a new design with a turbine engine. According to Assistant Secretary for Research and Development Ed Miller, "It became increasingly clear that the only solution which would be acceptable to Clements and Currie was the turbine... It was a political decision that was reached, and for all intents and purposes that decision gave the award to Chrysler since they were the only contractor with a gas turbine."[13] However, the Chrysler design had the advantage that the entire power pack had room to be replaced by any number of engine designs, including a Diesel if needed.[11]

The turbine engine does not appear to be the only reason for this decision. Chrysler was the only company that appeared to be seriously interested in tank development; the M60 had been lucrative for the company and relied on that program for much of its profit. In contrast, GM made only about 1% of its income from military sales, compared to 5% for Chrysler, and only submitted their bid after a "special plea" from the Pentagon.[13]

On 12 November 1976, the Defense Department awarded a $20 billion development contract to Chrysler.[13]

Production starts

In January 1978, a program was initiated[20] to develop an enhanced version of the 105mm gun, the M68A1[21] as a possible alternate weapon for the M1 Abrams. The new XM24/L55 gun barrel was 18 inches (45.72 cm) longer in comparison to the XM24/L52 barrel used on the M60 tanks.[22] It has a higher chamber pressure,[16] reinforced breech[a] and a higher muzzle velocity.[23]

Low rate initial production (LRIP) of the vehicle was approved on 7 May 1979.[12] In February 1982, General Dynamics Land Systems Division (GDLS) purchased Chrysler Defense, after Chrysler built over 1,000 M1s.[24] The M1 Abrams was the first vehicle to adopt Chobham armor.

 
105 mm M1 Abrams tank of the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment at Grafenwöhr Training Area in Germany, 1986

A total of 3,273 M1 Abrams tanks were produced during 1979–1985 and first entered U.S. Army service in 1980. Production at the government-owned, GDLS-operated Lima Army Tank Plant in Lima, Ohio, was joined by vehicles built at the Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant in Warren, Michigan from 1982 to 1996.[citation needed] The U.S. Army Laboratory Command (LABCOM), under the supervision of the United States Army Research Laboratory (ARL), was also heavily involved with designing the tank with M1A1 armor resistant shells, M829A2 armor-penetrating rounds, and improved weapon range.[25]

The M1 was armed with the license-built M68A1 version of the 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7 gun. The tank featured the first of its kind Chobham armor. The M1 Abrams was the first to use this advanced armor. It consisted of an arrangement of metal plates, ceramic blocks and open space.[26] An improved model called the M1IP was produced briefly in 1984 and contained upgrades to armour and other small improvements. The M1IP models were used in the Canadian Army Trophy NATO tank gunnery competition in 1985 and 1987.

About 5,000 M1A1 Abrams tanks were produced from 1986 to 1992 and featured the M256 120 mm (4.7 in) smoothbore cannon developed by Rheinmetall AG of Germany for the Leopard 2, improved armor, consisting of depleted uranium and other classified materials, and a CBRN protection system. Production of M1 and M1A1 tanks totaled some 9,000 tanks at a cost of approximately $4.3 million per unit.[citation needed]

In 1990, Project On Government Oversight in a report criticized the M1's high costs and low fuel efficiency in comparison with other tanks of similar power and effectiveness such as the Leopard 2. The report was based on data from U.S. Army sources and the Congressional record.[27] By 1999, costs for the tank were upwards of US$5 million a vehicle.[28]

As the Abrams entered service, they operated alongside M60A3 within the U.S. military, and with other NATO tanks in various Cold War exercises which usually took place in Western Europe, especially West Germany. The exercises were aimed at countering Soviet forces.

Adaptations before the Persian Gulf War (Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm) gave the vehicle better firepower and NBC (Nuclear, Biological and Chemical) protection.

Persian Gulf War

 
Abrams tanks move out on a mission during Operation Desert Storm in 1991. A Bradley IFV and a logistics convoy can be seen in the background.

The Abrams remained untested in combat until the Persian Gulf War in 1991, during Operation Desert Storm. A total of 1,848 M1A1s were deployed to Saudi Arabia to participate in the liberation of Kuwait. The M1A1 was superior to Iraq's Soviet-era T-54/T-55 and T-62 tanks, as well as T-72 versions imported from the Soviet Union and Poland.[29] Polish officials stated that these no license-produced T-72 (nicknamed Lion of Babylon) tanks were finished before destruction of the Iraqi Taji tank plant in 1991.[29]

The T-72s, like most Soviet export designs, lacked night-vision systems and then-modern rangefinders, though they did have some night-fighting tanks with older active infrared systems or floodlights. Very few M1 tanks were hit by enemy fire and none were destroyed as a direct result of enemy fire, none of which resulted in any fatalities.[30] Three Abrams were left behind the enemy lines after a swift attack on Talil airfield, south of Nasiriyah, on February 27. One of them was hit by enemy fire, the two other embedded in mud. The tanks were destroyed by U.S. forces in order to prevent any trophy-claim by the Iraqi Army.[31] A total of 23 M1A1s were damaged or destroyed during the war. Of the nine Abrams tanks destroyed, seven were destroyed by friendly fire and two intentionally destroyed to prevent capture by the Iraqi Army. Some others took minor combat damage, with little effect on their operational readiness.[32]

The M1A1 could kill other tanks at ranges in excess of 2,500 metres (8,200 ft). This range was crucial in combat against previous generation tanks of Soviet design in Desert Storm, as the effective range of the main gun in the Soviet/Iraqi tanks was less than 2,000 metres (6,600 ft). This meant Abrams tanks could hit Iraqi tanks before the enemy got in range—a decisive advantage in this kind of combat. In friendly fire incidents, the front armor and fore side turret armor survived direct armor-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot (APFSDS) hits from other M1A1s. This was not the case for the side armor of the hull and the rear armor of the turret, as both areas were penetrated on at least two occasions by unintentional strikes by depleted uranium ammunition during the Battle of Norfolk.[33]

 
A destroyed M1A1, hit in the rear grill by a Hellfire missile and penetrated by a sabot tank round from the left side to right (see exit hole).

During operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm some M1IP and M1A1s were modified locally in theater (in the war zone) by modification work orders (MWO) with additional rolled homogeneous armor plating welded on the turret front.[citation needed] The M1 can be equipped with mine plow and mine roller attachments.

Lessons from the war improved the tank's weapons sights and fire control unit.

Upgrades

The M1A2 was a further improvement of the M1A1, with a commander's independent thermal viewer, weapon station, position navigation equipment, and a full set of controls and displays linked by a digital data bus. These upgrades also provided the M1A2 with an improved fire control system.[34] The M1A2 System Enhancement Package (SEP) added digital maps, Force XXI Battle Command Brigade and Below (FBCB2) Linux communications system capabilities for commanders, and an improved cooling system to compensate for heat generated by the additional computer systems.[35]

The M1A2 SEP also serves as the basis for the M104 Wolverine heavy assault bridge. The M1A2 SEPv2 (version 2) added Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station (CROWS or CROWS II) support, color displays, better interfaces, a new operating system, better front and side armor, and an upgraded transmission for better durability.[35]

Further upgrades included depleted uranium armor for all variants, a system overhaul that returns all A1s to like-new condition (M1A1 AIM), a digital enhancement package for the A1 (M1A1D), and a commonality program to standardize parts between the U.S. Army and the Marine Corps (M1A1HC). Improvements to survivability, lethality, and protection have been sought since 2014.[36]

Iraq War

 
An Abrams crossing the Euphrates River at Objective Peach on ribbon assault float bridge deployed by the 299th Engineer Company in 2003

Further combat was seen during 2003 when U.S. forces invaded Iraq and deposed Ba'athist Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in the Iraq War's Operation Iraqi Freedom. During the invasion, at least nine Abrams tanks were put out of action by fire from rocket-propelled grenades.[citation needed]

One achievement of the M1A1s was the destruction of seven T-72s in a point-blank skirmish (less than 50 yards (46 m)) near Mahmoudiyah, about 18 miles (29 km) south of Baghdad, with no U.S. losses.[37] This was in the face of inadequately trained Iraqi tank crews, most of whom had not fired live ammunition in the previous year due to the sanctions then in operation and made no hits at point-blank range.[38] In addition to the Abrams's heavy armament, some crews were also issued M136 AT4 shoulder-fired anti-tank weapons under the assumption that they might have to engage heavy armor in tight urban areas where the main gun could not be brought to bear.

 
A M1A1 conducts reconnaissance in Iraq, September 2004.

Following lessons learned in Desert Storm, the Abrams and many other U.S. combat vehicles used in the conflict were fitted with Combat Identification Panels to reduce friendly fire incidents. These were fitted on the sides and rear of the turret, with flat panels equipped with a four-cornered "box" image on either side of the turret front. Some Abrams tanks were also fitted with a secondary storage bin on the back of the existing bustle rack on the rear of the turret (referred to as a bustle rack extension) to enable the crew to carry more supplies and personal belongings.

Several Abrams tanks that were irrecoverable due to loss of mobility or other circumstances were destroyed by friendly forces, usually by other Abrams tanks, to prevent their capture.[39] Some Abrams tanks were disabled by Iraqi infantrymen in ambushes during the invasion. Some troops employed short-range anti-tank rockets and fired at the tracks, rear and top. Other tanks were put out of action by engine fires when flammable fuel stored externally in turret racks was hit by small arms fire and spilled into the engine compartment.[40][41] By March 2005, approximately 80 Abrams tanks were forced out of action by enemy attacks;[42] 63 were restored, while 17 were damaged beyond repair[43] with 3 of them at the beginning of 2003.[44]

 
A M1A2 Abrams with prototype Tank Urban Survival Kit armor upgrade equipment and Common Remotely Operated Weapons Station (CROWS),[45] with a .50 caliber machine gun at the commander's station

Vulnerabilities exposed during urban combat in the Iraq War were addressed with the Tank Urban Survival Kit (TUSK) modifications, including armor upgrades and a gun shield, issued to some M1 Abrams tanks. It added protection in the rear and side of the tank and improved fighting ability and survival ability in urban environments.[46] By December 2006 more than 530 Abrams tanks had been shipped back to the U.S. for repairs and upgrades.[47]

In May 2008, it was reported that a U.S. M1 tank had also been damaged in Iraq by insurgent fire of a Soviet-made RPG-29 "Vampir", which uses a tandem-charge high-explosive anti-tank warhead to penetrate explosive reactive armor (ERA) as well as composite armor behind it.[48] The U.S. considered the RPG-29 a high threat to armor and refused to allow the newly formed Iraqi Army to buy it, fearing that it would fall into the insurgents' hands.[49]

Iraqi Army service

Between 2010 and 2012 the U.S. supplied 140 refurbished M1A1 Abrams tanks to Iraq. In mid-2014, they saw action when the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant launched the June 2014 Northern Iraq offensive. During three months, about one-third of the Iraqi Army's M1 tanks had been damaged or destroyed by ISIL and some were captured by opposing forces. By December 2014, the Iraqi Army only had about 40 operational Abrams left. That month, the U.S. Department of State approved the sale of another 175 Abrams to Iraq.[50][51][52]

Iranian-backed Iraqi Shiite Kata'ib Hezbollah (Hezbollah Brigades) were reported to operate M1 Abrams, and released publicity showing the tanks being transported by trucks to take part in the Battle of Mosul. It is not known whether the tanks were captured from ISIS, seized from Iraq's military, or handed over.[53]

One Iraqi-operated Abrams has been nicknamed "The Beast" after it became the lone working tank when taking back the town of Hit in April 2016, destroying enemy fighting positions and IED emplacements.[54]

In October 2017, Abrams were used by the Iraqi security forces and the Popular Mobilization Forces (also called Al-Hashd al-Shaabi) in assaults against the Kurdistan Regional Government Peshmerga in the town of Altun Kupri (also called Prde). It was claimed by Kurdish commanders that at least one Abrams was destroyed by the Peshmerga.[55]

War in Afghanistan

Tanks may have limited utility in Afghanistan due to the mountainous terrain, although Canada and Denmark deployed Leopard 1 and 2 MBTs that were specially modified to operate in the relatively flat and arid conditions of southwestern Afghanistan. In late 2010, at the request of Regional Command Southwest, the U.S. Marine Corps deployed a small detachment of 14 M1A1 Abrams tanks from Delta Company, 1st Tank Battalion, 1st Marine Division (Forward),[56] to southern Afghanistan in support of operations in Helmand and Kandahar provinces.[57]

2015 Yemen Civil War

After the start of the Saudi Arabian intervention in Yemen during the 2015 Yemeni Civil War, Saudi Arabian M1A2 MBTs were deployed near the Saudi Arabian/Yemeni border.[citation needed] In August 2016, the U.S. approved a deal to sell up to 153 more Abrams tanks to Saudi Arabia, including 20 "battle damage replacements", suggesting that some Saudi Arabian Abrams had been destroyed or severely damaged in combat in Yemen.[58][59][60]

Production shutdown

The U.S. Army planned to end production at the Lima Army Tank Plant from 2013 to 2016 in an effort to save over $1 billion; it would be restarted in 2017 to upgrade existing tanks. General Dynamics Land Systems (GDLS), which operates the factory, opposed the move, arguing that suspension of operations would increase long-term costs and reduce flexibility.[61][62] Specifically, GDLS estimated that closing the plant would cost $380 million and restarting production would cost $1.3 billion.[63]

By August 2013, Congress had allocated $181 million for buying parts and upgrading Abrams systems to mitigate industrial base risks and sustain development and production capability. Congress and General Dynamics were criticized for redirecting money to keep production lines open and accused of "forcing the Army to buy tanks it didn't need." General Dynamics asserted that a four-year shutdown would cost $1.1–1.6 billion to reopen the line, depending on the length of the shutdown, whether machinery would be kept operating, and whether the plant's components would be completely removed.[64]

They contended that the move was to upgrade Army National Guard units to expand a "pure fleet" and maintain production of identified "irreplaceable" subcomponents. A prolonged shutdown could cause their makers to lose their ability to produce them and foreign tank sales were not guaranteed to keep production lines open. There is still risk of production gaps even with production extended through 2015. With funds awarded before recapitalization is needed, budgetary pressures may push planned new upgrades for the Abrams from 2017 to 2019.[64]

In December 2014, Congress again allocated $120 million, against the wishes of the Army, for Abrams upgrades including improving gas mileage by integrating an auxiliary power unit (APU) to decrease idle time fuel consumption and upgrading the tank's sights and sensors.[65]

In late 2016, tank production/refurbishment had fallen to a rate of one per month with less than 100 workers on site. In 2017, the Trump administration made rebuilding the military a priority. It was reported in 2018 that the Army had ordered 135 tanks re-built to new standards with employment at over 500 workers and expected to rise to 1,000.[66]

Future plans

During the 1980s and 1990s, the Block III main battle tank from the Armored Systems Modernization (ASM) program was expected to succeed the M1 Abrams family in the 1990s. The design had an unmanned turret with a 140 mm main gun, as well as improved protection. The end of Cold War hostilities caused the end of the program. The tracked M8 Armored Gun System was conceived as a possible supplement for the Abrams in U.S. service for low-intensity conflict in the early 1990s. Prototypes were made but the program was canceled. The eight-wheeled M1128 Mobile Gun System was designed to supplement the Abrams in U.S. service for low-intensity conflicts.[67] It has been introduced into service and serves with Stryker brigades.

The U.S. Army's Future Combat Systems XM1202 Mounted Combat System was to replace the Abrams in U.S. service and was in development when funding for the program was cut from the DoD's budget.[citation needed]

Engineering Change Proposal 1 is a two-part upgrade process. ECP1A adds space, weight, and power improvements and active protection against improvised explosive devices. Nine ECP1A prototypes have been produced as of October 2014. ECP1B, which will begin development in 2015, may include sensor upgrades and the convergence of several tank round capabilities into a multi-purpose round.[68]

The Army anticipates that the remaining M1A1 fleet will remain in U.S. service until at least 2021, and the M1A2 to beyond 2050.[69] The United States Army National Guard will continue using M1A1s for a lengthier, undetermined period; it took until 1997 for the M60A3 to be retired by the last National Guard units, as opposed to the active-duty U.S. Army, which had fully transitioned to the M1 by the end of 1990.

As of 2020, the Marine Corps has been pursuing a force restructuring plan named Force 2030. Under this program, all US Marine tank battalions were deactivated and its M1A1 tanks transferred to the Army by the end of 2021.[70][71] In the future, any need the Marine Corps encounters for heavy armor will be met by the U.S. Army.

The U.S. Army is evaluating a replacement for the M1 Abrams as part of the Next Generation Combat Vehicle (NGCV) program, notionally known as the Decisive Lethality Platform (DLP).[72]

Design

Countermeasures

Camouflage

 
U.S. M1A1s during the Foal Eagle 1998 training exercises in South Korea, with their factory single green paint scheme
 
M1A1 in the Australian Army's Disruptive Pattern Camouflage, used for vehicles and materiel

Earlier U.S. military vehicles, used from World War I through the Vietnam War, used a scheme of "olive drab", often with large white stars. Prototypes, early production M1 (105 mm gun) and M1-IP models switched to a flat forest green paint scheme. The large white insignia stars have also transitioned to much smaller black markings. Some units painted their M1s with the older Mobility Equipment Research and Design Command (MERDC) 4-color paint scheme but the turn-in requirements for these tanks required repainting them to overall forest green. Therefore, even though a large number of the base model M1s were camouflaged in the field, few or none exist today.

M1A1s came from the factory with the NATO three color camouflage Black/Med-Green/Dark-Brown Chemical Agent Resistant Coating (CARC) paint jobs.[citation needed] Today, M1A1s are given the NATO three color paint job during rebuilds. M1s and M1A1s deployed to Operation Desert Storm were hastily painted desert tan. Some, but not all, of these tanks were re-painted to their "authorized" paint scheme. M1A2s built for Middle Eastern countries were painted in desert tan. Replacement parts (roadwheels, armor skirt panels, drive sprockets, etc.) are painted olive green, which can sometimes lead to vehicles with a patchwork of green and desert tan parts.

Australian M1A1s were desert tan when delivered but have undergone a transition to the Australian Army vehicle standard 'Disruptive Pattern Camouflage'; a scheme that consists of black, olive drab, and brown.[73][self-published source?][74]

The U.S. Army can equip its Abrams tanks with the Saab Barracuda camouflage system, which provides concealment against visual, infrared, thermal infrared, and broad-band radar detection.[citation needed]

Concealment

The turret is fitted with two six-barreled M250 smoke grenade launchers (USMC M1A1s used an eight-barreled version), with one on each side. When deployed, the grenades airburst, creating a thick smoke that blocks both visual and thermal imaging. The engine is also equipped with a smoke generator that is triggered by the driver. When activated, fuel is sprayed into the hot turbine exhaust, creating the thick smoke. Due to a risk of fires however, this system is sometimes disabled.

Armor

 
Tankers drive an M1A1 Abrams through the Taunus Mountains north of Frankfurt during Exercise Ready Crucible in February 2005.
 
U.S. Marines with the 2nd Tank Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, advance on their eastern objective defended by opposing Spanish forces during Exercise Trident Juncture 18 near Dalholen, Norway, Nov. 3, 2018.

In July 1973, representatives from Chrysler and General Motors traveled to the United Kingdom, and were escorted by personnel from the Ballistic Research Laboratory and XM1 Project Manager Major General Robert J. Baer to witness the progress of British developed Chobham armor.[75] They observed the manufacturing processes required for the production of Chobham armor, which was an arrangement of metal plates, ceramic blocks and open space;[26] and saw a proposed design for a new British vehicle utilizing it.

