TR Altay Main Battle Tank & Related Programs

boredaf

Contributor
Messages
1,004
Solutions
1
Reactions
11 2,799
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
Let's not rewrite history and pretend like Germans somehow conned us. We tested all available tanks and decided on Leopards, nobody forced us to choose them. All the countries involved would've been happy to sell us tanks at the time and Germany was the one we chose.
 

Bogeyman 

Experienced member
Professional
Messages
8,439
Reactions
60 29,526
Website
twitter.com
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Over the years we've heard some chatter that comparing penetrated tanks, Leo2 did give a better chance of survival to the crew. M60T is armored to the brim with NERAs but when they're penetrated, you die. Not always the same case with Leo2. It has far greater crew survivability.

Germany didn't fleece anyone, we paid for and bought 30 year old Leo2A4s in 2007. Then waited 6 years to start even contemplating about modernizing them to NGs. Our German supported NG mod got embargoed after 2016 and we had to use near unarmored tanks against modern ATGMs in Syria. BMC was to start modernizing Leo2A4s in 2019. 4 years have passed. In a separate Roketsan package, all we have to show for are 40 T1s.
When Lancet kamikaze drones destroyed the tank in the Leopard tanks, the ammunition exploded from the inside because there was no explosion door or insulation between the tank ammunition and the personnel.

FySq5E4WwAE0kop


Since KMW designed this tank in the 80s to fight hand-to-hand against the flood of Soviet armor in the Cold War, it did not prioritize developing a design that would rely on thick frontal armor and protect personnel from ammunition. Later, with the development of drone technology and ATGM systems, ammunition explosions against ammunition fired from above and from the environment became seriously lethal for personnel.



On this subject, I leave below images of the explosive doors and compartments of the Abrams Tank.

FySq5pqWYAEMB_B

FySq6ExXsAcbetl

FySq6EyWIAEh1Cd

FySq6eGXgAAJwPe

FySq6eFXsAAJVz6



Although KMW took a series of measures to increase the thickness of the top armor in the versions after the Leopard 2A5, they still do not have a solution to completely isolate the ammunition from the crew. There are also those who say that the fuel in the additional fuel tanks for the Leopard 2, which was destroyed with the latest ammunition, burned due to ignition.
Because when the internal ammunition explodes, the armor largely shatters and the body opens. The damage to the hull of our tanks that were attacked by treacherous terrorists in Syria shows that the ammunition explodes from the inside and destroys the armor in ATGM attacks.

 

Afif

Experienced member
Moderator
Bangladesh Correspondent
DefenceHub Diplomat
Bangladesh Moderator
Messages
4,092
Reactions
65 7,494
Nation of residence
Bangladesh
Nation of origin
Bangladesh
1707907982768.jpeg



Unfortunately, Altay has the same interior design. They better stop using that compartment for ammo storage....( Like American did with Abrams)
 

Chocopie

Contributor
South Korea Correspondent
Messages
530
Reactions
33 1,950
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
South Korea
View attachment 65608


Unfortunately, Altay has the same interior design. They better stop using that compartment for ammo storage....( Like American did with Abrams)
They apparently changed the hull storage in Altay T2 (according to WarThunder Forum, so no guarantee of credibility 😉)

For 12 ammo rounds they installed 2 isolated storage compartments with 6 rounds left and right from driver. Blow out panels seen here:
IMG_9812.jpeg


Leo 2, K1 & K2, Type 90 & Type 10, Challenger, Ariete and Leclerc all have non-isolated hull ammo racks.

But IMO that‘s not a main issue (most hit Leo 2 crews survived in Ukraine). The main issue to be solved is drone protection: enforced top armor, hard-kill APS and jamming against kamikaze drones.
 