HEAT and sabot rounds enter the beginning layers of armor but are unable to penetrate the crew compartment. Ceramics have the ability to absorb a great deal of heat, and can blunt physical blows by cracking and deflecting the force. The remaining hot gasses and metal shrapnel spread out or settle in empty air pockets. Both contractors reevaluated their proposed armor configurations based upon the newly obtained data.[76]

This led to major changes in the General Motors XM1, the most prominent of which is the turret front changing from vertical to sloped armor. The Chrysler XM1 on the other hand retained its basic shape although a number of changes were made. The Ballistic Research Laboratory had to develop new armor combinations in order to accommodate the changes made by the contractors.[76]

Similar to most other main battle tanks, the M1 Abrams feature composite armor only on the frontal aspect of the hull. However, the Abrams' turret features composite armoring across both the front and the sides. In addition, the side skirts of the frontal half of the hull are also made of composite, providing superior ballistic protection against chemical energy munitions such as HEAT rounds. The composition of the Abrams' composite armor consists of sandwiched plates of non-explosive reactive armor (NERA) between conventional steel plates. The NERA plates feature elasticity, allowing them to flex and distort upon perforation, disrupting the penetrating jets of shaped charges and providing more material and space for a kinetic round to pass through, thus providing increased protection compared to conventional steel armor of similar weight.[citation needed]

For the base model M1 Abrams, Steven J. Zaloga gives a frontal armor estimate of 350 mm vs armor-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot (APFSDS) and 700 mm vs high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) warhead in M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank 1982–1992 (1993).[77] In M1 Abrams vs T-72 Ural (2009), he uses Soviet estimates of 470 mm vs APFSDS and 650 mm vs HEAT for the base model Abrams. He also gives the Soviet estimates for the M1A1, 600 mm vs APFSDS, and 700 mm vs HEAT.[78]

Armor protection was improved by implementing a new special armor incorporating depleted uranium and other undisclosed materials and layouts.[26] This was introduced into the M1A1 production starting October 1988. This new armor increased effective armor particularly against kinetic energy rounds[79] but at the expense of adding considerable weight to the tank, as depleted uranium is 1.7 times denser than lead.[80]

The first M1A1 tanks to receive this upgrade were tanks stationed in Germany. US-based tank battalions participating in Operation Desert Storm received an emergency program to upgrade their tanks with depleted uranium armor immediately before the onset of the campaign. M1A2 tanks uniformly incorporate depleted uranium armor, and all M1A1 tanks in active service have been upgraded to this standard as well.[81] This variant was designated as the M1A1HA (HA for Heavy Armor).[82]

The M1A1 AIM, M1A2 SEP and all subsequent Abrams models feature depleted uranium in both the hull and turret armor.[83] Each Abrams variant after the M1A1 have been equipped with depleted uranium armor of different generations. The M1A1HA uses first generation armor, while the M1A2 and M1A1HC use second generation depleted uranium. The M1A2 SEP variants have been equipped with third generation depleted uranium armor combined with a graphite coating. The M1A2C also features increased physical line-of-sight turret armor.[84]

For the M1A1HA, Zaloga gives a frontal armor estimate of 600 mm vs APFSDS and 1300 mm vs HEAT in M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank 1982–1992, nearly double the original protection of the Abrams.[82] In M1 Abrams vs T-72 Ural, he uses different estimates of 600 mm vs APFSDS and 700 mm vs HEAT for the front hull and 800 mm vs APFSDS and 1300 mm vs HEAT for the front of the turret.[78] The protection of M1A2 SEP is a frontal turret armor estimate of 940–960 mm vs APFSDS and 1,320–1,620 vs HEAT, glacis estimate of 560–590 mm vs APFSDS and 510–1,050 vs HEAT, and lower front hull estimate of 580–650 mm vs APFSDS and 800–970 vs HEAT. The M1A2 SEPV3 increased the LOS thickness of the turret and hull front armor; total armor protection from this increase is not known.[85]

In 1998, a program was begun to incorporate improved turret side armor into the M1A2. This was intended to offer better protection against rocket-propelled grenades more modern than the baseline RPG-7. These kits were installed on about 325 older M1A2 tanks in 2001-2009 and it was also included in upgraded tanks.[86]

The Abrams may also be fitted with explosive reactive armor over the track skirts if needed (such as the Tank Urban Survival Kit)[87] and slat armor over the rear of the tank and rear fuel cells to protect against ATGMs. Protection against spalling is provided by a kevlar liner.

Damage control

The tank has a halon firefighting system to automatically extinguish fires in the crew compartment. The engine compartment has a firefighting system that is engaged by pulling a T-handle located on the left side of the hull. The Halon gas can be dangerous to the crew.[88] However, the toxicity of Halon 1301 gas at 7% concentration is much lower than the combustion products produced by fire in the crew compartment, and CO2 dump would be lethal to the crew.[89]

The crew compartment also contains small hand-held fire extinguishers. Fuel and ammunition are stored in armored compartments with blowout panels intended to protect the crew from the risk of the tank's own ammunition cooking off (exploding) if the tank is damaged. The main gun's ammunition is stored in the rear section of the turret, with blast doors that open under power by sliding sideways only to remove a round for firing, then automatically close. Doctrine mandates that the ammunition door must be closed before arming the main gun.[89]

Tank Urban Survival Kit

 
A M1A2 with TUSK
 
A M1A1 Abrams with an Abrams Integrated Management System (AIM) and the Tank Urban Survivability Kit (TUSK) conducting a patrol in Baghdad, 2007

The Tank Urban Survival Kit (TUSK) is a series of improvements to the M1 Abrams intended to improve fighting ability in urban environments.[90][87] Historically, urban and other close battlefields have been poor places for tanks to fight. A tank's front armor is much stronger than that on the sides, top, or rear. In an urban environment, attacks can come from any direction, and attackers can get close enough to reliably hit weak points in the tank's armor or gain sufficient elevation to hit the top armor.

Armor upgrades include reactive armor on the sides of the tank and slat armor (similar to that on the Stryker) on the rear to protect against rocket-propelled grenades and other shaped charge warheads. A Transparent Armor Gun Shield and a thermal sight system are added to the loader's top-mounted M240B 7.62 mm machine gun, and a Kongsberg Gruppen Remote Weapon Turret carrying a 12.7 mm (.50 in) caliber machine gun (again similar to that used on the Stryker) is in place of the tank commander's original 12.7 mm (.50 in) caliber machine gun mount, wherein the commander had to expose himself to fire the weapon manually. An exterior telephone allows supporting infantry to communicate with the tank commander.

The TUSK system is a field-installable kit that allows tanks to be upgraded without needing to be recalled to a maintenance depot. While the reactive armor may not be needed in most situations, like those present in maneuver warfare, items like the rear slat armor, loader's gun shield, infantry phone (which saw use on Marine Corps M1A1s as early as 2003), and Kongsberg Remote Weapons Station for the 12.7 mm (.50 in) caliber machine gun will eventually be added to the entire M1A2 fleet.

In August 2006, General Dynamics Land Systems received a U.S. Army order for 505 Tank Urban Survivability Kits (TUSK) for Abrams main battle tanks supporting operations in Iraq, under a US$45 million contract. Deliveries were expected to be completed by April 2009.[91] Under a separate order, the U.S. Army awarded General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products (GDATP) US$30 million to produce reactive armor kits to equip M1A2s. The reactive tiles for the M1 will be locally produced at GDATP's Burlington Technology Center.[91]

Tiles will be produced at the company's reactive armor facility in Stone County Operations, McHenry, Mississippi. In December 2006, the U.S. Army added Counter Improvised Explosive Device enhancements to the M1A1 and M1A2 TUSK, awarding GDLS $11.3 million contract, part of the $59 million package mentioned above. In December, GDLS also received an order, amounting to around 40% of a US$48 million order, for loader's thermal weapon sights being part of the TUSK system improvements for the M1A1 and M1A2 Abrams Tanks.[91]

Active protection system

 
The Trophy Active Protection System (APS) was installed and tested on a USMC M1A1 Abrams in 2017.

In addition to the armor, some USMC Abrams tanks[needs update] are equipped with a Softkill Active protection system, the AN/VLQ-6 Missile Countermeasure Device (MCD) that can impede the function of guidance systems of some semi-active control line-of-sight (SACLOS) wire- and radio guided anti-tank missiles (such as the Russian 9K114 Shturm) and infrared homing missiles.[92] The MCD works by emitting a massive, condensed infrared signal to confuse the infrared homing seeker of an anti-tank guided missile (ATGM).

However, the drawback to the system is that the ATGM is not destroyed, it is merely directed away from its intended target, leaving the missile to detonate elsewhere. This device is mounted on the turret roof in front of the loader's hatch, and can lead some people to mistake Abrams tanks fitted with these devices for the M1A2 version, since the Commander's Independent Thermal Viewer on the latter is mounted in the same place, though the MCD is box-shaped and fixed in place as opposed to cylindrical and rotating like the CITV.

In 2016, the U.S. Army and Marine Corps began testing out the Israeli Trophy active protection system to protect their Abrams tanks from modern RPG and ATGM threats by either jamming (with ATGMs) or firing small rounds to deflect incoming projectiles.[93] The Army planned to field a brigade of over 80 tanks equipped with Trophy to Europe in 2020.[94] It is planned for up to 261 Abrams to be upgraded with the system, enough for four brigades.[95] In June 2018, the Army awarded Leonardo DRS, U.S. partner to Trophy's designer Rafael, a $193 million contract to deliver the system in support of M1 Abrams "immediate operational requirements".[96] U.S. Army M1A2 SEP V2 Abrams tanks deployed to Germany in July 2020 fitted with Trophy systems.[citation needed] Deliveries to equip four tank brigades were completed in January 2021.[97]

Armament

Primary

M68A1 rifled gun

The main armament of the original model M1 and M1IP was the M68A1 105 mm rifled tank gun firing a variety of armor-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot, high-explosive anti-tank, high explosive, white phosphorus rounds and an anti-personnel (multiple flechette) round. This gun used a license-made tube of the British Royal Ordnance L7 gun together with the vertical sliding breech block and other parts of the U.S. T254E2 prototype gun. However, it proved to be inadequate; a cannon with lethality beyond the 1.9-mile (3 km) range was needed to combat newer armor technologies. To attain that lethality, the projectile diameter needed to be increased. The tank was able to carry 55 105 mm rounds, with 44 stored in the turret blow-out compartment and the rest in hull stowage.

M256 smoothbore gun
M1 Abrams during a U.S. Army firing exercise, displaying internal crew cabin operations
 
An M1A1 fires its main gun in 2019.

The main armament of the M1A1 and M1A2 is the M256A1 120 mm smoothbore gun, designed by Rheinmetall AG of Germany, manufactured under license in the U.S. by Watervliet Arsenal, New York. The M256A1 is an improved variant of the Rheinmetall 120 mm L/44 gun carried on the German Leopard 2 on all variants up to the Leopard 2A5, the difference being in thickness and chamber pressure. Leopard 2A6 replaced the L/44 barrel with a longer L/55. Due to the increased caliber, only 40 or 42 rounds are able to be stored depending on if the tank is an A1 or A2 model.

  • Elevation: −9 to +20 degree

The M256A1 fires a variety of rounds. The primary APFSDS round of the Abrams is the depleted uranium M829 round, of which four variants have been designed. M829A1, known as the "Silver Bullet", saw widespread service in the Gulf War, where it proved itself against Iraqi armor such as the T-72. The M829A2 APFSDS round was developed specifically as an immediate solution to address the improved protection of a Russian T-72, T-80U or T-90 main battle tank equipped with Kontakt-5 explosive reactive armor (ERA).[98]

Later, the M829A3 round was introduced to improve its effectiveness against next generation ERA equipped tanks, through usage of a multi-material penetrator and increased penetrator diameter that can resist the shear effect of K-5 type ERA.[citation needed] Development of the M829 series is continuing with the M829A4 currently entering production, featuring advanced technology such as data-link capability.[99]

The Abrams also fires high-explosive anti-tank warhead shaped charge rounds such as the M830, the latest version of which (M830A1) incorporates a sophisticated multi-mode electronic sensing fuse and more fragmentation that allows it to be used effectively against armored vehicles, personnel, and low-flying aircraft. The Abrams uses a manual loader, who also provides additional support for maintenance, observation post/listening post (OP/LP) operations, and other tasks.

The new M1028 120 mm anti-personnel canister cartridge was brought into service early for use in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. It contains 1,098 38-inch (9.5 mm) tungsten balls that spread from the muzzle to produce a shotgun effect lethal out to 600 meters (2,000 ft). The tungsten balls can be used to clear enemy dismounts, break up hasty ambush sites in urban areas, clear defiles, stop infantry attacks and counter-attacks and support friendly infantry assaults by providing covering fire. The canister round is also a highly effective breaching round and can level cinder block walls and knock man-sized holes in reinforced concrete walls for infantry raids at distances up to 75 meters (246 ft).[100]

Also in use is the M908 obstacle-reduction round. It is designed to destroy obstacles and barriers. The round is a modified M830A1 with the front fuse replaced by a steel nose to penetrate into the obstacle before detonation.[101]

The U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) conducted a thermal analysis of the M256 from 2002 to 2003 to evaluate the potential of using a hybrid barrel system that would allow for multiple weapon systems such as the XM1111 Mid-Range munition, airburst rounds, or XM 1147. The test concluded that mesh density (number of elements per unit area) impacts accuracy of the M256 and specific densities would be needed for each weapon system[102]

In 2013 the Army was developing a new round to replace the M830/M830A1, M1028, and M908. Called the Advanced Multi-Purpose (AMP) round, it will have point detonation, delay, and airburst modes through an ammunition data-link and a multi-mode, programmable fuse in a single munition. Having one round that does the job of four would simplify logistics and be able to be used on a variety of targets. The AMP is to be effective against bunkers, infantry, light armor, and obstacles out to 500 meters, and will be able to breach reinforced concrete walls and defeat ATGM teams from 500 to 2,000 meters.[103][104] Orbital ATK was awarded a contract to begin the first phase of development for the AMP XM1147 High-Explosive Multi-Purpose with Tracer cartridge in October 2015.[105]

In addition to these, the XM1111 (Mid-Range-Munition Chemical Energy) was also in development. The XM1111 was a guided munition using a dual-mode seeker that combined imaging-infrared and semi-active laser guidance. The MRM-CE was selected over the competing MRM-KE, which used a rocket-assisted kinetic energy penetrator. The CE variant was chosen due to its better effects against secondary targets, providing a more versatile weapon. The Army hoped to achieve IOC with the XM1111 by 2013.[106] However, the Mid-Range Munition was cancelled in 2009 along with Future Combat Systems.[107]

Secondary

 
A M1A1 firing its main gun as seen from the loader's hatch. The M240 is visible left while the M2 is visible right.

The Abrams tank has three machine guns, with an optional fourth:

  1. A .50 cal. (12.7 mm) M2HB machine gun in front of the commander's hatch. On the M1 and M1A1, this gun is mounted on the Commander's Weapons Station. This allows the weapon to be aimed and fired from within the tank. Normal combat loadout for the M1A1 is a single 100-round box of ammo at the weapon, and another 900 rounds carried. The later M1A2 variant had a "flex" mount that required the tank commander to expose his or her upper torso in order to fire the weapon. In urban environments in Iraq this was found to be unsafe. With the Common Remote Operated Weapons System (CROWS) add-on kit, an M2A1 .50 Caliber Machine gun, M240, or M249 SAW can be mounted on a CROWS remote weapons platform (similar to the Protector M151 remote weapon station used on the Stryker family of vehicles). Current variants of the Tank Urban Survival Kit (TUSK) on the M1A2 have forgone this, instead adding transparent gun shields to the commander's weapon station. The upgrade variant called the M1A1 Abrams Integrated Management (AIM) equips the .50 caliber gun with a thermal sight for accurate night and other low-visibility shooting.[108]
  2. A 7.62 mm M240 machine gun in front of the loader's hatch on a skate mount (seen at right). Some of these were fitted with gun shields during the Iraq War, as well as night-vision scopes for low-visibility engagements and firing. This gun can be moved to the TC's position if the M2 .50 cal is damaged.
  3. A second 7.62 mm M240 machine gun in a coaxial mount (i.e., it points at the same targets as the main gun) to the right of the main gun. The coaxial MG is aimed and fired with the same computerized firing control system used for the main gun. On earlier M1 and M1A1s 3000 rounds are carried, all linked together and ready to fire. This was reduced slightly in later models to make room for new system electronics. A typical 7.62mm combat loadout is between 10,000 and 14,000 rounds carried on each tank.
  4. (Optional) A second coaxial .50 cal. (12.7 mm) M2HB machine gun can be mounted directly above the main gun in a remote weapons platform as part of the CSAMM (Counter Sniper Anti Material Mount) package.

Aiming

 
A view of the gunner's station (bottom left) and commander's station (top right)

The Abrams is equipped with a ballistic fire-control computer that uses user and system-supplied data from a variety of sources to compute, display, and incorporate the three components of a ballistic solution—lead angle, ammunition type, and range to the target—to accurately fire the main gun. These three components are determined using a laser rangefinder, crosswind sensor, a pendulum static cant sensor, data concerning performance and flight characteristics of each specific type of round, tank-specific boresight alignment data, ammunition temperature, air temperature, barometric pressure, a muzzle reference system (MRS) that determines and compensates for barrel drop at the muzzle due to gravitational pull and barrel heating due to firing or sunlight, and target speed determined by tracking rate tachometers in the Gunner's or Commander's Controls Handles.

All of these factors are computed into a ballistic solution and updated 30 times per second. The updated solution is displayed in the Gunner's or Tank Commander's field of view in the form of a reticle in both day and Thermal modes. The ballistic computer manipulates the turret and a complex arrangement of mirrors so that all one has to do is keep the reticle on the target and fire to achieve a hit. Proper lead and gun tube elevation are applied to the turret by the computer, greatly simplifying the job of the gunner.[citation needed]

 
A 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment soldier, assisting in the critical job of "boresighting" the alignment of all the tank's sights to the center of the axis of the bore of the main gun on an M1A1 Abrams in Mosul, Iraq in January 2005. Hand signals enable the gunner (inside the tank) to train the main gun onto a boresighting target.

The fire-control system uses this data to compute a firing solution for the gunner. The ballistic solution generated ensures a hit percentage greater than 95 percent at nominal ranges.[citation needed] Either the commander or gunner can fire the main gun. Additionally, the Commander's Independent Thermal Viewer (CITV) on the M1A2 can be used to locate targets and pass them on for the gunner to engage while the commander scans for new targets.

If the primary sight system malfunctions or is damaged, the main and coaxial weapons can be manually aimed using a telescopic scope boresighted to the main gun known as the Gunner's Auxiliary Sight (GAS). The GAS has two interchangeable reticles; one for high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) and multi-purpose anti-tank (MPAT) ammunition and one for armor-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot (APFSDS) and Smart Target-Activated Fire and Forget (STAFF) ammunition. Turret traverse and main gun elevation can be performed with manual handles and cranks if the fire control or hydraulic systems fail.

The commander's M2HB .50 caliber machine gun on the M1 and M1A1 is aimed by a 3× magnification sight incorporated into the Commander's Weapon Station (CWS), while the M1A2 uses the machine gun's own iron sights, or a remote aiming system such as the Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station (CROWS) system when used as part of the Tank Urban Survival Kit (TUSK). The loader's M240 machine gun is aimed either with the built-in iron sights or with a thermal scope mounted on the machine gun.[citation needed]

In late 2017, the 400 USMC M1A1 Abrams were to be upgraded with better and longer-range sights on the Abrams Integrated Display and Targeting System (AIDATS) replacing the black-and-white camera view with a color sight and day/night thermal sight, simplified handling with a single set of controls, and a slew to cue button that repositions the turret with one command. Preliminary testing showed the upgrades reduced target engagement time from six seconds to three by allowing the commander and gunner to work more closely and collaborate better on target acquisition.[109][110]

Mobility

Tactical

 
Marines from 1st Tank Battalion load a Honeywell AGT1500 multi-fuel turbine back into the tank at Camp Coyote, Kuwait, February 2003.

The M1 Abrams's powertrain consists of a Honeywell AGT1500 (originally made by Lycoming) multifuel gas turbine capable of 1,500 shaft horsepower (1,100 kW) at 30,000 rpm and 395 lb⋅ft (536 N⋅m) at 10,000 rpm and a six-speed (four forward, two reverse) Allison X-1100-3B Hydro-Kinetic automatic transmission. This gives it a governed top speed of 45 mph (72 km/h) on paved roads, and 30 mph (48 km/h) cross-country. With the engine governor removed, speeds of around 60 mph (97 km/h) are possible on an improved surface. However, damage to the drivetrain (especially to the tracks) and an increased risk of injuries to the crew can occur at speeds above 45 mph (72 km/h).

The tank was built around this engine[111] and it is multifuel–capable, including diesel, kerosene, any grade of motor gasoline, and jet fuel (such as JP-4 or JP-8). For logistical simplicity, JP-8 is the U.S. military's universal fuel powering both aircraft and vehicle fleets. The Australian M1A1 AIM SA burns diesel fuel, since the use of JP-8 is less common in the Australian Army.

 
M1 driving controls

The gas turbine propulsion system has proven quite reliable in practice and combat, but its high fuel consumption is a serious logistic problem.[112] The engine burns more than 1.67 US gallons (6.3 L) per mile (60 US gallons (230 L) per hour) when traveling cross-country and 10 US gallons (38 L) per hour when idle.[citation needed]

The high speed, high temperature jet blast emitted from the rear of M1 Abrams tanks makes it hazardous for infantry to take cover or follow behind the tank in urban combat.[citation needed] The turbine is very quiet when compared to diesel engines of similar power output and produces sound significantly different from a contemporary diesel tank engine, reducing the audible distance of the sound, thus earning the Abrams the nickname "whispering death" during its first Reforger exercise.[citation needed]

 
A Marine M1A1 offloading from a Landing Craft Air Cushioned vehicle

The Army received proposals, including two diesel options, to provide the common engine for the XM2001 Crusader and Abrams. In 2000, the Army selected the gas turbine engine LV100-5 from Honeywell and subcontractor General Electric.[113] The new LV100-5 engine was lighter and smaller (43% fewer parts) with rapid acceleration, quieter running, and no visible exhaust.[114] It also featured a 33% reduction in fuel consumption (50% less when idle) and near drop-in replacement.[115] The Common Engine Program was shelved when the Crusader program was canceled. Phase 2 of Army's PROSE (Partnership for Reduced O&S Costs, Engine) program, however, called for further development of the LV100-5 and replacement of the current AGT1500 engine.[116]

 
A Marine M1A1 fitted with snorkel attachment and bustle rack extension

An 220-pound (100 kg) Auxiliary Power Unit (APU) was designed by the Army's TARDEC, replacing an existing battery pack that weighs about 500 pounds (230 kg). It uses a high power density 330 cc (20 in3) Wankel rotary engine modified to use diesel and military grade jet fuel. The new APU will also be more fuel efficient than the tank's main engine.[117] Testing of the first APUs began in 2009.

 
82nd Airborne paratroopers ride an M1 Abrams tank

Although the M1 tank is not designed to carry riders easily, provisions exist for the Abrams to transport troops in tank desant with the turret stabilization device switched off. A battle equipped infantry squad may ride on the rear of the tank, behind the turret. The soldiers can use ropes and equipment straps to provide handholds and snap links to secure themselves. If enemy contact is made the tank conceals itself, allowing the infantry to dismount.[118]

Strategic

 
A U.S. Army M1A1 after being offloaded from a U.S. Air Force C-17 at Balad Air Base, Iraq in 2004

Strategic mobility is the ability of the tanks of an armed force to arrive in a timely, cost effective, and synchronized fashion. The Abrams can be carried by a C-5 Galaxy or a C-17 Globemaster III. The limited capacity (two combat-ready tanks in a C-5, one combat-ready tank in a C-17) caused serious logistical problems when deploying the tanks for the first Persian Gulf War, though there was enough time for 1,848 tanks to be transported by ship.

Marines transport their Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF)-attached Abrams tanks by combat ship. A Wasp-class Landing Helicopter Dock (LHD) typically carries a platoon of 4 to 5 tanks attached to the deployed Marine Expeditionary Unit, which are then amphibiously transported to shore by Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC) at 1 combat-ready tank per landing craft.

The Abrams is also transportable by truck, namely the Oshkosh M1070 and M1000 Heavy Equipment Transporter System (HETS) for the US Military. The HETS can operate on highways, secondary roads, and cross-country. It accommodates the four tank crew members.[119] The Australian Army uses customised MAN trucks to transport its Abrams.[120]

The first instance of the Abrams being airlifted directly into a battlefield occurred in October 1993. Following the Battle of Mogadishu, 18 M1 tanks were airlifted by C-5 aircraft to Somalia from Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia.[121][122]

Variants and upgrades

  • XM1-FSED: Preproduction test model. Eleven Full-Scale Engineering Development test bed vehicles were produced in 1977–78. These vehicles were also called Pilot Vehicles and numbered PV-1 through PV-11.
  • M1: First production variant. Production began (at Chrysler) in 1979 and continued to 1985 (at General Dynamics) (3,273 built for the US). The first 110 tanks were low rate initial production (LRIP) models, still called XM1s, because they were built before the tank being type-classified as the M1.
    • M1IP (Improved Performance): Produced briefly in 1984 before the M1A1, contained upgrades and reconfigurations like new turret with thicker frontal armor, new turret is referred as long turret instead of older short turret, armor upgraded from ~650mm line of sight thickness to ~880mm (894 built for US).
  • M1A1:[nb 1] Production started in 1985 and continued to 1992, pressurized NBC system, rear bustle rack for improved stowage of supplies and crew belongings, redesigned blow-off panels and M256 120 mm smoothbore cannon (4,976 built for the U.S. Army, 221 for USMC, 59 M1A1 AIM SA sold to Australia).
    • M1A1HA (Heavy Armor): Added first generation depleted uranium armor components. Some tanks were later upgraded with second generation depleted uranium armor components, and are unofficially designated M1A1HA+.
    • M1A1HC (Heavy Common): Added new second generation depleted uranium armor components, digital engine control and other small upgrades common between Army and Marine Corps tanks.
    • M1A1D (Digital): A digital upgrade for the M1A1HC, to keep up with M1A2 SEP, manufactured in quantity for only 2 battalions.
    • M1A1 AIM v.1 (Abrams Integrated Management): A program whereby older units are reconditioned to zero hour conditions;[123] and the tank is improved by adding Forward-Looking Infra-Red (FLIR) and Far Target Locate sensors, a tank-infantry phone, communications gear, including FBCB2 and Blue Force Tracking to aid in crew situational awareness, and a thermal sight for the .50 caliber machine gun.[108]
    • M1A1 AIM v.2/M1A1SA (Situational Awareness): Upgrades similar to AIM v.1 tanks + new third generation depleted uranium armor components. Configuration for the Royal Moroccan Army, which is almost identical to the Australian variant, except exportable turret armor is installed by General Dynamics Land System to replace the DU armor.[124]
    • M1A1 FEP (Firepower Enhancement Package): Similar upgrade to AIM v.2 for USMC tanks.
    • M1A1KVT (Krasnovian Variant Tank): M1A1s that have been visually modified to resemble Soviet-made tanks for use at the National Training Center, fitted with MILES gear and a Hoffman device.
    • M1A1M: An export variant ordered by the Iraqi Army.[125]
    • M1A1 (AIDATS upgrade): Upgrade-only variant to all USMC General Dynamics M1A1 Abrams tanks to improve the tank commander's situational awareness with an upgraded thermal sight, color day camera, and a stationary color display.[126]
  • M1A2 (Baseline): Production began in 1992 and initial operating capability achieved in 1993.[127] (77 built for the U.S. and more than 600 M1s upgraded to M1A2, 315 for Saudi Arabia, 1,005 for Egypt, 218 for Kuwait). The M1A2 offers the tank commander an independent thermal sight and ability to, in rapid sequence, shoot at two targets without the need to acquire each one sequentially, also second generation depleted uranium armor components.[128]
    • M1A2 SEP (System Enhancement Package): Is fitted with new, second-generation gunner's thermal sight.[129] Has upgraded third-generation depleted uranium armor components with graphite coating (240 new built, 300 M1A2s upgraded to M1A2 SEP for the US, also unknown numbers of upgraded basic M1s and M1IPs, also 400 oldest M1A1s upgraded to M1A2 SEP).
    • M1A2S (Saudi Package): Saudi Arabian variant upgrade of the M1A2 based on M1A2 SEP, with some features, such as depleted uranium armor, believed to be missing and replaced by special armor. (442 M1A2s upgraded to M1A2S).[130][131]
    • M1A2 SEPv2: Added Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station as standard, color displays, improved interfaces, a new operating system, improved front and side armor with ERA (TUSK kit), tank-infantry phone as standard, and an upgraded transmission for better durability.[citation needed]
    • M1A2 SEPv3 (formerly M1A2C): Has increased power generation and distribution, better communications and networking, new Vehicle Health Management System (VHMS) and Line Replaceable Modules (LRMs) for improved maintenance, an Ammunition DataLink (ADL) to use airburst rounds, improved counter-IED armor package, improved FLIR using long- and mid-wave infrared, a low-profile CROWS RWS, Next Generation Armor Package (NGAP),[132] and an Auxiliary Power Unit (APU) under armor to run electronics while stationary instead of the engine, visually distinguishing the version by a small exhaust at the left rear. More passive ballistic protection added to the turret faces, along with new Explosive Reactive Armor mountings (Abrams Reactive Armor Tile (ARAT))[133] and Trophy Active Protection systems added to the turret sides. Prototypes began testing in 2015,[134] and the first were delivered in October 2017.[135] The first unit received them in July 2020.[citation needed]
      • M1A2T: Special configuration variant of the M1A2 SEPv3 reportedly being offered for sale to Taiwan as of March 2019 and approved by US State Department as of July 2019.[136] Per DSCA statement, it is roughly equivalent to M1A2 SEPv3, except depleted uranium armor is replaced by FMS export armor. There is no mention of the Trophy APS system. The new-built tanks will be produced at Anniston Army Depot, Anniston, Alabama, and the Joint Systems Manufacturing Center, Lima, Ohio.[137][138]
    • M1A2 SEPv4 (formerly M1A2D): Under development as of 29 March 2022.[139] The Commander's Primary Sight, also known as the Commander's Independent Thermal Viewer, and Gunner's Primary Sight will be upgraded with third Gen FLIR, an improved laser rangefinder and color cameras. Additional improvements will include advanced meteorological sensors, laser warning/detection receivers, directional smoke grenade launchers and integration of the new XM1147 advanced multi-purpose [sv] (AMP) 120mm tank round.[140][141][142][143] The AN/VVR-4 laser warning receiver and ROSY rapid obscurant system have been trialed by the US Army for adoption on the Abrams tank and Bradley fighting vehicle.[144][145][146]
    • M1A2-K: Under development, unique variant for the Kuwaiti Army, slated to replace Kuwait's current M1A2 fleet.[147]

  • Tank Test Bed (TTB) Prototype TACOM project begun in 1983 with unmanned turret, three crew members in armored capsule in front of the heavy armored hull, main armament was 120 mm smoothbore gun M256, mechanical loading system under turret.[148]
  • Component Advanced Technology Test Bed (CATTB) was an experimental model with a XM291 140 mm smoothbore cannon,[149] heavy armored turret and upgraded hull based on the Abrams chassis. It had a mechanical loading system in turret bustle, a new engine and probably other upgrades, never fielded. The tank went into trials in 1987–88.[150]
 
AbramsX at AUSA 2022
  • AbramsX is a technology demonstrator[151] of the M1 Abrams series by General Dynamics Land Systems. The AbramsX features an autoloader, unmanned turret (which reduces the crew to 3), a hybrid diesel-electric power pack that gives 50% more fuel efficiency, a 30mm chain gun in a remote weapon station, active protection systems, augmented reality that would increase the crew's awareness thanks to cameras and sensors mounted around the tank’s exterior, a silent mode when running on electric power, the ability to be updated more easily than existing tanks, the ability to utilize loitering munitions such as the AeroVironment Switchblade as well as surveillance drones,[citation needed] and reduced weight for improved mobility. In October 2022, GDLS released a video showing the Technology Demonstrator and various technology tests.[152][153]

Specialized

 
A Grizzly Combat Mobility Vehicle (CMV)
 
A U.S. Army M104 Wolverine Heavy Assault Bridge
  • RV90 Armored Recovery Vehicle: A prototype designed by General Dynamics was produced in 1988 and evaluated against the M88A1E1 later that year. The Army selected the M88A1E1, which went into production as the M88A2 Hercules.[154]
  • M1 Grizzly Combat Mobility Vehicle (CMV).[155]
  • M1 Panther II: A remote controlled mine clearing vehicle with turret removed, mine rollers on front, and the Standardized Teleoperation System.[citation needed]
  • M104 Wolverine Heavy Assault Bridge[citation needed]
  • M1074 Joint Assault Bridge (JAB): Bridgelayer combining a heavy "scissor" bridge with the M1 Abrams chassis. Expected to reach low-rate initial production in 2019 to replace the M60 AVLB and M104 Wolverine.[156]
  • Battle Command Vehicle: The vehicle was visually modified to with a mock M256 gun to appear like an ordinary Abrams MBT, but featured communications equipment and workstations for battle commanders. United Defense LP constructed a prototype which the Army tested at Fort Hood in 1997.[157]
 
An Assault Breacher Vehicle launching a line charge
  • M1150 Assault Breacher Vehicle (ABV): Assault variant for the USMC. Based upon the M1A1 Abrams chassis, the Assault Breacher Vehicle has a variety of systems installed, such as a full-width mine plow, two linear demolition charges, and a lane-marking system. Reactive armor has been fitted to the vehicle providing additional protection against High-explosive anti-tank warhead-based weapons. The turret has been replaced by a new smaller one with two MICLIC launchers at its rear. A M2HB .50 machine gun in a remote weapons station is mounted on the commander's cupola and a bank of grenade launchers are fitted to each side of the superstructure to cover the frontal arc for self-protection.[158]

Additional equipment

  • M1A1 Mine Clearing Blade System (MCBS): (LIN B13228)[b] It is electrically operated and is capable of clearing surface or buried mines up to 6 feet in front of the tank's path. The plough produces a windrow of soil that is filled with mines. This windrow must be reduced using a mine rake or by laying a MICLIC alongside the windrow and detonating it. The plough is also capable of pushing up berms, clearing trench-lines, and proofing lanes and staging areas. It can be adapted for use on the M60A1 MBT.[159]
  • Self Protection Combat Roller (SPCR): (LIN M53112) The Self Protection Combat Roller (SPCR) exerts high pressure onto the ground ahead of the tracks of the host vehicle to target pressure activated explosive devices in order to actively prove routes. It is designed to operate on concrete, asphalt, gravel and hard dirt roads. The system comprises two 4-wheel roller gangs to protect the vehicle tracks which stow neatly to minimize its impact on vehicle operation ability and mobility when not in use. The rollers are able to steer left and right to provide a level of coverage during cornering. An optional Magnetic System Duplicator (MSD) can be fitted to help protect the equipment from the effect of magnetic influence fused mines.[160]
  • Surface Clearance Device (SCD): (LIN B17484) The SCD is employed to clear surface laid mines and IEDs from roads, trails and rough terrain. There are two versions of the SCD; a V-blade optimised for clearing routes and a straight angle-blade which is optimised for clearing staging and assembly areas.[161]
  • Vehicle Magnetic Signature Duplicator (VEMSID): (LIN V53112) The VEMSID increases the effectiveness and survivability of countermine equipment by causing the stand-off detonation of magnetic influence mines at a safe distance ahead of the tank. It generates a multi-axial magnetic signature optimized for passively fused magnetic influence fused mines. The system comprises four emitter coils, two associated power boxes and an MSD Control Unit (MSDCU).[162]
  • Air Ground Defense System (AGDS): Proposed air defense variant of the Abrams equipped with dual 35 mm Bushmaster III autocannons, 12 ADATS missiles and advanced electro-optical and radar targeting systems derived from the ADATS. It was supposed to be capable of both air defense and anti-tank purposes with the ADATS MIM-146 missiles which was a dual purpose ATGM/SAM. The proposal never saw consideration and was never developed further.[163]

Specifications

Abrams specifications[citation needed]
M1 M1IP M1A1 M1A2 M1A2 SEP
Produced 1979–85 1984 1985–92 1992 on 1999 on
Length 32.04 ft (9.77 m)
Width 12 ft (3.7 m)
Height 7.79 ft (2.37 m) 8.0 ft (2.4 m)
Top speed 45 mph (72 km/h) 41.5 mph (66.8 km/h) 42 mph (68 km/h)
Range 310 mi (500 km) 275 mi (443 km) 288 mi (463 km) 265 mi (426 km) 264 mi (425 km)
Power 1,500 shp (1,100 kW)
Weight 61.4 short tons (55.7 t) 62.8 short tons (57.0 t) M1A1: 61.5 short tons (55.8 t)
M1A1SA: 67.6 short tons (61.3 t)
68.4 short tons (62.1 t) SEP v1: 69.5 short tons (63.0 t)
SEP v2: 71.2 short tons (64.6 t)SEP v3: 73.6 short tons (66.8 t)
Main armament 105 mm M68A1 rifled 120 mm M256A1 smoothbore
Crew 4 (commander, gunner, loader, driver)
Protection Chobham armor Longer turret for thicker composite array M1A1: BRL-2 composite armor
M1A1HA/HC/M1A2: Depleted uranium inserts in frontal turret arrays

M1A1 AIM/SA: Depleted uranium inserts in hull and turret

Depleted uranium inserts in hull and turret

Improved Chobham armor and increased turret armor
Additions of ARAT ERA, slat armor

Operators

 
M1 Abrams operators
 
An Australian Abrams tank in 2021
 
Egyptian Abrams tank deployed during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution
 
M1A1M Abrams tanks in Iraqi service, January 2011
  •   AustraliaAustralian Army: 59 M1A1 (AIM) configuration tanks (hybrids with a mix of equipment used by U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps but without depleted uranium layers in armor). These tanks were bought from the U.S. in 2006 and replaced the Leopard AS1 in 2007.[164] As of 2017, the Australian Government was considering expanding the Army's fleet of Abrams to 90 tanks.[165] In April 2021, the U.S. granted an FMS for 160 M1A1 tank hulls to produce 75 M1A2 SEPv3 Abrams Main Battle Tanks, 29 M1150 Assault Breacher Vehicles and 18 M1074 Joint Assault Bridges including the development of a unique armor package for the Australian Army.[166] In January 2022, Australia committed to purchase 120 tanks and armored vehicles including 75 M1A2s at a total cost of $3.5 billion and to be delivered in 2024; the M1A2s are to replace their 59 M1A1s which were bought in 2007.[167][168]
  •   EgyptEgyptian Army: 1,360 M1A1 tanks assembled in Egypt for the Egyptian Army in cooperation with the U.S.[169][170]
  •   IraqIraqi Army: 321 M1A1Ms[171][172] Iraq was leasing 22 U.S. Army M1A1s for training in 2008.[125][171][173][174] The first 11 tanks were delivered to the Iraqi Army in August 2010[175] with all deliveries completed by August 2011.[176] In October 2012, it was reported that six more tanks were being delivered.[177] Zaloga wrote that four battalions of the 9th Armoured Division were equipped with M1s by 2014: 1st and 2nd of the 34th Brigade, and 4th and 5th of the 35th Brigade.[178]
  •   KuwaitKuwaiti Army: 218 M1A2s[179]
  •   PolandPolish Land Forces: Poland has bought 250 new American M1 Abrams tanks in the newest M1A2 SEP v3 version. Production is set to finish by 2024, and delivery to early 2025. After donation of over 200 Polish T-72 tanks to Ukraine, an agreement between the Polish and American governments was signed to buy 116 ex-U.S. M1A1 Abrams tanks.[180] Delivery is expected to start in 2022. 7 loaned training tanks have already delivered to Poland as of July 2022. The total purchase cost with support vehicles, crew training, and large supply of ammunition will cost PLN 23.3 billion (approximately $6 billion). The Abrams tanks are to supplement 247 Leopard 2PL main battle tanks as well as older T-72 and PT-91 tanks.[181][182][183] 28 tanks in variant SEPv2 were leased in July 2022 to tank crews until proper deliveries begin.[184]
  •   Saudi ArabiaSaudi Arabian Army: 373 Abrams tanks,[185] To be upgraded to M1A2S configuration in Saudi Arabia.[185] 69 more M1A2S tanks ordered on 8 January 2013, to be delivered by 31 July 2014.[186]
  •   MoroccoRoyal Moroccan Army: 222 M1A1 SA (situational awareness) tanks ordered in 2015.[187][188] Deliveries under the contract started in July 2016[189] with an estimated completion date of February 2018. The contract include 150 refurbished and upgraded tanks to the special armor configuration.[190] Morocco took delivery of the first batch of M1A1SAs on 28 July 2016.[191] A Foreign Military Sale for 162 M1A2Ms was approved by the U.S. Department of State in November 2018 and sent to Congress for final approval.[192]
  •   TaiwanRepublic of China Army: Taiwan was considering the purchase of upwards 200 M1 Abrams tanks, which was later reduced with the intention of acquiring 120 M1A1 tanks.[193] The Ministry of National Defence stated in 2016 that it was in discussion with the U.S. about sales of M1A1s.[194] This plan was apparently canceled by October 2017. Instead the Taiwanese government plans to upgrade its M60A3s in service with a 120 mm main gun, new ballistics computer, etc.[195] In July 2018, Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense budgeted money to purchase 108 M1A2 tanks from the U.S. government, to replace its aging CM-11 Brave Tiger and M60A3 TTS battle tanks.[196] The U.S. Department of State approved the $2.2 billion sale in July 2019.[197][198] A sale of 108 M1A2T tanks was later finalized.[199] The first two of these tanks were delivered to Taiwan in September 2022.[200][better source needed]
  •   United StatesUnited States Army and United States Marine Corps received over 8,100 M1, M1A1 and M1A2 tanks combined.[201]
    • U.S. Army – 2,509 total, 750 M1A1SA, 1,605 M1A2 SEPv2, 154 M1A2 SEPv3 (some 3,700 more M1A1 and M1A2 in storage).[202][203]

Potential and future operators

  •   Brazil – Following Brazil's official designation as major non-NATO ally of the United States in July 2019, the U.S. government offered the Brazilian Armed Forces several models of military equipment; the country is interested in potentially acquiring between 110 and 130 M1A1 Abrams tanks, which would be upgraded on U.S. soil and operated as Brazil's main battle tanks for the next 20 years.[204][205][206]
  •   GreeceHellenic Army: 400 ex-U.S. Army M1A1 tanks have been offered to Greece in 2011.[207][208][209]

Former operators

  •   United States – United States Marine Corps: In 2020 the Marine Corps announced the disbandment of its tank units, citing a pivot towards amphibious warfare.[210] All 450 of the Marine Corps M1 Abrams MBTs were transferred to the U.S. Army with withdrawal from Marine Corps service being completed in May 2021.[211]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ During early development in the late 1970s it was referred to as the XM-1E.

Notes

  1. ^ In firearms the breech is part of a firearm at the rear of the barrel, as defined by Merriam Webster.
  2. ^ The Line Item Number (LIN) is a six-character alphanumeric identification of the generic nomenclature assigned to identify nonexpendable and type classified expendable or durable items of equipment during their life cycle authorization and supply management. They are commonly used on the unit's property books.

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External links

  • Abrams U.S. Army Acquisition Support Center page - U.S. Army.
  • M1A2 Main Battle Tank 24 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine - General Dynamics Land Systems.
  • M1A2 Abrams Main Battle Tank - Military.com
  • M1A1/2 Abrams Main Battle Tank - Global Defense Technology.
  • M1 Abrams page - a detailed overview of how the tank works on howstuffworks.com
  • , , and - Defense-Update.com
  • M1 Abrams modernization 2011, M1 Abrams modernization 2012 - Federation of American Scientists.
  • AbramsX Technology Demonstrator on the Move, concept video for proposed next-generation Abrams tank with autonomous operation and a silent mode. October 2022.

abrams, tank, redirects, here, early, 20th, century, light, tank, combat, third, generation, american, main, battle, tank, designed, chrysler, defense, general, dynamics, land, systems, named, general, creighton, abrams, conceived, modern, armored, ground, war. M1 tank redirects here For the early 20th century light tank see M1 Combat Car The M1 Abrams is a third generation American main battle tank designed by Chrysler Defense now General Dynamics Land Systems 6 and named for General Creighton Abrams Conceived for modern armored ground warfare and now one of the heaviest tanks in service at nearly 68 short tons almost 62 metric tons it introduced several modern technologies to US armored forces including a multifuel turbine engine sophisticated Chobham composite armor a computer fire control system separate ammunition storage in a blow out compartment and NBC protection for crew safety Initial models of the M1 were armed with a licensed produced 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7 gun while later variants feature a licensed Rheinmetall 120 mm L 44 M1 AbramsU S Army M1A2 Abrams with production TUSK explosive reactive armor package installedTypeMain battle tankPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1980 presentUsed bySee Operators belowWarsGulf War War in Afghanistan Iraq War 2011 Egyptian revolution War in Iraq Saudi Arabian led intervention in YemenProduction historyDesignerChrysler Defense now General Dynamics Land Systems Designed1972 1975ManufacturerLima Army Tank Plant since 1980 citation needed Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant 1982 1996 Unit costUS 6 21 million M1A2 FY99 citation needed Estimated in 2016 as US 8 92 million with inflation adjustment Produced1979 presentNo builtapprox 10 400 1 VariantsSee variantsSpecificationsMassM1 60 short tons 54 t 2 M1A1 63 short tons 57 t 2 M1A1 SA 67 6 short tons 61 3 t M1A2 SEP v2 71 2 short tons 64 6 t M1A2 SEP v3 73 6 short tons 66 8 t 3 LengthGun forward 32 04 ft 9 77 m 4 Hull length 26 02 ft 7 93 m Width12 ft 3 66 m 4 Height8 ft 2 44 m 4 Crew4 commander gunner loader driver Elevation 20 10 2 Traverse9 seconds 360 degrees 2 ArmorComposite armorMainarmamentM1 105 mm L 52 M68A1 rifled gun 55 rounds M1A1 120 mm L 44 M256A1 smoothbore gun 40 rounds M1A2 120 mm L 44 M256A1 smoothbore gun 42 rounds Secondaryarmament1 0 50 caliber 12 7 mm M2HB heavy machine gun with 900 rounds 2 7 62 mm 308 in M240 machine guns with 10 400 rounds 1 pintle mounted 1 coaxial EngineHoneywell AGT1500 multi fuel turbine engine1 500 shp 1 120 kW Power weightFrom 26 9 hp t 20 05 kW t to 23 8 hp t 17 74 kW t TransmissionAllison DDA X 1100 3BSuspensionHigh hardness steel torsion bars with rotary shock absorbersGround clearanceM1 M1A1 0 48 m 1 6 ft 19 in M1A2 0 43 m 1 ft 5 in Fuel capacity504 4 US gallons 1 909 L OperationalrangeM1A2 road 265 mi 426 km Cross country 93 124 mi 150 200 km 5 Maximum speedM1A1 road 45 mph 72 km h governed Off road 30 mph 48 km h citation needed M1A2 road 42 mph 67 km h governed Off road 25 mph 40 km h 5 The M1 Abrams was developed from the failure of the MBT 70 project to replace the obsolescent M60 tank There are three main operational Abrams versions the M1 M1A1 and M1A2 with each new iteration seeing improvements in armament protection and electronics Extensive improvements have been implemented to the latest formerly designated M1A2 System Enhancement Package version 3 or SEPv3 and M1A2 SEPv4 respectively versions such as improved composite armor better optics digital systems and ammunition 7 The Abrams was due to be replaced by the Future Combat Systems XM1202 but due to its cancellation the U S military has opted to continue maintaining and operating the M1 series for the foreseeable future by upgrading with improved optics armor and firepower The M1 Abrams entered service in 1980 and currently serves as the main battle tank of the United States Army and formerly the Marine Corps The export version is used by the armies of Egypt Kuwait Saudi Arabia Australia and Iraq The Abrams was first used in combat in the Persian Gulf War and has seen combat in both the War in Afghanistan and Iraq War under U S service while Iraqi Abrams tanks have seen action in the war against Islamic State and have seen use by Saudi Arabia during the Yemeni Civil War Contents 1 History 1 1 Previous developments 1 2 Starting afresh 1 3 More changes 1 4 Prototypes 1 5 Chrysler is chosen 1 6 Production starts 1 7 Persian Gulf War 1 8 Upgrades 1 9 Iraq War 1 10 Iraqi Army service 1 11 War in Afghanistan 1 12 2015 Yemen Civil War 1 13 Production shutdown 1 14 Future plans 2 Design 2 1 Countermeasures 2 1 1 Camouflage 2 1 2 Concealment 2 1 3 Armor 2 1 4 Damage control 2 1 5 Tank Urban Survival Kit 2 1 6 Active protection system 2 2 Armament 2 2 1 Primary 2 2 1 1 M68A1 rifled gun 2 2 1 2 M256 smoothbore gun 2 2 2 Secondary 2 2 3 Aiming 2 3 Mobility 2 3 1 Tactical 2 3 2 Strategic 3 Variants and upgrades 3 1 Specialized 4 Specifications 5 Operators 5 1 Potential and future operators 5 2 Former operators 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Footnotes 7 2 Notes 7 3 Citations 7 4 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory EditMain article History of the M1 Abrams Previous developments Edit Main article MBT 70 Through the 1960s the US Army and West German Army had collaborated on a single design that would replace both the M60 tank and the Leopard 1 The overall goal was to have a single new design with improved firepower to handle new Soviet tanks like the T 62 while providing improved protection against the T 62 s new 115 mm smoothbore gun and especially high explosive anti tank HEAT rounds 8 failed verification The resulting design the MBT 70 incorporated new technologies across the board A hydropneumatic suspension provided excellent cross country ride quality and also allowed the entire tank to be raised or lowered by the driver with the lowest position placing the top of the tank only 6 feet 1 8 m off the ground New 1 500 hp class engines powered the designs which could both reach 43 miles per hour 69 km h two new guns were introduced a US 152 mm design whose primary long range weapon was the Shillelagh missile while the Germans introduced a new 120 mm smoothbore design 8 While the design was highly capable its weight continued to grow as did its budget By 1969 the unit cost stood at five times the original estimates causing the Department of Defense to suspend the program 9 Development of the tank continued on an austere basis until January 1970 when the DoD ended its tank partnership with Germany 10 As a result of the problems with the MBT 70 the U S Army introduced the XM803 using some technologies from the MBT 70 but removing some of the more troublesome features This succeeded only in producing an expensive system with capabilities similar to the M60 citation needed Congress canceled the XM803 in December 1971 but permitted the Army to reallocate 20 million remaining funds to develop a new main battle tank citation needed Starting afresh Edit The Tank automotive and Armaments Command TACOM began examining specific goals After several rounds of input the decision was made to provide armor to defeat the heavy threat posed by the T 62 s 115 mm gun using projected improvements of their armour piercing fin stabilized discarding sabot APFSDS ammunition through the 1980s and the new 125 mm gun of the T 64 and T 72 firing high explosive anti tank HEAT rounds 11 To this end a new design basis emerged in February 1973 It had to defeat any hit from a Soviet gun within 800 meters and 30 degrees to either side The tank would be armed with the 105 mm M68 gun a licensed version of the Royal Ordnance L7 and a 20 mm version of the M242 Bushmaster 12 In May 1973 Chrysler Defense and General Motors submitted proposals Both were armed with the 105 mm M68 gun the licensed L7 and the 20 mm Bushmaster Chrysler chose a 1 500 hp gas turbine Lycoming AGT1500 GM s model was powered by a 1 500 hp diesel similar to that used on the American MBT 70 and XM803 11 Examining the experiences of the Yom Kippur War that year a number of design changes were made The newly created Burlington armor from the British Army s labs was incorporated to improve protection especially against HEAT and to incorporate the new armor package the original goal of keeping weight under 50 short tons 45 t was abandoned The Bushmaster was seen as superfluous and was deleted As TACOM continued to improve the detailed design initial samples of the armor system were sent to the Ballistic Research Laboratory for testing 11 At the time the Pentagon s procurement system was beset with problems being caused by the desire to have the best possible design This often resulted in programs being canceled due to cost overruns leaving the forces with outdated systems as was the case with the MBT 70 There was a strong movement within the Army to get a new design within budget to prevent the MBT 70 experience from repeating itself For the new design the Army stated the unit cost was to be no more than 507 000 in 1972 dollars equivalent to 3 280 000 in 2021 13 The Pentagon s approach to control of research and development was modified with the XM1 Previous acquisition strategy called for a significant amount of the design work be done by the government Under the new framework contractors would competitively bid their own designs rather than compete solely for the right to manufacture the end product 14 More changes Edit The Ballistic Research Laboratory BRL used computerized tools during the development of the M1 which led to the development of BRL CAD Here a Vector General 3D graphics terminal displays a model of the M1 Through the period while the initial prototypes were being built a debate broke out between Germany and US about the use of the 105 mm gun The Army was planning on introducing several new types of ammunition for the 105 that would greatly improve its performance notably the XM 774 using depleted uranium These rounds would give it the performance needed to defeat any Soviet tank with ease There was some concern that depleted uranium would not be allowed in Germany perhaps just in peacetime so improvements to the tungsten cored M735 were also considered Through this same period there was an ongoing effort to improve NATO logistics by standardizing ammunition to the maximum possible degree The Germans were moving ahead with their 120 mm gun on the Leopard 2K and noted that the British had also introduced a 120 mm gun of their own in keeping with their long range combat doctrine By 1977 the decision had been made to eventually move the new tank to a 120 mm gun After head to head testing between the Royal Ordnance L11A5 and the Rheinmetall Rh 120 the latter was chosen The turret designs of the two prototypes were modified to allow either gun to be fitted Although the L11 M256 120mm gun was chosen to be the main weapon of the M1 Abrams in 1979 the improved ammunition for the gun still was not fully developed thus delaying its fielding until 1984 15 The early production versions of the M1 Abrams M1 amp IPM1 were armed with the M68A1 16 for two reasons First was due to the large number of M60 tanks with the M68E1 gun still in widespread US service in the 1980s and a large on hand stockpile of 105mm munitions Fitting the M1 with the M68A1 gun was viewed as an economical and practical solution that allowed for commonality in ammunition among the two types of tanks 17 Secondly was that the M68A1 could employ the newly developed M900 APFSDS citation needed depleted uranium round that had improved penetration performance in comparison to the M774 18 Prototypes Edit XM1 prototypes Chrysler General Motors Prototypes were delivered in 1976 by Chrysler and GM armed with the license built M68E1 version of the 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7 They entered head to head testing at Aberdeen Proving Ground along with a Leopard 2 AV prototype for comparison The Leopard 2 was found to meet U S requirements but was thought to cost more 11 The testing showed that the GM design was generally superior to Chrysler s offering better armor protection and better fire control and turret stabilization systems 13 These early preproduction prototypes were provisionally armed with the M68E1 105mm main gun while a preferred 120mm gun and its ammunition were in their design and component development phase These prototypes used a combination mount that allowed for evaluating both 105mm and 120mm guns 19 During testing the power packs of both designs proved to have issues The Chrysler gas turbine engine had extensive heat recovery systems in an attempt to improve its fuel efficiency to something similar to a traditional internal combustion engine This proved not to be the case the engine consumed much more fuel than expected burning 3 8 gallons per mile The GM design used a new variable compression diesel design 13 By spring 1976 the decision to choose the GM design was largely complete In addition to offering better overall performance there were concerns about Chrysler s engine both from a reliability and fuel consumption standpoint The GM program was also slightly cheaper overall at 208 million compared to 221 million for Chrysler In July 1976 Lt Colonel George Mohrmann prepared a stack of letters informing Congress of the decision to move ahead with the GM design All that was required was the final sign off by the Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld 13 Chrysler is chosen Edit The finalized M1 prototype On 20 July 1976 United States Secretary of the Army Martin Hoffman and a group of generals visited Deputy Defense Secretary Bill Clements and Director of Defense Research and Engineering Malcolm Currie on their decision They were surprised when Clements and Currie criticized their decision and demanded the turbine be selected Donald Rumsfeld heard arguments from both in the afternoon and asked for twenty four hours to review the issues The Army team spent the night writing briefs and presented them to Rumsfeld the next morning who then announced a four month delay 13 Within days GM was asked to present a new design with a turbine engine According to Assistant Secretary for Research and Development Ed Miller It became increasingly clear that the only solution which would be acceptable to Clements and Currie was the turbine It was a political decision that was reached and for all intents and purposes that decision gave the award to Chrysler since they were the only contractor with a gas turbine 13 However the Chrysler design had the advantage that the entire power pack had room to be replaced by any number of engine designs including a Diesel if needed 11 The turbine engine does not appear to be the only reason for this decision Chrysler was the only company that appeared to be seriously interested in tank development the M60 had been lucrative for the company and relied on that program for much of its profit In contrast GM made only about 1 of its income from military sales compared to 5 for Chrysler and only submitted their bid after a special plea from the Pentagon 13 On 12 November 1976 the Defense Department awarded a 20 billion development contract to Chrysler 13 Production starts Edit In January 1978 a program was initiated 20 to develop an enhanced version of the 105mm gun the M68A1 21 as a possible alternate weapon for the M1 Abrams The new XM24 L55 gun barrel was 18 inches 45 72 cm longer in comparison to the XM24 L52 barrel used on the M60 tanks 22 It has a higher chamber pressure 16 reinforced breech a and a higher muzzle velocity 23 Low rate initial production LRIP of the vehicle was approved on 7 May 1979 12 In February 1982 General Dynamics Land Systems Division GDLS purchased Chrysler Defense after Chrysler built over 1 000 M1s 24 The M1 Abrams was the first vehicle to adopt Chobham armor 105 mm M1 Abrams tank of the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment at Grafenwohr Training Area in Germany 1986 A total of 3 273 M1 Abrams tanks were produced during 1979 1985 and first entered U S Army service in 1980 Production at the government owned GDLS operated Lima Army Tank Plant in Lima Ohio was joined by vehicles built at the Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant in Warren Michigan from 1982 to 1996 citation needed The U S Army Laboratory Command LABCOM under the supervision of the United States Army Research Laboratory ARL was also heavily involved with designing the tank with M1A1 armor resistant shells M829A2 armor penetrating rounds and improved weapon range 25 The M1 was armed with the license built M68A1 version of the 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7 gun The tank featured the first of its kind Chobham armor The M1 Abrams was the first to use this advanced armor It consisted of an arrangement of metal plates ceramic blocks and open space 26 An improved model called the M1IP was produced briefly in 1984 and contained upgrades to armour and other small improvements The M1IP models were used in the Canadian Army Trophy NATO tank gunnery competition in 1985 and 1987 About 5 000 M1A1 Abrams tanks were produced from 1986 to 1992 and featured the M256 120 mm 4 7 in smoothbore cannon developed by Rheinmetall AG of Germany for the Leopard 2 improved armor consisting of depleted uranium and other classified materials and a CBRN protection system Production of M1 and M1A1 tanks totaled some 9 000 tanks at a cost of approximately 4 3 million per unit citation needed In 1990 Project On Government Oversight in a report criticized the M1 s high costs and low fuel efficiency in comparison with other tanks of similar power and effectiveness such as the Leopard 2 The report was based on data from U S Army sources and the Congressional record 27 By 1999 costs for the tank were upwards of US 5 million a vehicle 28 As the Abrams entered service they operated alongside M60A3 within the U S military and with other NATO tanks in various Cold War exercises which usually took place in Western Europe especially West Germany The exercises were aimed at countering Soviet forces Adaptations before the Persian Gulf War Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm gave the vehicle better firepower and NBC Nuclear Biological and Chemical protection Persian Gulf War Edit Abrams tanks move out on a mission during Operation Desert Storm in 1991 A Bradley IFV and a logistics convoy can be seen in the background The Abrams remained untested in combat until the Persian Gulf War in 1991 during Operation Desert Storm A total of 1 848 M1A1s were deployed to Saudi Arabia to participate in the liberation of Kuwait The M1A1 was superior to Iraq s Soviet era T 54 T 55 and T 62 tanks as well as T 72 versions imported from the Soviet Union and Poland 29 Polish officials stated that these no license produced T 72 nicknamed Lion of Babylon tanks were finished before destruction of the Iraqi Taji tank plant in 1991 29 The T 72s like most Soviet export designs lacked night vision systems and then modern rangefinders though they did have some night fighting tanks with older active infrared systems or floodlights Very few M1 tanks were hit by enemy fire and none were destroyed as a direct result of enemy fire none of which resulted in any fatalities 30 Three Abrams were left behind the enemy lines after a swift attack on Talil airfield south of Nasiriyah on February 27 One of them was hit by enemy fire the two other embedded in mud The tanks were destroyed by U S forces in order to prevent any trophy claim by the Iraqi Army 31 A total of 23 M1A1s were damaged or destroyed during the war Of the nine Abrams tanks destroyed seven were destroyed by friendly fire and two intentionally destroyed to prevent capture by the Iraqi Army Some others took minor combat damage with little effect on their operational readiness 32 The M1A1 could kill other tanks at ranges in excess of 2 500 metres 8 200 ft This range was crucial in combat against previous generation tanks of Soviet design in Desert Storm as the effective range of the main gun in the Soviet Iraqi tanks was less than 2 000 metres 6 600 ft This meant Abrams tanks could hit Iraqi tanks before the enemy got in range a decisive advantage in this kind of combat In friendly fire incidents the front armor and fore side turret armor survived direct armor piercing fin stabilized discarding sabot APFSDS hits from other M1A1s This was not the case for the side armor of the hull and the rear armor of the turret as both areas were penetrated on at least two occasions by unintentional strikes by depleted uranium ammunition during the Battle of Norfolk 33 A destroyed M1A1 hit in the rear grill by a Hellfire missile and penetrated by a sabot tank round from the left side to right see exit hole During operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm some M1IP and M1A1s were modified locally in theater in the war zone by modification work orders MWO with additional rolled homogeneous armor plating welded on the turret front citation needed The M1 can be equipped with mine plow and mine roller attachments Lessons from the war improved the tank s weapons sights and fire control unit Upgrades Edit The M1A2 was a further improvement of the M1A1 with a commander s independent thermal viewer weapon station position navigation equipment and a full set of controls and displays linked by a digital data bus These upgrades also provided the M1A2 with an improved fire control system 34 The M1A2 System Enhancement Package SEP added digital maps Force XXI Battle Command Brigade and Below FBCB2 Linux communications system capabilities for commanders and an improved cooling system to compensate for heat generated by the additional computer systems 35 The M1A2 SEP also serves as the basis for the M104 Wolverine heavy assault bridge The M1A2 SEPv2 version 2 added Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station CROWS or CROWS II support color displays better interfaces a new operating system better front and side armor and an upgraded transmission for better durability 35 Further upgrades included depleted uranium armor for all variants a system overhaul that returns all A1s to like new condition M1A1 AIM a digital enhancement package for the A1 M1A1D and a commonality program to standardize parts between the U S Army and the Marine Corps M1A1HC Improvements to survivability lethality and protection have been sought since 2014 36 Iraq War Edit An Abrams crossing the Euphrates River at Objective Peach on ribbon assault float bridge deployed by the 299th Engineer Company in 2003 Further combat was seen during 2003 when U S forces invaded Iraq and deposed Ba athist Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in the Iraq War s Operation Iraqi Freedom During the invasion at least nine Abrams tanks were put out of action by fire from rocket propelled grenades citation needed One achievement of the M1A1s was the destruction of seven T 72s in a point blank skirmish less than 50 yards 46 m near Mahmoudiyah about 18 miles 29 km south of Baghdad with no U S losses 37 This was in the face of inadequately trained Iraqi tank crews most of whom had not fired live ammunition in the previous year due to the sanctions then in operation and made no hits at point blank range 38 In addition to the Abrams s heavy armament some crews were also issued M136 AT4 shoulder fired anti tank weapons under the assumption that they might have to engage heavy armor in tight urban areas where the main gun could not be brought to bear A M1A1 conducts reconnaissance in Iraq September 2004 Following lessons learned in Desert Storm the Abrams and many other U S combat vehicles used in the conflict were fitted with Combat Identification Panels to reduce friendly fire incidents These were fitted on the sides and rear of the turret with flat panels equipped with a four cornered box image on either side of the turret front Some Abrams tanks were also fitted with a secondary storage bin on the back of the existing bustle rack on the rear of the turret referred to as a bustle rack extension to enable the crew to carry more supplies and personal belongings Several Abrams tanks that were irrecoverable due to loss of mobility or other circumstances were destroyed by friendly forces usually by other Abrams tanks to prevent their capture 39 Some Abrams tanks were disabled by Iraqi infantrymen in ambushes during the invasion Some troops employed short range anti tank rockets and fired at the tracks rear and top Other tanks were put out of action by engine fires when flammable fuel stored externally in turret racks was hit by small arms fire and spilled into the engine compartment 40 41 By March 2005 approximately 80 Abrams tanks were forced out of action by enemy attacks 42 63 were restored while 17 were damaged beyond repair 43 with 3 of them at the beginning of 2003 44 A M1A2 Abrams with prototype Tank Urban Survival Kit armor upgrade equipment and Common Remotely Operated Weapons Station CROWS 45 with a 50 caliber machine gun at the commander s station Vulnerabilities exposed during urban combat in the Iraq War were addressed with the Tank Urban Survival Kit TUSK modifications including armor upgrades and a gun shield issued to some M1 Abrams tanks It added protection in the rear and side of the tank and improved fighting ability and survival ability in urban environments 46 By December 2006 more than 530 Abrams tanks had been shipped back to the U S for repairs and upgrades 47 In May 2008 it was reported that a U S M1 tank had also been damaged in Iraq by insurgent fire of a Soviet made RPG 29 Vampir which uses a tandem charge high explosive anti tank warhead to penetrate explosive reactive armor ERA as well as composite armor behind it 48 The U S considered the RPG 29 a high threat to armor and refused to allow the newly formed Iraqi Army to buy it fearing that it would fall into the insurgents hands 49 Iraqi Army service Edit Between 2010 and 2012 the U S supplied 140 refurbished M1A1 Abrams tanks to Iraq In mid 2014 they saw action when the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant launched the June 2014 Northern Iraq offensive During three months about one third of the Iraqi Army s M1 tanks had been damaged or destroyed by ISIL and some were captured by opposing forces By December 2014 the Iraqi Army only had about 40 operational Abrams left That month the U S Department of State approved the sale of another 175 Abrams to Iraq 50 51 52 Iranian backed Iraqi Shiite Kata ib Hezbollah Hezbollah Brigades were reported to operate M1 Abrams and released publicity showing the tanks being transported by trucks to take part in the Battle of Mosul It is not known whether the tanks were captured from ISIS seized from Iraq s military or handed over 53 One Iraqi operated Abrams has been nicknamed The Beast after it became the lone working tank when taking back the town of Hit in April 2016 destroying enemy fighting positions and IED emplacements 54 In October 2017 Abrams were used by the Iraqi security forces and the Popular Mobilization Forces also called Al Hashd al Shaabi in assaults against the Kurdistan Regional Government Peshmerga in the town of Altun Kupri also called Prde It was claimed by Kurdish commanders that at least one Abrams was destroyed by the Peshmerga 55 War in Afghanistan Edit Tanks may have limited utility in Afghanistan due to the mountainous terrain although Canada and Denmark deployed Leopard 1 and 2 MBTs that were specially modified to operate in the relatively flat and arid conditions of southwestern Afghanistan In late 2010 at the request of Regional Command Southwest the U S Marine Corps deployed a small detachment of 14 M1A1 Abrams tanks from Delta Company 1st Tank Battalion 1st Marine Division Forward 56 to southern Afghanistan in support of operations in Helmand and Kandahar provinces 57 2015 Yemen Civil War Edit After the start of the Saudi Arabian intervention in Yemen during the 2015 Yemeni Civil War Saudi Arabian M1A2 MBTs were deployed near the Saudi Arabian Yemeni border citation needed In August 2016 the U S approved a deal to sell up to 153 more Abrams tanks to Saudi Arabia including 20 battle damage replacements suggesting that some Saudi Arabian Abrams had been destroyed or severely damaged in combat in Yemen 58 59 60 Production shutdown Edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2017 The U S Army planned to end production at the Lima Army Tank Plant from 2013 to 2016 in an effort to save over 1 billion it would be restarted in 2017 to upgrade existing tanks General Dynamics Land Systems GDLS which operates the factory opposed the move arguing that suspension of operations would increase long term costs and reduce flexibility 61 62 Specifically GDLS estimated that closing the plant would cost 380 million and restarting production would cost 1 3 billion 63 By August 2013 Congress had allocated 181 million for buying parts and upgrading Abrams systems to mitigate industrial base risks and sustain development and production capability Congress and General Dynamics were criticized for redirecting money to keep production lines open and accused of forcing the Army to buy tanks it didn t need General Dynamics asserted that a four year shutdown would cost 1 1 1 6 billion to reopen the line depending on the length of the shutdown whether machinery would be kept operating and whether the plant s components would be completely removed 64 They contended that the move was to upgrade Army National Guard units to expand a pure fleet and maintain production of identified irreplaceable subcomponents A prolonged shutdown could cause their makers to lose their ability to produce them and foreign tank sales were not guaranteed to keep production lines open There is still risk of production gaps even with production extended through 2015 With funds awarded before recapitalization is needed budgetary pressures may push planned new upgrades for the Abrams from 2017 to 2019 64 In December 2014 Congress again allocated 120 million against the wishes of the Army for Abrams upgrades including improving gas mileage by integrating an auxiliary power unit APU to decrease idle time fuel consumption and upgrading the tank s sights and sensors 65 In late 2016 tank production refurbishment had fallen to a rate of one per month with less than 100 workers on site In 2017 the Trump administration made rebuilding the military a priority It was reported in 2018 that the Army had ordered 135 tanks re built to new standards with employment at over 500 workers and expected to rise to 1 000 66 Future plans Edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2022 During the 1980s and 1990s the Block III main battle tank from the Armored Systems Modernization ASM program was expected to succeed the M1 Abrams family in the 1990s The design had an unmanned turret with a 140 mm main gun as well as improved protection The end of Cold War hostilities caused the end of the program The tracked M8 Armored Gun System was conceived as a possible supplement for the Abrams in U S service for low intensity conflict in the early 1990s Prototypes were made but the program was canceled The eight wheeled M1128 Mobile Gun System was designed to supplement the Abrams in U S service for low intensity conflicts 67 It has been introduced into service and serves with Stryker brigades The U S Army s Future Combat Systems XM1202 Mounted Combat System was to replace the Abrams in U S service and was in development when funding for the program was cut from the DoD s budget citation needed Engineering Change Proposal 1 is a two part upgrade process ECP1A adds space weight and power improvements and active protection against improvised explosive devices Nine ECP1A prototypes have been produced as of October 2014 ECP1B which will begin development in 2015 may include sensor upgrades and the convergence of several tank round capabilities into a multi purpose round 68 The Army anticipates that the remaining M1A1 fleet will remain in U S service until at least 2021 and the M1A2 to beyond 2050 69 The United States Army National Guard will continue using M1A1s for a lengthier undetermined period it took until 1997 for the M60A3 to be retired by the last National Guard units as opposed to the active duty U S Army which had fully transitioned to the M1 by the end of 1990 As of 2020 the Marine Corps has been pursuing a force restructuring plan named Force 2030 Under this program all US Marine tank battalions were deactivated and its M1A1 tanks transferred to the Army by the end of 2021 70 71 In the future any need the Marine Corps encounters for heavy armor will be met by the U S Army The U S Army is evaluating a replacement for the M1 Abrams as part of the Next Generation Combat Vehicle NGCV program notionally known as the Decisive Lethality Platform DLP 72 Design EditCountermeasures Edit Camouflage Edit Further information Military camouflage U S M1A1s during the Foal Eagle 1998 training exercises in South Korea with their factory single green paint scheme M1A1 in the Australian Army s Disruptive Pattern Camouflage used for vehicles and materiel Earlier U S military vehicles used from World War I through the Vietnam War used a scheme of olive drab often with large white stars Prototypes early production M1 105 mm gun and M1 IP models switched to a flat forest green paint scheme The large white insignia stars have also transitioned to much smaller black markings Some units painted their M1s with the older Mobility Equipment Research and Design Command MERDC 4 color paint scheme but the turn in requirements for these tanks required repainting them to overall forest green Therefore even though a large number of the base model M1s were camouflaged in the field few or none exist today M1A1s came from the factory with the NATO three color camouflage Black Med Green Dark Brown Chemical Agent Resistant Coating CARC paint jobs citation needed Today M1A1s are given the NATO three color paint job during rebuilds M1s and M1A1s deployed to Operation Desert Storm were hastily painted desert tan Some but not all of these tanks were re painted to their authorized paint scheme M1A2s built for Middle Eastern countries were painted in desert tan Replacement parts roadwheels armor skirt panels drive sprockets etc are painted olive green which can sometimes lead to vehicles with a patchwork of green and desert tan parts Australian M1A1s were desert tan when delivered but have undergone a transition to the Australian Army vehicle standard Disruptive Pattern Camouflage a scheme that consists of black olive drab and brown 73 self published source 74 The U S Army can equip its Abrams tanks with the Saab Barracuda camouflage system which provides concealment against visual infrared thermal infrared and broad band radar detection citation needed Concealment Edit The turret is fitted with two six barreled M250 smoke grenade launchers USMC M1A1s used an eight barreled version with one on each side When deployed the grenades airburst creating a thick smoke that blocks both visual and thermal imaging The engine is also equipped with a smoke generator that is triggered by the driver When activated fuel is sprayed into the hot turbine exhaust creating the thick smoke Due to a risk of fires however this system is sometimes disabled Armor Edit Tankers drive an M1A1 Abrams through the Taunus Mountains north of Frankfurt during Exercise Ready Crucible in February 2005 U S Marines with the 2nd Tank Battalion 2nd Marine Division advance on their eastern objective defended by opposing Spanish forces during Exercise Trident Juncture 18 near Dalholen Norway Nov 3 2018 In July 1973 representatives from Chrysler and General Motors traveled to the United Kingdom and were escorted by personnel from the Ballistic Research Laboratory and XM1 Project Manager Major General Robert J Baer to witness the progress of British developed Chobham armor 75 They observed the manufacturing processes required for the production of Chobham armor which was an arrangement of metal plates ceramic blocks and open space 26 and saw a proposed design for a new British vehicle utilizing it HEAT and sabot rounds enter the beginning layers of armor but are unable to penetrate the crew compartment Ceramics have the ability to absorb a great deal of heat and can blunt physical blows by cracking and deflecting the force The remaining hot gasses and metal shrapnel spread out or settle in empty air pockets Both contractors reevaluated their proposed armor configurations based upon the newly obtained data 76 This led to major changes in the General Motors XM1 the most prominent of which is the turret front changing from vertical to sloped armor The Chrysler XM1 on the other hand retained its basic shape although a number of changes were made The Ballistic Research Laboratory had to develop new armor combinations in order to accommodate the changes made by the contractors 76 Similar to most other main battle tanks the M1 Abrams feature composite armor only on the frontal aspect of the hull However the Abrams turret features composite armoring across both the front and the sides In addition the side skirts of the frontal half of the hull are also made of composite providing superior ballistic protection against chemical energy munitions such as HEAT rounds The composition of the Abrams composite armor consists of sandwiched plates of non explosive reactive armor NERA between conventional steel plates The NERA plates feature elasticity allowing them to flex and distort upon perforation disrupting the penetrating jets of shaped charges and providing more material and space for a kinetic round to pass through thus providing increased protection compared to conventional steel armor of similar weight citation needed For the base model M1 Abrams Steven J Zaloga gives a frontal armor estimate of 350 mm vs armor piercing fin stabilized discarding sabot APFSDS and 700 mm vs high explosive anti tank HEAT warhead in M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank 1982 1992 1993 77 In M1 Abrams vs T 72 Ural 2009 he uses Soviet estimates of 470 mm vs APFSDS and 650 mm vs HEAT for the base model Abrams He also gives the Soviet estimates for the M1A1 600 mm vs APFSDS and 700 mm vs HEAT 78 Armor protection was improved by implementing a new special armor incorporating depleted uranium and other undisclosed materials and layouts 26 This was introduced into the M1A1 production starting October 1988 This new armor increased effective armor particularly against kinetic energy rounds 79 but at the expense of adding considerable weight to the tank as depleted uranium is 1 7 times denser than lead 80 The first M1A1 tanks to receive this upgrade were tanks stationed in Germany US based tank battalions participating in Operation Desert Storm received an emergency program to upgrade their tanks with depleted uranium armor immediately before the onset of the campaign M1A2 tanks uniformly incorporate depleted uranium armor and all M1A1 tanks in active service have been upgraded to this standard as well 81 This variant was designated as the M1A1HA HA for Heavy Armor 82 The M1A1 AIM M1A2 SEP and all subsequent Abrams models feature depleted uranium in both the hull and turret armor 83 Each Abrams variant after the M1A1 have been equipped with depleted uranium armor of different generations The M1A1HA uses first generation armor while the M1A2 and M1A1HC use second generation depleted uranium The M1A2 SEP variants have been equipped with third generation depleted uranium armor combined with a graphite coating The M1A2C also features increased physical line of sight turret armor 84 For the M1A1HA Zaloga gives a frontal armor estimate of 600 mm vs APFSDS and 1300 mm vs HEAT in M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank 1982 1992 nearly double the original protection of the Abrams 82 In M1 Abrams vs T 72 Ural he uses different estimates of 600 mm vs APFSDS and 700 mm vs HEAT for the front hull and 800 mm vs APFSDS and 1300 mm vs HEAT for the front of the turret 78 The protection of M1A2 SEP is a frontal turret armor estimate of 940 960 mm vs APFSDS and 1 320 1 620 vs HEAT glacis estimate of 560 590 mm vs APFSDS and 510 1 050 vs HEAT and lower front hull estimate of 580 650 mm vs APFSDS and 800 970 vs HEAT The M1A2 SEPV3 increased the LOS thickness of the turret and hull front armor total armor protection from this increase is not known 85 In 1998 a program was begun to incorporate improved turret side armor into the M1A2 This was intended to offer better protection against rocket propelled grenades more modern than the baseline RPG 7 These kits were installed on about 325 older M1A2 tanks in 2001 2009 and it was also included in upgraded tanks 86 The Abrams may also be fitted with explosive reactive armor over the track skirts if needed such as the Tank Urban Survival Kit 87 and slat armor over the rear of the tank and rear fuel cells to protect against ATGMs Protection against spalling is provided by a kevlar liner Damage control Edit The tank has a halon firefighting system to automatically extinguish fires in the crew compartment The engine compartment has a firefighting system that is engaged by pulling a T handle located on the left side of the hull The Halon gas can be dangerous to the crew 88 However the toxicity of Halon 1301 gas at 7 concentration is much lower than the combustion products produced by fire in the crew compartment and CO2 dump would be lethal to the crew 89 The crew compartment also contains small hand held fire extinguishers Fuel and ammunition are stored in armored compartments with blowout panels intended to protect the crew from the risk of the tank s own ammunition cooking off exploding if the tank is damaged The main gun s ammunition is stored in the rear section of the turret with blast doors that open under power by sliding sideways only to remove a round for firing then automatically close Doctrine mandates that the ammunition door must be closed before arming the main gun 89 Tank Urban Survival Kit Edit A M1A2 with TUSK A M1A1 Abrams with an Abrams Integrated Management System AIM and the Tank Urban Survivability Kit TUSK conducting a patrol in Baghdad 2007 The Tank Urban Survival Kit TUSK is a series of improvements to the M1 Abrams intended to improve fighting ability in urban environments 90 87 Historically urban and other close battlefields have been poor places for tanks to fight A tank s front armor is much stronger than that on the sides top or rear In an urban environment attacks can come from any direction and attackers can get close enough to reliably hit weak points in the tank s armor or gain sufficient elevation to hit the top armor Armor upgrades include reactive armor on the sides of the tank and slat armor similar to that on the Stryker on the rear to protect against rocket propelled grenades and other shaped charge warheads A Transparent Armor Gun Shield and a thermal sight system are added to the loader s top mounted M240B 7 62 mm machine gun and a Kongsberg Gruppen Remote Weapon Turret carrying a 12 7 mm 50 in caliber machine gun again similar to that used on the Stryker is in place of the tank commander s original 12 7 mm 50 in caliber machine gun mount wherein the commander had to expose himself to fire the weapon manually An exterior telephone allows supporting infantry to communicate with the tank commander The TUSK system is a field installable kit that allows tanks to be upgraded without needing to be recalled to a maintenance depot While the reactive armor may not be needed in most situations like those present in maneuver warfare items like the rear slat armor loader s gun shield infantry phone which saw use on Marine Corps M1A1s as early as 2003 and Kongsberg Remote Weapons Station for the 12 7 mm 50 in caliber machine gun will eventually be added to the entire M1A2 fleet In August 2006 General Dynamics Land Systems received a U S Army order for 505 Tank Urban Survivability Kits TUSK for Abrams main battle tanks supporting operations in Iraq under a US 45 million contract Deliveries were expected to be completed by April 2009 91 Under a separate order the U S Army awarded General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products GDATP US 30 million to produce reactive armor kits to equip M1A2s The reactive tiles for the M1 will be locally produced at GDATP s Burlington Technology Center 91 Tiles will be produced at the company s reactive armor facility in Stone County Operations McHenry Mississippi In December 2006 the U S Army added Counter Improvised Explosive Device enhancements to the M1A1 and M1A2 TUSK awarding GDLS 11 3 million contract part of the 59 million package mentioned above In December GDLS also received an order amounting to around 40 of a US 48 million order for loader s thermal weapon sights being part of the TUSK system improvements for the M1A1 and M1A2 Abrams Tanks 91 Active protection system Edit The Trophy Active Protection System APS was installed and tested on a USMC M1A1 Abrams in 2017 In addition to the armor some USMC Abrams tanks needs update are equipped with a Softkill Active protection system the AN VLQ 6 Missile Countermeasure Device MCD that can impede the function of guidance systems of some semi active control line of sight SACLOS wire and radio guided anti tank missiles such as the Russian 9K114 Shturm and infrared homing missiles 92 The MCD works by emitting a massive condensed infrared signal to confuse the infrared homing seeker of an anti tank guided missile ATGM However the drawback to the system is that the ATGM is not destroyed it is merely directed away from its intended target leaving the missile to detonate elsewhere This device is mounted on the turret roof in front of the loader s hatch and can lead some people to mistake Abrams tanks fitted with these devices for the M1A2 version since the Commander s Independent Thermal Viewer on the latter is mounted in the same place though the MCD is box shaped and fixed in place as opposed to cylindrical and rotating like the CITV In 2016 the U S Army and Marine Corps began testing out the Israeli Trophy active protection system to protect their Abrams tanks from modern RPG and ATGM threats by either jamming with ATGMs or firing small rounds to deflect incoming projectiles 93 The Army planned to field a brigade of over 80 tanks equipped with Trophy to Europe in 2020 94 It is planned for up to 261 Abrams to be upgraded with the system enough for four brigades 95 In June 2018 the Army awarded Leonardo DRS U S partner to Trophy s designer Rafael a 193 million contract to deliver the system in support of M1 Abrams immediate operational requirements 96 U S Army M1A2 SEP V2 Abrams tanks deployed to Germany in July 2020 fitted with Trophy systems citation needed Deliveries to equip four tank brigades were completed in January 2021 97 Armament Edit Primary Edit M68A1 rifled gun Edit The main armament of the original model M1 and M1IP was the M68A1 105 mm rifled tank gun firing a variety of armor piercing fin stabilized discarding sabot high explosive anti tank high explosive white phosphorus rounds and an anti personnel multiple flechette round This gun used a license made tube of the British Royal Ordnance L7 gun together with the vertical sliding breech block and other parts of the U S T254E2 prototype gun However it proved to be inadequate a cannon with lethality beyond the 1 9 mile 3 km range was needed to combat newer armor technologies To attain that lethality the projectile diameter needed to be increased The tank was able to carry 55 105 mm rounds with 44 stored in the turret blow out compartment and the rest in hull stowage M256 smoothbore gun Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source M1 Abrams during a U S Army firing exercise displaying internal crew cabin operations An M1A1 fires its main gun in 2019 The main armament of the M1A1 and M1A2 is the M256A1 120 mm smoothbore gun designed by Rheinmetall AG of Germany manufactured under license in the U S by Watervliet Arsenal New York The M256A1 is an improved variant of the Rheinmetall 120 mm L 44 gun carried on the German Leopard 2 on all variants up to the Leopard 2A5 the difference being in thickness and chamber pressure Leopard 2A6 replaced the L 44 barrel with a longer L 55 Due to the increased caliber only 40 or 42 rounds are able to be stored depending on if the tank is an A1 or A2 model Elevation 9 to 20 degreeThe M256A1 fires a variety of rounds The primary APFSDS round of the Abrams is the depleted uranium M829 round of which four variants have been designed M829A1 known as the Silver Bullet saw widespread service in the Gulf War where it proved itself against Iraqi armor such as the T 72 The M829A2 APFSDS round was developed specifically as an immediate solution to address the improved protection of a Russian T 72 T 80U or T 90 main battle tank equipped with Kontakt 5 explosive reactive armor ERA 98 Later the M829A3 round was introduced to improve its effectiveness against next generation ERA equipped tanks through usage of a multi material penetrator and increased penetrator diameter that can resist the shear effect of K 5 type ERA citation needed Development of the M829 series is continuing with the M829A4 currently entering production featuring advanced technology such as data link capability 99 The Abrams also fires high explosive anti tank warhead shaped charge rounds such as the M830 the latest version of which M830A1 incorporates a sophisticated multi mode electronic sensing fuse and more fragmentation that allows it to be used effectively against armored vehicles personnel and low flying aircraft The Abrams uses a manual loader who also provides additional support for maintenance observation post listening post OP LP operations and other tasks The new M1028 120 mm anti personnel canister cartridge was brought into service early for use in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion of Iraq It contains 1 098 3 8 inch 9 5 mm tungsten balls that spread from the muzzle to produce a shotgun effect lethal out to 600 meters 2 000 ft The tungsten balls can be used to clear enemy dismounts break up hasty ambush sites in urban areas clear defiles stop infantry attacks and counter attacks and support friendly infantry assaults by providing covering fire The canister round is also a highly effective breaching round and can level cinder block walls and knock man sized holes in reinforced concrete walls for infantry raids at distances up to 75 meters 246 ft 100 Also in use is the M908 obstacle reduction round It is designed to destroy obstacles and barriers The round is a modified M830A1 with the front fuse replaced by a steel nose to penetrate into the obstacle before detonation 101 The U S Army Research Laboratory ARL conducted a thermal analysis of the M256 from 2002 to 2003 to evaluate the potential of using a hybrid barrel system that would allow for multiple weapon systems such as the XM1111 Mid Range munition airburst rounds or XM 1147 The test concluded that mesh density number of elements per unit area impacts accuracy of the M256 and specific densities would be needed for each weapon system 102 In 2013 the Army was developing a new round to replace the M830 M830A1 M1028 and M908 Called the Advanced Multi Purpose AMP round it will have point detonation delay and airburst modes through an ammunition data link and a multi mode programmable fuse in a single munition Having one round that does the job of four would simplify logistics and be able to be used on a variety of targets The AMP is to be effective against bunkers infantry light armor and obstacles out to 500 meters and will be able to breach reinforced concrete walls and defeat ATGM teams from 500 to 2 000 meters 103 104 Orbital ATK was awarded a contract to begin the first phase of development for the AMP XM1147 High Explosive Multi Purpose with Tracer cartridge in October 2015 105 In addition to these the XM1111 Mid Range Munition Chemical Energy was also in development The XM1111 was a guided munition using a dual mode seeker that combined imaging infrared and semi active laser guidance The MRM CE was selected over the competing MRM KE which used a rocket assisted kinetic energy penetrator The CE variant was chosen due to its better effects against secondary targets providing a more versatile weapon The Army hoped to achieve IOC with the XM1111 by 2013 106 However the Mid Range Munition was cancelled in 2009 along with Future Combat Systems 107 Secondary Edit A M1A1 firing its main gun as seen from the loader s hatch The M240 is visible left while the M2 is visible right The Abrams tank has three machine guns with an optional fourth A 50 cal 12 7 mm M2HB machine gun in front of the commander s hatch On the M1 and M1A1 this gun is mounted on the Commander s Weapons Station This allows the weapon to be aimed and fired from within the tank Normal combat loadout for the M1A1 is a single 100 round box of ammo at the weapon and another 900 rounds carried The later M1A2 variant had a flex mount that required the tank commander to expose his or her upper torso in order to fire the weapon In urban environments in Iraq this was found to be unsafe With the Common Remote Operated Weapons System CROWS add on kit an M2A1 50 Caliber Machine gun M240 or M249 SAW can be mounted on a CROWS remote weapons platform similar to the Protector M151 remote weapon station used on the Stryker family of vehicles Current variants of the Tank Urban Survival Kit TUSK on the M1A2 have forgone this instead adding transparent gun shields to the commander s weapon station The upgrade variant called the M1A1 Abrams Integrated Management AIM equips the 50 caliber gun with a thermal sight for accurate night and other low visibility shooting 108 A 7 62 mm M240 machine gun in front of the loader s hatch on a skate mount seen at right Some of these were fitted with gun shields during the Iraq War as well as night vision scopes for low visibility engagements and firing This gun can be moved to the TC s position if the M2 50 cal is damaged A second 7 62 mm M240 machine gun in a coaxial mount i e it points at the same targets as the main gun to the right of the main gun The coaxial MG is aimed and fired with the same computerized firing control system used for the main gun On earlier M1 and M1A1s 3000 rounds are carried all linked together and ready to fire This was reduced slightly in later models to make room for new system electronics A typical 7 62mm combat loadout is between 10 000 and 14 000 rounds carried on each tank Optional A second coaxial 50 cal 12 7 mm M2HB machine gun can be mounted directly above the main gun in a remote weapons platform as part of the CSAMM Counter Sniper Anti Material Mount package Aiming Edit A view of the gunner s station bottom left and commander s station top right The Abrams is equipped with a ballistic fire control computer that uses user and system supplied data from a variety of sources to compute display and incorporate the three components of a ballistic solution lead angle ammunition type and range to the target to accurately fire the main gun These three components are determined using a laser rangefinder crosswind sensor a pendulum static cant sensor data concerning performance and flight characteristics of each specific type of round tank specific boresight alignment data ammunition temperature air temperature barometric pressure a muzzle reference system MRS that determines and compensates for barrel drop at the muzzle due to gravitational pull and barrel heating due to firing or sunlight and target speed determined by tracking rate tachometers in the Gunner s or Commander s Controls Handles All of these factors are computed into a ballistic solution and updated 30 times per second The updated solution is displayed in the Gunner s or Tank Commander s field of view in the form of a reticle in both day and Thermal modes The ballistic computer manipulates the turret and a complex arrangement of mirrors so that all one has to do is keep the reticle on the target and fire to achieve a hit Proper lead and gun tube elevation are applied to the turret by the computer greatly simplifying the job of the gunner citation needed A 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment soldier assisting in the critical job of boresighting the alignment of all the tank s sights to the center of the axis of the bore of the main gun on an M1A1 Abrams in Mosul Iraq in January 2005 Hand signals enable the gunner inside the tank to train the main gun onto a boresighting target The fire control system uses this data to compute a firing solution for the gunner The ballistic solution generated ensures a hit percentage greater than 95 percent at nominal ranges citation needed Either the commander or gunner can fire the main gun Additionally the Commander s Independent Thermal Viewer CITV on the M1A2 can be used to locate targets and pass them on for the gunner to engage while the commander scans for new targets If the primary sight system malfunctions or is damaged the main and coaxial weapons can be manually aimed using a telescopic scope boresighted to the main gun known as the Gunner s Auxiliary Sight GAS The GAS has two interchangeable reticles one for high explosive anti tank HEAT and multi purpose anti tank MPAT ammunition and one for armor piercing fin stabilized discarding sabot APFSDS and Smart Target Activated Fire and Forget STAFF ammunition Turret traverse and main gun elevation can be performed with manual handles and cranks if the fire control or hydraulic systems fail The commander s M2HB 50 caliber machine gun on the M1 and M1A1 is aimed by a 3 magnification sight incorporated into the Commander s Weapon Station CWS while the M1A2 uses the machine gun s own iron sights or a remote aiming system such as the Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station CROWS system when used as part of the Tank Urban Survival Kit TUSK The loader s M240 machine gun is aimed either with the built in iron sights or with a thermal scope mounted on the machine gun citation needed In late 2017 the 400 USMC M1A1 Abrams were to be upgraded with better and longer range sights on the Abrams Integrated Display and Targeting System AIDATS replacing the black and white camera view with a color sight and day night thermal sight simplified handling with a single set of controls and a slew to cue button that repositions the turret with one command Preliminary testing showed the upgrades reduced target engagement time from six seconds to three by allowing the commander and gunner to work more closely and collaborate better on target acquisition 109 110 Mobility Edit Tactical Edit Marines from 1st Tank Battalion load a Honeywell AGT1500 multi fuel turbine back into the tank at Camp Coyote Kuwait February 2003 The M1 Abrams s powertrain consists of a Honeywell AGT1500 originally made by Lycoming multifuel gas turbine capable of 1 500 shaft horsepower 1 100 kW at 30 000 rpm and 395 lb ft 536 N m at 10 000 rpm and a six speed four forward two reverse Allison X 1100 3B Hydro Kinetic automatic transmission This gives it a governed top speed of 45 mph 72 km h on paved roads and 30 mph 48 km h cross country With the engine governor removed speeds of around 60 mph 97 km h are possible on an improved surface However damage to the drivetrain especially to the tracks and an increased risk of injuries to the crew can occur at speeds above 45 mph 72 km h The tank was built around this engine 111 and it is multifuel capable including diesel kerosene any grade of motor gasoline and jet fuel such as JP 4 or JP 8 For logistical simplicity JP 8 is the U S military s universal fuel powering both aircraft and vehicle fleets The Australian M1A1 AIM SA burns diesel fuel since the use of JP 8 is less common in the Australian Army M1 driving controls The gas turbine propulsion system has proven quite reliable in practice and combat but its high fuel consumption is a serious logistic problem 112 The engine burns more than 1 67 US gallons 6 3 L per mile 60 US gallons 230 L per hour when traveling cross country and 10 US gallons 38 L per hour when idle citation needed The high speed high temperature jet blast emitted from the rear of M1 Abrams tanks makes it hazardous for infantry to take cover or follow behind the tank in urban combat citation needed The turbine is very quiet when compared to diesel engines of similar power output and produces sound significantly different from a contemporary diesel tank engine reducing the audible distance of the sound thus earning the Abrams the nickname whispering death during its first Reforger exercise citation needed A Marine M1A1 offloading from a Landing Craft Air Cushioned vehicle The Army received proposals including two diesel options to provide the common engine for the XM2001 Crusader and Abrams In 2000 the Army selected the gas turbine engine LV100 5 from Honeywell and subcontractor General Electric 113 The new LV100 5 engine was lighter and smaller 43 fewer parts with rapid acceleration quieter running and no visible exhaust 114 It also featured a 33 reduction in fuel consumption 50 less when idle and near drop in replacement 115 The Common Engine Program was shelved when the Crusader program was canceled Phase 2 of Army s PROSE Partnership for Reduced O amp S Costs Engine program however called for further development of the LV100 5 and replacement of the current AGT1500 engine 116 A Marine M1A1 fitted with snorkel attachment and bustle rack extension An 220 pound 100 kg Auxiliary Power Unit APU was designed by the Army s TARDEC replacing an existing battery pack that weighs about 500 pounds 230 kg It uses a high power density 330 cc 20 in3 Wankel rotary engine modified to use diesel and military grade jet fuel The new APU will also be more fuel efficient than the tank s main engine 117 Testing of the first APUs began in 2009 82nd Airborne paratroopers ride an M1 Abrams tank Although the M1 tank is not designed to carry riders easily provisions exist for the Abrams to transport troops in tank desant with the turret stabilization device switched off A battle equipped infantry squad may ride on the rear of the tank behind the turret The soldiers can use ropes and equipment straps to provide handholds and snap links to secure themselves If enemy contact is made the tank conceals itself allowing the infantry to dismount 118 Strategic Edit A U S Army M1A1 after being offloaded from a U S Air Force C 17 at Balad Air Base Iraq in 2004 Strategic mobility is the ability of the tanks of an armed force to arrive in a timely cost effective and synchronized fashion The Abrams can be carried by a C 5 Galaxy or a C 17 Globemaster III The limited capacity two combat ready tanks in a C 5 one combat ready tank in a C 17 caused serious logistical problems when deploying the tanks for the first Persian Gulf War though there was enough time for 1 848 tanks to be transported by ship Marines transport their Marine Air Ground Task Force MAGTF attached Abrams tanks by combat ship A Wasp class Landing Helicopter Dock LHD typically carries a platoon of 4 to 5 tanks attached to the deployed Marine Expeditionary Unit which are then amphibiously transported to shore by Landing Craft Air Cushion LCAC at 1 combat ready tank per landing craft The Abrams is also transportable by truck namely the Oshkosh M1070 and M1000 Heavy Equipment Transporter System HETS for the US Military The HETS can operate on highways secondary roads and cross country It accommodates the four tank crew members 119 The Australian Army uses customised MAN trucks to transport its Abrams 120 The first instance of the Abrams being airlifted directly into a battlefield occurred in October 1993 Following the Battle of Mogadishu 18 M1 tanks were airlifted by C 5 aircraft to Somalia from Hunter Army Airfield Georgia 121 122 Variants and upgrades EditXM1 FSED Preproduction test model Eleven Full Scale Engineering Development test bed vehicles were produced in 1977 78 These vehicles were also called Pilot Vehicles and numbered PV 1 through PV 11 M1 First production variant Production began at Chrysler in 1979 and continued to 1985 at General Dynamics 3 273 built for the US The first 110 tanks were low rate initial production LRIP models still called XM1s because they were built before the tank being type classified as the M1 M1IP Improved Performance Produced briefly in 1984 before the M1A1 contained upgrades and reconfigurations like new turret with thicker frontal armor new turret is referred as long turret instead of older short turret armor upgraded from 650mm line of sight thickness to 880mm 894 built for US M1A1 nb 1 Production started in 1985 and continued to 1992 pressurized NBC system rear bustle rack for improved stowage of supplies and crew belongings redesigned blow off panels and M256 120 mm smoothbore cannon 4 976 built for the U S Army 221 for USMC 59 M1A1 AIM SA sold to Australia M1A1HA Heavy Armor Added first generation depleted uranium armor components Some tanks were later upgraded with second generation depleted uranium armor components and are unofficially designated M1A1HA M1A1HC Heavy Common Added new second generation depleted uranium armor components digital engine control and other small upgrades common between Army and Marine Corps tanks M1A1D Digital A digital upgrade for the M1A1HC to keep up with M1A2 SEP manufactured in quantity for only 2 battalions M1A1 AIM v 1 Abrams Integrated Management A program whereby older units are reconditioned to zero hour conditions 123 and the tank is improved by adding Forward Looking Infra Red FLIR and Far Target Locate sensors a tank infantry phone communications gear including FBCB2 and Blue Force Tracking to aid in crew situational awareness and a thermal sight for the 50 caliber machine gun 108 M1A1 AIM v 2 M1A1SA Situational Awareness Upgrades similar to AIM v 1 tanks new third generation depleted uranium armor components Configuration for the Royal Moroccan Army which is almost identical to the Australian variant except exportable turret armor is installed by General Dynamics Land System to replace the DU armor 124 M1A1 FEP Firepower Enhancement Package Similar upgrade to AIM v 2 for USMC tanks M1A1KVT Krasnovian Variant Tank M1A1s that have been visually modified to resemble Soviet made tanks for use at the National Training Center fitted with MILES gear and a Hoffman device M1A1M An export variant ordered by the Iraqi Army 125 M1A1 AIDATS upgrade Upgrade only variant to all USMC General Dynamics M1A1 Abrams tanks to improve the tank commander s situational awareness with an upgraded thermal sight color day camera and a stationary color display 126 M1A2 Baseline Production began in 1992 and initial operating capability achieved in 1993 127 77 built for the U S and more than 600 M1s upgraded to M1A2 315 for Saudi Arabia 1 005 for Egypt 218 for Kuwait The M1A2 offers the tank commander an independent thermal sight and ability to in rapid sequence shoot at two targets without the need to acquire each one sequentially also second generation depleted uranium armor components 128 M1A2 SEP System Enhancement Package Is fitted with new second generation gunner s thermal sight 129 Has upgraded third generation depleted uranium armor components with graphite coating 240 new built 300 M1A2s upgraded to M1A2 SEP for the US also unknown numbers of upgraded basic M1s and M1IPs also 400 oldest M1A1s upgraded to M1A2 SEP M1A2S Saudi Package Saudi Arabian variant upgrade of the M1A2 based on M1A2 SEP with some features such as depleted uranium armor believed to be missing and replaced by special armor 442 M1A2s upgraded to M1A2S 130 131 M1A2 SEPv2 Added Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station as standard color displays improved interfaces a new operating system improved front and side armor with ERA TUSK kit tank infantry phone as standard and an upgraded transmission for better durability citation needed M1A2 SEPv3 formerly M1A2C Has increased power generation and distribution better communications and networking new Vehicle Health Management System VHMS and Line Replaceable Modules LRMs for improved maintenance an Ammunition DataLink ADL to use airburst rounds improved counter IED armor package improved FLIR using long and mid wave infrared a low profile CROWS RWS Next Generation Armor Package NGAP 132 and an Auxiliary Power Unit APU under armor to run electronics while stationary instead of the engine visually distinguishing the version by a small exhaust at the left rear More passive ballistic protection added to the turret faces along with new Explosive Reactive Armor mountings Abrams Reactive Armor Tile ARAT 133 and Trophy Active Protection systems added to the turret sides Prototypes began testing in 2015 134 and the first were delivered in October 2017 135 The first unit received them in July 2020 citation needed M1A2T Special configuration variant of the M1A2 SEPv3 reportedly being offered for sale to Taiwan as of March 2019 and approved by US State Department as of July 2019 136 Per DSCA statement it is roughly equivalent to M1A2 SEPv3 except depleted uranium armor is replaced by FMS export armor There is no mention of the Trophy APS system The new built tanks will be produced at Anniston Army Depot Anniston Alabama and the Joint Systems Manufacturing Center Lima Ohio 137 138 M1A2 SEPv4 formerly M1A2D Under development as of 29 March 2022 update 139 The Commander s Primary Sight also known as the Commander s Independent Thermal Viewer and Gunner s Primary Sight will be upgraded with third Gen FLIR an improved laser rangefinder and color cameras Additional improvements will include advanced meteorological sensors laser warning detection receivers directional smoke grenade launchers and integration of the new XM1147 advanced multi purpose sv AMP 120mm tank round 140 141 142 143 The AN VVR 4 laser warning receiver and ROSY rapid obscurant system have been trialed by the US Army for adoption on the Abrams tank and Bradley fighting vehicle 144 145 146 M1A2 K Under development unique variant for the Kuwaiti Army slated to replace Kuwait s current M1A2 fleet 147 Tank Test Bed TTB Prototype TACOM project begun in 1983 with unmanned turret three crew members in armored capsule in front of the heavy armored hull main armament was 120 mm smoothbore gun M256 mechanical loading system under turret 148 Component Advanced Technology Test Bed CATTB was an experimental model with a XM291 140 mm smoothbore cannon 149 heavy armored turret and upgraded hull based on the Abrams chassis It had a mechanical loading system in turret bustle a new engine and probably other upgrades never fielded The tank went into trials in 1987 88 150 AbramsX at AUSA 2022 AbramsX is a technology demonstrator 151 of the M1 Abrams series by General Dynamics Land Systems The AbramsX features an autoloader unmanned turret which reduces the crew to 3 a hybrid diesel electric power pack that gives 50 more fuel efficiency a 30mm chain gun in a remote weapon station active protection systems augmented reality that would increase the crew s awareness thanks to cameras and sensors mounted around the tank s exterior a silent mode when running on electric power the ability to be updated more easily than existing tanks the ability to utilize loitering munitions such as the AeroVironment Switchblade as well as surveillance drones citation needed and reduced weight for improved mobility In October 2022 GDLS released a video showing the Technology Demonstrator and various technology tests 152 153 Specialized Edit A Grizzly Combat Mobility Vehicle CMV A U S Army M104 Wolverine Heavy Assault Bridge RV90 Armored Recovery Vehicle A prototype designed by General Dynamics was produced in 1988 and evaluated against the M88A1E1 later that year The Army selected the M88A1E1 which went into production as the M88A2 Hercules 154 M1 Grizzly Combat Mobility Vehicle CMV 155 M1 Panther II A remote controlled mine clearing vehicle with turret removed mine rollers on front and the Standardized Teleoperation System citation needed M104 Wolverine Heavy Assault Bridge citation needed M1074 Joint Assault Bridge JAB Bridgelayer combining a heavy scissor bridge with the M1 Abrams chassis Expected to reach low rate initial production in 2019 to replace the M60 AVLB and M104 Wolverine 156 Battle Command Vehicle The vehicle was visually modified to with a mock M256 gun to appear like an ordinary Abrams MBT but featured communications equipment and workstations for battle commanders United Defense LP constructed a prototype which the Army tested at Fort Hood in 1997 157 An Assault Breacher Vehicle launching a line charge M1150 Assault Breacher Vehicle ABV Assault variant for the USMC Based upon the M1A1 Abrams chassis the Assault Breacher Vehicle has a variety of systems installed such as a full width mine plow two linear demolition charges and a lane marking system Reactive armor has been fitted to the vehicle providing additional protection against High explosive anti tank warhead based weapons The turret has been replaced by a new smaller one with two MICLIC launchers at its rear A M2HB 50 machine gun in a remote weapons station is mounted on the commander s cupola and a bank of grenade launchers are fitted to each side of the superstructure to cover the frontal arc for self protection 158 Additional equipment M1A1 Mine Clearing Blade System MCBS LIN B13228 b It is electrically operated and is capable of clearing surface or buried mines up to 6 feet in front of the tank s path The plough produces a windrow of soil that is filled with mines This windrow must be reduced using a mine rake or by laying a MICLIC alongside the windrow and detonating it The plough is also capable of pushing up berms clearing trench lines and proofing lanes and staging areas It can be adapted for use on the M60A1 MBT 159 Self Protection Combat Roller SPCR LIN M53112 The Self Protection Combat Roller SPCR exerts high pressure onto the ground ahead of the tracks of the host vehicle to target pressure activated explosive devices in order to actively prove routes It is designed to operate on concrete asphalt gravel and hard dirt roads The system comprises two 4 wheel roller gangs to protect the vehicle tracks which stow neatly to minimize its impact on vehicle operation ability and mobility when not in use The rollers are able to steer left and right to provide a level of coverage during cornering An optional Magnetic System Duplicator MSD can be fitted to help protect the equipment from the effect of magnetic influence fused mines 160 Surface Clearance Device SCD LIN B17484 The SCD is employed to clear surface laid mines and IEDs from roads trails and rough terrain There are two versions of the SCD a V blade optimised for clearing routes and a straight angle blade which is optimised for clearing staging and assembly areas 161 Vehicle Magnetic Signature Duplicator VEMSID LIN V53112 The VEMSID increases the effectiveness and survivability of countermine equipment by causing the stand off detonation of magnetic influence mines at a safe distance ahead of the tank It generates a multi axial magnetic signature optimized for passively fused magnetic influence fused mines The system comprises four emitter coils two associated power boxes and an MSD Control Unit MSDCU 162 Air Ground Defense System AGDS Proposed air defense variant of the Abrams equipped with dual 35 mm Bushmaster III autocannons 12 ADATS missiles and advanced electro optical and radar targeting systems derived from the ADATS It was supposed to be capable of both air defense and anti tank purposes with the ADATS MIM 146 missiles which was a dual purpose ATGM SAM The proposal never saw consideration and was never developed further 163 Specifications EditAbrams specifications citation needed M1 M1IP M1A1 M1A2 M1A2 SEPProduced 1979 85 1984 1985 92 1992 on 1999 onLength 32 04 ft 9 77 m Width 12 ft 3 7 m Height 7 79 ft 2 37 m 8 0 ft 2 4 m Top speed 45 mph 72 km h 41 5 mph 66 8 km h 42 mph 68 km h Range 310 mi 500 km 275 mi 443 km 288 mi 463 km 265 mi 426 km 264 mi 425 km Power 1 500 shp 1 100 kW Weight 61 4 short tons 55 7 t 62 8 short tons 57 0 t M1A1 61 5 short tons 55 8 t M1A1SA 67 6 short tons 61 3 t 68 4 short tons 62 1 t SEP v1 69 5 short tons 63 0 t SEP v2 71 2 short tons 64 6 t SEP v3 73 6 short tons 66 8 t Main armament 105 mm M68A1 rifled 120 mm M256A1 smoothboreCrew 4 commander gunner loader driver Protection Chobham armor Longer turret for thicker composite array M1A1 BRL 2 composite armor M1A1HA HC M1A2 Depleted uranium inserts in frontal turret arrays M1A1 AIM SA Depleted uranium inserts in hull and turret Depleted uranium inserts in hull and turret Improved Chobham armor and increased turret armor Additions of ARAT ERA slat armorOperators Edit M1 Abrams operators An Australian Abrams tank in 2021 Egyptian Abrams tank deployed during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution M1A1M Abrams tanks in Iraqi service January 2011 Australia Australian Army 59 M1A1 AIM configuration tanks hybrids with a mix of equipment used by U S Army and U S Marine Corps but without depleted uranium layers in armor These tanks were bought from the U S in 2006 and replaced the Leopard AS1 in 2007 164 As of 2017 the Australian Government was considering expanding the Army s fleet of Abrams to 90 tanks 165 In April 2021 the U S granted an FMS for 160 M1A1 tank hulls to produce 75 M1A2 SEPv3 Abrams Main Battle Tanks 29 M1150 Assault Breacher Vehicles and 18 M1074 Joint Assault Bridges including the development of a unique armor package for the Australian Army 166 In January 2022 Australia committed to purchase 120 tanks and armored vehicles including 75 M1A2s at a total cost of 3 5 billion and to be delivered in 2024 the M1A2s are to replace their 59 M1A1s which were bought in 2007 167 168 Egypt Egyptian Army 1 360 M1A1 tanks assembled in Egypt for the Egyptian Army in cooperation with the U S 169 170 Iraq Iraqi Army 321 M1A1Ms 171 172 Iraq was leasing 22 U S Army M1A1s for training in 2008 125 171 173 174 The first 11 tanks were delivered to the Iraqi Army in August 2010 175 with all deliveries completed by August 2011 176 In October 2012 it was reported that six more tanks were being delivered 177 Zaloga wrote that four battalions of the 9th Armoured Division were equipped with M1s by 2014 1st and 2nd of the 34th Brigade and 4th and 5th of the 35th Brigade 178 Kuwait Kuwaiti Army 218 M1A2s 179 Poland Polish Land Forces Poland has bought 250 new American M1 Abrams tanks in the newest M1A2 SEP v3 version Production is set to finish by 2024 and delivery to early 2025 After donation of over 200 Polish T 72 tanks to Ukraine an agreement between the Polish and American governments was signed to buy 116 ex U S M1A1 Abrams tanks 180 Delivery is expected to start in 2022 7 loaned training tanks have already delivered to Poland as of July 2022 The total purchase cost with support vehicles crew training and large supply of ammunition will cost PLN 23 3 billion approximately 6 billion The Abrams tanks are to supplement 247 Leopard 2PL main battle tanks as well as older T 72 and PT 91 tanks 181 182 183 28 tanks in variant SEPv2 were leased in July 2022 to tank crews until proper deliveries begin 184 Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabian Army 373 Abrams tanks 185 To be upgraded to M1A2S configuration in Saudi Arabia 185 69 more M1A2S tanks ordered on 8 January 2013 to be delivered by 31 July 2014 186 Morocco Royal Moroccan Army 222 M1A1 SA situational awareness tanks ordered in 2015 187 188 Deliveries under the contract started in July 2016 189 with an estimated completion date of February 2018 The contract include 150 refurbished and upgraded tanks to the special armor configuration 190 Morocco took delivery of the first batch of M1A1SAs on 28 July 2016 191 A Foreign Military Sale for 162 M1A2Ms was approved by the U S Department of State in November 2018 and sent to Congress for final approval 192 Taiwan Republic of China Army Taiwan was considering the purchase of upwards 200 M1 Abrams tanks which was later reduced with the intention of acquiring 120 M1A1 tanks 193 The Ministry of National Defence stated in 2016 that it was in discussion with the U S about sales of M1A1s 194 This plan was apparently canceled by October 2017 Instead the Taiwanese government plans to upgrade its M60A3s in service with a 120 mm main gun new ballistics computer etc 195 In July 2018 Taiwan s Ministry of National Defense budgeted money to purchase 108 M1A2 tanks from the U S government to replace its aging CM 11 Brave Tiger and M60A3 TTS battle tanks 196 The U S Department of State approved the 2 2 billion sale in July 2019 197 198 A sale of 108 M1A2T tanks was later finalized 199 The first two of these tanks were delivered to Taiwan in September 2022 200 better source needed United States United States Army and United States Marine Corps received over 8 100 M1 M1A1 and M1A2 tanks combined 201 U S Army 2 509 total 750 M1A1SA 1 605 M1A2 SEPv2 154 M1A2 SEPv3 some 3 700 more M1A1 and M1A2 in storage 202 203 Potential and future operators Edit Brazil Following Brazil s official designation as major non NATO ally of the United States in July 2019 the U S government offered the Brazilian Armed Forces several models of military equipment the country is interested in potentially acquiring between 110 and 130 M1A1 Abrams tanks which would be upgraded on U S soil and operated as Brazil s main battle tanks for the next 20 years 204 205 206 Greece Hellenic Army 400 ex U S Army M1A1 tanks have been offered to Greece in 2011 207 208 209 Former operators Edit United States United States Marine Corps In 2020 the Marine Corps announced the disbandment of its tank units citing a pivot towards amphibious warfare 210 All 450 of the Marine Corps M1 Abrams MBTs were transferred to the U S Army with withdrawal from Marine Corps service being completed in May 2021 211 See also Edit Tanks portalList of the United States military vehicles by model number List of main battle tanks by country List of main battle tanks by generationReferences EditFootnotes Edit During early development in the late 1970s it was referred to as the XM 1E Notes Edit In firearms the breech is part of a firearm at the rear of the barrel as defined by Merriam Webster The Line Item Number LIN is a six character alphanumeric identification of the generic nomenclature assigned to identify nonexpendable and type classified expendable or durable items of equipment during their life cycle authorization and supply management They are commonly used on the unit s property books Citations Edit M1A2 Abrams Archived from the original on 13 December 2017 Retrieved 12 December 2017 a b c d Hunnicutt 2015 p 306 ASAALT Weapon Systems Handbook 2018 PDF Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army Acquisition Logistics and Technology Archived PDF from the original on 19 October 2018 Retrieved 19 October 2018 a b c Abrams Tank Fact File for the United States Army United States Army Archived from the original on 15 November 2013 Retrieved 16 November 2015 a b Foss Chris 2005 Jane s Armour and Artillery 2005 2006 Jane s Information Group p 162 ISBN 0 7106 2686 X M1 Abrams Main Battle tank Archived 21 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine FAS org 14 April 2000 Majumdar Dave 2 June 2016 Inside the US Army s Lethal New M1A2 SEP v 3 Abrams Main Battle Tank The National Interest archived from the original on 18 October 2017 retrieved 18 October 2017 a b Licht vom Mond Der Spiegel in German 2 November 1969 Archived from the original on 22 October 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2010 Controversial Tank Project suspended by Defense Department Tucson Daily Citizen UPI 9 September 1969 Retrieved 13 November 2021 Beecher William 21 January 1970 U S and Bonn End 7 Year Joint Effort to Build a Tank The New York Times Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 a b c d e Hunnicutt 2015 a b Hunnicutt 2015 p 202 a b c d e f g h The First Chrysler Bail Out The M 1 Tank Washington Monthly 1987 Kelly 1989 p 13 43 Tank Munitions Development Archived from the original on 18 June 2020 Retrieved 18 June 2020 a b Hunnicutt 2015 p 312 105mm Gun Tank M1 and IPM1 in a combination mount with M68A1 Gun Zaloga amp Sarson 1993 Picatinny Arsenal The Joint Center of Excellence for Guns and Ammunition Pica army mil Retrieved 11 April 2020 Ogorkiewicz Richard M 1991 Technology of Tanks Vols 1 2 London Janes Information Group p 82 DTIC ADA051050 Initial Firing Test Results of the 35mm Scaled Model of the 105mm M68 Tank Gun Defense Technical Information Center Free Download Borrow and Streaming Internet Archive January 1978 CANNON 105MM GUN M68A1E2 MIL C 45504A Rev D Jan 1987 Military and Government Specs amp Standards Naval Publications and Form Center NPFC Hunnicutt 2015 p 234 The gun tube was extended by 1 5 feet compared to the M68E1 Direct Support General Support and Depot Maintenance Manual for Cannon 105 MM Gun M68 amp M68E1 M116 and 140 Mount TM 9 1000 213 35 by Fred C Chief of Staff Weyand Jan 1 1978 Holusha John 20 February 1982 General Dynamics buys Chrysler tank division The New York Times Archived from the original on 3 April 2017 Retrieved 3 April 2017 History of the U S Army Research Laboratory 2017 a b c How M1 Tanks Work HowStuffWorks 7 May 2002 Archived from the original on 18 April 2018 Retrieved 3 April 2018 The Army s M1 Tank Has It Lived Up To Expectations Project on Government Oversight 1 January 1990 Archived 17 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Department of Defense Annual Report FY99 Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 20 February 2014 a b Zaloga amp Sarson 1993 p 24 Wyden Ron January 1992 Operation Desert Storm Early Performance Assessment of Bradley and Abrams PDF Government Accountability Office Archived from the original PDF on 11 April 2019 Retrieved 5 July 2018 One of the M1s is hit and disabled The crew is extracted safely and the tank left behind not before it is destroyed by the task force commander who fires two rounds into it The first bounces off the second penetrates and set it on fire The terrain is still causing problems On the attack several vehicles get embedded in mud and can t be extracted The problem is complicated by enemy missile and machine gun fire Two tanks and two armored personnel carriers are destroyed and discarded Halberstadt Hans Desert Storm Ground War Motorbooks International 1991 p 111 GAO NSIAD 92 94 Operation Desert Storm Early performance assessment of Bradleys and Abrams Archived 14 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine p 24 GAO January 1992 Quote 23 Abrams tanks were destroyed or damaged in the Persian Gulf area Of the nine Abrams destroyed seven were due to friendly fire and two were intentionally destroyed to prevent capture after they became disabled Other Abrams tanks were damaged by enemy fire land mines on board fires or to prevent capture after they became disabled A Company 3 66 Armor Abrams Bumper A 33 TAB H Friendly fire Incidents Archived from the original on 1 June 2013 At approximately 4 30 AM on 27 February an anti tank guided missile probably fired from a Bradley struck A 33 in the engine compartment The crew uninjured was evacuating the disabled tank when two DU rounds hit the tank in the left side of the hull and exited through the right side The tank commander driver and gunner sustained injuries from fragments The loader who was already outside the tank was uninjured A 31 crew members assisted in rescuing A 33 s crew Sketch depicting the path of a DU 120 mm round through the hull of Abrams C 12 Archived 27 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine OSD Diaz R Gary Intervehicular Information System IVIS The Basis for a Tactical Information System SAE Paper Number 940982 General Dynamics 1 March 1994 a b Abrams Tank Upgrade PDF Weapons Systems 2013 2013 Archived PDF from the original on 5 May 2015 Army Equipment Program PDF U S Army May 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 9 April 2015 Conroy Jason amp Martz Ron Heavy Metal A Tank Company s Battle To Baghdad Potomac Books 2005 p 158 Biddle Stephen On Operation Iraqi Freedom Outside Perspectives Statement Before The Committee On Armed Services United States House Of Representatives First Session 108th Congress 21 October 2003 Zucchino David Thunder Run The Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad Grove Press 2004 pp 20 30 73 Technical Intelligence Bulletins Wlhoward com May June 2003 Archived from the original on 12 March 2007 Conway John P 7 January 2004 Abrams Tank Systems Lessons Learned Operation Iraqi Freedom PDF Archived PDF from the original on 5 September 2006 Komarow Steven Tanks take a beating in Iraq Archived 18 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine USA Today 29 March 2005 Greem Michael M1 Abrams at War 2005 Zenith Press p 99 ISBN 0 7603 2153 1 Archived from the original on 20 September 2017 Najaf fighting heaviest so far 26 March 2003 Archived from the original on 25 November 2016 Retrieved 23 May 2020 via news bbc co uk PROTECTOR Remote Weapon Station Kongsberg Protech Systems Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Komarow Steven Tanks adapted for urban fights they once avoided Archived 22 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine USA Today 29 March 2005 U S Army Battling To Save Equipment Washington Post Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2014 Michael R Gordon 21 May 2008 Operation in Sadr City Is an Iraqi Success So Far The New York Times Archived from the original on 23 June 2017 Super RPG threat Army passes on system that could defeat RPG 29 DoD officials say ArmyTimes Archived from the original on 19 July 2012 Binnie Jeremy 20 June 2014 Iraqi Abrams losses revealed Janes archived from the original on 2 May 2015 Michael Pregent Michael Weiss 12 August 2014 Exploiting the ISIS Vulnerabilities in Iraq The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 10 December 2015 Retrieved 8 December 2015 Yet ISIS does not have the highly trained maintenance crews that are necessary to keep these weapons in good working order Agency Backs More Abrams for Iraq in ISIS Fight Archived 23 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine DoDBuzz com 22 December 2014 Hezbollah Brigades hurries troops to Mosul fight FDD s Long War Journal www longwarjournal org Archived from the original on 5 August 2017 Retrieved 23 May 2020 The Beast of Hit Abrams Tank Plays Role in Iraqi Fight against ISIS Archived 17 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Military com 13 April 2016 Rudaw Iraqi army Shiite militia and Peshmerga exchange heavy fire north of Kirkuk Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 20 October 2017 Marine tanks prepare for their first missions in Afghanistan U S Marine Corps 18 January 2011 Archived 16 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine U S Tanks En Route to Southwestern Afghanistan Archived 30 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine American Forces Press Service 19 November 2010 Retrieved 12 March 2011 Saudi Losses in Yemen War Exposed by US Tank Deal Archived 11 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Defenseone com 9 August 2016 Kingdom of Saudi Arabia M1A2S Saudi Abrams Main Battle Tanks and M88Al A2 Heavy Equipment Recovery Combat Utility Lift Evacuation System HERCULES Armored Recovery Vehicles ARV Defense Security Cooperation Agency 9 August 2016 Archived from the original on 13 September 2016 Retrieved 19 September 2016 Saudi Losses in Yemen War Exposed by US Tank Deal Archived from the original on 10 August 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2016 Ewing Philip 21 April 2011 The tank at the end of history DoD Buzz Military com Archived from the original on 25 April 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2011 Support Abrams General Dynamic Land Systems Archived from the original on 10 April 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2011 Lighter Yet Deadlier Defense News Gannett Government Media Corporation Archived from the original on 10 January 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2011 a b Over Army Objections Industry and Congress Partner to Keep Abrams Tank Production Hot permanent dead link National Defense Magazine October 2013 Congress Again Buys Abrams Tanks the Army Doesn t Want Archived 24 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Military com 18 December 2014 Thompson Loren 2 November 2018 How President Trump Saved The Last Tank Plant In America Forbes Retrieved 30 October 2020 Asia Pacific Defence Reporter Volume 30 Asia Pacific Defence Publications 2004 Retrieved 2 April 2011 Wasserbly Daniel 14 October 2014 AUSA 2014 Army outlines upcoming combat vehicle choices IHS Jane s International Defence Review Archived from the original on 29 April 2015 ECP1A for Abrams which just completed a critical design review and includes design efforts to incorporate data links for future ammunition increased protection as well as on board diagnostics and a shift from line replaceable units LRUs to line replaceable modules LRMs LRMs are easier to replace because there are fewer cables boxes and cards to handle General Dynamics Land Systems M1 M1A1 M1A2 Abrams MBT United States MBTs and medium tanks Jane s Armour and Artillery Jane s Information Group Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 1 July 2011 Wolfgang Ben 30 March 2020 Marine Corps cuts helicopters tanks for possible China conflict The Washington Times Retrieved 30 August 2021 Snow Shaun 26 March 2020 The Marines want to get rid of their tanks Here s why Marine Corps Times Retrieved 30 August 2021 Keating Edward G Adedeji Adebayo April 2021 Projected Acquisition Costs for the Army s Ground Combat Vehicles PDF Congressional Budget Office Retrieved 30 December 2022 Miller Jason Australian Military Vehicles Research Disruptive Pattern Camouflage for the Australian Abrams M1A1 AIM SA as at 2010 Mheaust com au Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 self published source Australian Government Department of Defence 13 May 2010 Exercise Chong Ju Desert tan vs Auscam Abrams Defence gov au Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Hunnicutt 2015 p 177 a b Hunnicutt 2015 p 178 Zaloga amp Sarson 1993 pp 9 10 Zaloga gives another set of figures in this book 350mm against APFSDS and 700mm vs HEAT a b Zaloga 2009 p 15 Author mentions that a Soviet report estimated the protection of the basic M1 to be equivalent to 470 mm steel armor against armor piercing rounds and equivalent to 650 mm steel armor against shaped charge warheads Hunnicutt 2015 p 245 BBC US to use depleted uranium BBC News 18 March 2003 Archived from the original on 19 May 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Clancy Tom Armored Cav A Guided Tour of an Armored Cavalry Regiment Berkeley Books 1994 p 58 a b Zaloga amp Sarson 1993 p 11 The Army s Future Combat Systems Program and Alternatives PDF Congressional Budget Office Study 67 August 2006 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Here s your first look at the Army s new M1 Abrams variant Task amp Purpose 26 February 2019 Archived from the original on 6 June 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Prado Fabio Main Battle Tank M1 M1A1 and M1A2 Abrams www fprado com Archived from the original on 22 November 2016 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Zaloga amp Sarson 1993 p 48 a b Modified M1 A2 Abrams Tanks Improve Safety Precision Archived from the original on 15 May 2013 Retrieved 22 July 2017 NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards CDC Archived from the original on 18 August 2017 a b The Chieftain 14 October 2018 Chieftain Chats Abrams retrieved 21 February 2019 Cramer Eric W TUSK to Update Abrams for Urban Battle Defense AT amp L July August 2005 dead link a b c Tank Urban Survivability Kit TUSK Archived from the original on 13 October 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2014 Defense Update com Defense Update com 25 April 2006 Archived from the original on 10 March 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Walsh Marines May Protect Tanks With Active and EW Protection Systems Much Like Ship Self Defense Archived 14 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine News USNI org 14 April 2016 Some Abrams Tanks Will Have Trophy System By 2020 Army Archived 11 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Military com 9 October 2017 All Armored Brigades To Get Active Protection Systems Gen Milley Archived 15 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Breaking Defense 15 May 2018 Abrams tanks get new round of Israeli made shields to fend off anti tank weapons Army Times 6 July 2018 Army Tries Again To Protect Stryker Rafael or Rheinmetall Breaking Defense 8 January 2021 Fabio Prado Main Battle Tank M1 M1A1 and M1A2 Abrams Fprado com Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Next Gen 120 mm Tank Killer ATK s M829E4 AKE Defense Industry Daily Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Hilmes Rolf 1 December 2004 Arming Future MBTs Some Considerations Military Technology Monsch 79 M908 HE OR T Archived 12 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine ATK com South Joseph T Carter Robert H 1 August 2005 Thermal Analysis of an M256 120 mm Cannon Report Fort Belvoir VA Defense Technical Information Center doi 10 21236 ada437279 Hill Paul May 2012 Advanced Multi Purpose AMP Overview and Status PDF NDIA Joint Armaments Conference PM Panel p 26 Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2012 Army developing new 120 mm AMP tank round Archived 7 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Army mil 19 March 2014 Orbital ATK Awarded 16 Million to Develop Next Generation 120 mm Tank Ammo Archived 12 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Businesswire com 8 October 2015 Clank Softly and Carry a Better Shillelagh Defense Industry Daily Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 MRM cancelled Archived 9 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine Soldiergeek com 11 July 2011 a b General Dynamics Awarded 34 Million for M1A1 Abrams Tank Upgrades Press release General Dynamics 5 September 2008 Archived from the original on 3 January 2010 Abrams Tank Upgrades Will Give Marines Killer Edge Archived 24 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine DoDBuzz com 23 August 2016 Marines M1A1 tanks How an upgrade will help make them more lethal Archived 27 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine MarineCorpstimes com 26 August 2016 Heavy duty overhaul under way for Abrams tank engine Accessmylibrary com 1 September 2006 Archived from the original on 11 January 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Fabio Prado Main Battle Tank M1 M1A1 and M1A2 Abrams 64 26 50 215 Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Dupont Daniel G 25 September 2000 Tanks Won t Be Converted to Diesel Honeywell Turbine Engine Picked for Abrams Fleet Crusader System Inside the Army Vol 12 no 38 Inside Washington Publishers pp 1 11 JSTOR 43985032 Retrieved 7 February 2022 GE Aviation LV100 Archived from the original on 7 June 2008 Retrieved 7 August 2008 GE Aviation LV100 Advantages Archived from the original on 18 June 2008 Retrieved 7 August 2008 AIM Program s M1A1 Tank Refits and Rebuilds Continue Defenseindustrydaily com 2 May 2005 Archived from the original on 14 July 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 TARDEC Auxiliary Power Unit for a tank Engineeringtv com Archived from the original on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Department of the Army 2009 7 U S Army Warrior Ethos And Combat Skills Handbook Field Manual No 3 21 75 Morris Book Publishing LLC ISBN 978 1 59921 819 9 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 2 June 2010 M1070 Heavy Equipment Transporter HET Fact File United States Army Army mil Archived from the original on 6 July 2010 Retrieved 30 June 2010 Enter the Abrams Australian Defence Magazine 10 January 2008 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Haulman Daniel L THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE IN SOMALIA 1992 1995 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 28 September 2017 Retrieved 28 September 2017 Leland John W THE CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY OF THE C 5 GALAXY PDF Archived PDF from the original on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 29 September 2017 M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank Fas org Archived from the original on 21 August 2010 Retrieved 30 June 2010 Miller Michelle 22 August 2016 Morocco receives Abrams tanks from U S Army Archived from the original on 14 May 2019 a b Armor Iraq Getting M 1A1 Tanks Strategypage com 3 August 2008 Archived from the original on 16 April 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Marine Corps to deliver capability trifecta to tank commanders United States Marine Corps Flagship Retrieved 5 May 2021 Foss Christopher F ed 1994 Jane s Armour and Artillery 15th ed Coulsdon Surrey Jane s Information Group pp 129 130 ISBN 0710611544 M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank Archived 21 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine Federation of American Scientists S Cohen William 1999 Report of Secretary of Defense to the Congress on the FY Budget FY Authorization Request and FY Defense Programs Department of Defense p 60 Tyler Rogoway 25 August 2015 Houthi Rebels Destroy M1 Abrams Tanks With Basic Iranian Guided Missiles Foxtrot Alpha Archived from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Saudi Arabia Orders 69 More M1A2S Abrams Heavy Tanks Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Trevithick Joseph 22 February 2019 Picture Of Newest M1 Abrams Tank Variant With Previously Unseen Turret Armor Emerges The Drive Retrieved 23 May 2020 Trevithick Joseph 7 March 2017 U S Army M1 Abrams Tanks in Europe Are Getting Explosive Armor The Drive Retrieved 23 May 2020 Army Upgrades M1A2 Abrams Battle Tank Archived 11 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Scout com Military com 3 June 2016 Army rolls out latest version of iconic Abrams Main Battle Tank Archived 9 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Army mil 9 October 2017 https www nytimes com reuters 2019 07 08 world asia 08reuters usa taiwan html searchResultPosition 8 permanent dead link Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States TECRO M1A2T Abrams Tanks and Related Equipment and Support The Official Home of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency www dsca mil Retrieved 23 May 2020 Drillsma Ryan 19 March 2019 US could announce sale of M1A2X tanks to Taiwan before July Taiwan News Taipei Archived from the original on 19 March 2019 Retrieved 19 March 2019 Abrams Main Battle Tank Asc army mil 29 March 2022 Retrieved 26 May 2022 Dean Glenn 2017 NDIA Armaments Systems Forum PDF National Defense Industrial Association Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2018 US engineering big upgrades for M1A2 SEP v4 Abrams tanks starting in 2021 to match Russian Armata and other new tanks NextBigFuture com 17 November 2016 Archived from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 Villasanta Arthur Dominic 28 March 2017 New US Army M1 Abrams Tank Rounds can Easily Destroy the T 14 Armata Archived from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 tmgdadmin 5 September 2017 General Dynamics Receives Contracts to Upgrade Abrams Main Battle Tanks Archived from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 UTC Aerospace readies AN VVR 4 laser warning system Jane s 360 Archived from the original on 23 July 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Laser warning goes modular Jane s 360 Archived from the original on 23 July 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Rheinmetall ROSY at US Army Expeditionary Warrior Experiments 2018 Youtube Rheinmetall Defence Archived from the original on 28 October 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Binnie Jeremy 20 December 2017 Kuwait to get unique Abrams tank variant IHS Jane s 360 Archived from the original on 26 December 2017 Retrieved 26 December 2017 Sewell Stephen Cookie March April 1995 Ammunition Loading Systems for Future Tanks PDF Armor Vol CIV no 2 Fort Knox KY U S Army Armor Center pp 17 18 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 4 March 2022 Khourdaji Samir May 1990 RD amp E Centre Technical Report No 13492 FINITE STRESS ANALYSIS FOR COMPONENT ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY TEST BED CATTB Defense Technical Information Center Defense Technical Information Center Archived from the original on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 16 July 2016 CATTB data Archived from the original on 30 September 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 AUSA 2022 Day 1 defense exhibition Washington US AbramsX StrykerX Stryker Leonidas TRX Breacher GDLS YouTube Davis Jeff General Dynamics business units to participate in AUSA 2022 General Dynamics Land Systems General Dynamics Land Systems Retrieved 9 October 2022 Gabriel Honrada 12 October 2022 Heavy metal new US tanks made to blast China Russia Asia Times Retrieved 14 October 2022 Hunnicutt 2015 p 271 273 Defense amp Security Intelligence amp Analysis IHS Jane s IHS wayback archive it org Retrieved 30 March 2009 permanent dead link Army DRS Set To Integrate New Bridging System on Tanks Defensenews com 6 September 2016 Foss Christopher F ed 2002 Armoured Command Vehicles Jane s Armour and Artillery 2002 2003 23rd ed Surrey Janes Information Group p 610 ISBN 0 7106 2425 5 Abramson Mark ABVs ready to break Afghan ground Stars and Stripes 1 February 2010 M1 Mine Clearing Blade System Battlefield Capabilities Archived from the original on 19 January 2021 Retrieved 3 January 2021 Surface Clearance Device Product Page MIL V 53112 1 1 NOT 1 Vehicle Magnetic Signature Duplicator Vemasid System M109 M992 Family of Vehicles An VSQ 3 4 No S S Document Sharoni Asher H Bacon Lawrence July August 1996 Forward Area Air Ground Defense Armor 105 4 15 20 via Google Books Acquisition of the ABRAMS Main Battle Tank Australian National Audit Office 17 July 2007 Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 6 May 2014 Abernethy Mark 7 March 2017 Army s plans for more and better tanks Australian Financial Review Archived from the original on 26 June 2018 Retrieved 20 August 2018 Australia Heavy Armored Combat Systems Defense Security Cooperation Agency Retrieved 15 July 2021 Galloway Anthony 9 January 2022 Australia commits to 3 5 billion tank purchase from the US The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 10 January 2022 Giannini Dominic 10 January 2022 Over 120 tanks armoured vehicles secured 7NEWS Retrieved 10 January 2022 IISS 2017 The 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2016 Retrieved 31 December 2016 MND confirms U S M1A1 tank sales to Taiwan under negotiation Taipei Times 14 November 2016 Archived from the original on 31 December 2016 Retrieved 31 December 2016 Yeo Mike 6 October 2017 Giving up on Abrams tank acquisition Taiwan moves to upgrade its M60A3 tanks Taiwan Army mulls spending US 990 million on M1A2 tanks FOCUS TAIWAN News Channel 9 July 2018 Archived from the original on 12 July 2018 Retrieved 12 July 2018 Everington Keoni 9 July 2019 US State Department greenlights US 2 2 billio Taiwan News Retrieved 23 May 2020 Judson Jen 9 July 2019 US State Dept OKs possible 2 billion Abrams tank sale to Taiwan Defense News Retrieved 23 May 2020 Taiwan would fight off China invasion for as long as it takes defense minister says Newsweek 18 March 2021 https twitter com IndoPac Info status 1569737560846659584 t Lo9VSKQGp2ePJJ1VLsWamw amp s 19 bare URL Fabio Prado 10 December 2009 Main Battle Tank M1 M1A1 and M1A2 Abrams Armorsite Archived from the original on 3 July 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Military Balance 2021 IISS 2021 p 50 The Military Balance 2021 PDF Routledge Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 M 1 Abrams 105 mm tanques estocados nos EUA podem interessar ao Brasil in Portuguese Retrieved 1 August 2019 Oportunidade EUA oferecem ao Brasil tanques jipes e helicopteros in Portuguese Retrieved 1 August 2019 Message to the Congress on Designating Brazil as a Major Non NATO Ally whitehouse gov 8 May 2019 via National Archives Zhthste mas o ti sas xreiazetai Kathimerini in Greek Archived from the original on 7 July 2012 Retrieved 9 April 2012 Agence France Presse Greece Considers Free Tank Offer Defense News 7 December 2011 Retrieved 18 April 2012 Pente C 130 kai 100 armata maxhs Abrams erxontai apo HPA onalert gr Archived from the original on 12 November 2014 Retrieved 1 April 2015 A farewell to armor Marine Corps shuts down tank units hauls away M1A1s Stars and Stripes 30 July 2020 Athey Philip 26 May 2021 Marine Corps deactivates its final active duty tank battalion Marine Corps Times Retrieved 20 July 2022 Bibliography Edit Kelly Orr 1989 King of the Killing Zone New York New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 425 12304 9 Rostker Bernard 1998 Environmental Exposure Report Depleted Uranium in the Persian Gulf II DoD Publication gulflink osd mil Archived from the original on 3 June 2010 Retrieved 30 June 2010 Operation Desert Storm Early Performance Assessment of Bradley and Abrams PDF Report Washington D C United States General Accounting Office January 1992 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Halberstadt Hans 1991 Desert Storm Ground War Motorbooks International ISBN 978 0879385613 Hunnicutt Richard Pearce 1984 Patton A History of the American Main Battle Tank Presidio Press ISBN 0 89141 230 1 Hunnicutt Richard Pearce 2015 Abrams A History of the American Main Battle Tank Echo Point Books ISBN 978 1 62654 166 5 Forty George 1995 Tank Action From the Great War to the Persian Gulf Allan Sutton Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 75090 479 7 M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank FAS Military Analysis Network Retrieved 17 January 2004 Practical Applications of Vehicle Control within the Distributed Processing Architecture Proceedings of the 1992 American Control Conference Ruggirello Joseph A Bielawski Dennis A and Diaz R Gary General Dynamics IEEE Published Jun 1992 Zaloga Steven Sarson Peter 1993 M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank 1982 1992 New Vanguard Book 2 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 85532 283 8 Zaloga Steven J 2009 M1 Abrams vs T 72 Ural Operation Desert Storm 1991 Oxford UK New York Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 407 7 LCCN 2009502059 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to M1 Abrams Abrams U S Army Acquisition Support Center page U S Army M1A2 Main Battle Tank Archived 24 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine General Dynamics Land Systems M1A2 Abrams Main Battle Tank Military com M1A1 2 Abrams Main Battle Tank Global Defense Technology M1 Abrams page a detailed overview of how the tank works on howstuffworks com M1 Tank Urban Survivability Kit TUSK M1A1 AIM Upgrade and M1A2 SEP Upgrade Defense Update com M1 Abrams modernization 2011 M1 Abrams modernization 2012 Federation of American Scientists AbramsX Technology Demonstrator on the Move concept video for proposed next generation Abrams tank with autonomous operation and a silent mode October 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M1 Abrams amp oldid 1132067546, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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