Sanchez

Experienced member
Moderator
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
1,681
Reactions
61 7,624
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Some German Leo fans („Sse best tank in sse wwörld, mein Lieber!“) say those pics were taken after Turkish F-16 bombed them to hinder capture. I don‘t know for sure. Maybe it‘s their way of coping 😅
This is the unofficial Turkish line as well. Tanks were left behind and then struck from air to stop their capture.
 

Ryder

Experienced member
Messages
10,479
Reactions
5 18,094
Nation of residence
Australia
Nation of origin
Turkey
Some German Leo fans („Sse best tank in sse wwörld, mein Lieber!“) say those pics were taken after Turkish F-16 bombed them to hinder capture. I don‘t know for sure. Maybe it‘s their way of coping 😅

Fun fact.

Isis captured Russian sam missiles after they took Palmyra.

Russians asked the Americans to bomb the captured sams with their airforce.

Russians with another L. At least the Turks blew their own tanks so the terrorists dont use it.
 

Chocopie

Contributor
South Korea Correspondent
Messages
530
Reactions
33 1,950
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
South Korea
This is the unofficial Turkish line as well. Tanks were left behind and then struck from air to stop their capture.
That might be true. The damage in the pic is severe. Afaik they were hit by Kornets/Iranian copies which are devastating ATGM before air bombing.
@Bogeyman thinks it‘s from front hull ammo explosion as he posted above.

Never seen such total destruction of Leo 2A4s with blown off turrets in Ukraine.
 
Last edited:

Sanchez

Experienced member
Moderator
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
1,681
Reactions
61 7,624
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
That might be true. The damage in the pics is severe. Afaik they were hit by Kornets/Iranian copies which are devastating ATGM before air bombing.

Never seen such total destruction of Leo 2A4s with blown off turrets in Ukraine.
There are no available after action reports to read about that day. What we know is that tanks were hit and immobilized, they had to be evacuated after tank borne SVBIEDs started coming from the fog, and later air force bombed them. We don't know if the damage they received earlier was repairable or not.

I'd think a Mk-82 does plenty damage to any armored target and forces secondary explosions anywhere it touches.
 

Chocopie

Contributor
South Korea Correspondent
Messages
530
Reactions
33 1,950
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
South Korea
There are no available after action reports to read about that day. What we know is that tanks were hit and immobilized, they had to be evacuated after tank borne SVBIEDs started coming from the fog, and later air force bombed them. We don't know if the damage they received earlier was repairable or not.

I'd think a Mk-82 does plenty damage to any armored target and forces secondary explosions anywhere it touches.
Yes, it would be nice to know the grade of damage after the initial hits.

Leo 2 especially in its latest iteration 2A8 is a damned good MBT and a fine piece of German engineering. Not well suited for Korean terrain and tank doctrine.

Heavy armor and weight up to 70t is optimal for European terrain. My main gripe is the absurdly high price and low production rate.
 

Saithan

Experienced member
Denmark Correspondent
Messages
8,182
Reactions
21 18,804
Nation of residence
Denmark
Nation of origin
Turkey
Anyone remembers Mammoth tanks from C&C, imagine that’s what’s going to roam on the fields with pretty much layered AD and firepower to rival Battleships.
 

Huelague

Experienced member
Messages
3,611
Reactions
4 3,862
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
Turkey
Let's not rewrite history and pretend like Germans somehow conned us. We tested all available tanks and decided on Leopards, nobody forced us to choose them. All the countries involved would've been happy to sell us tanks at the time and Germany was the one we chose.
And on the battlefield they highlightend as crap.
 

lLiberté

Member
Messages
20
Reactions
2 43
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
I just can't comprehend this hate against the Leopard right now. Can we take a minute and accept the fact that Leopard was the best thing we could get at that time. Our tank inventory was incredibly obsolete up until we acquired Leopard 2A4 and our best tank was second-hand M60A3s. 2A4 acquisition and Sabra modernisations were emergency programs at that point.

It was 1980s when we last bought brand-new tank, Leopard 1A3T1, rest was used up M48s and M60s. Another point you seem to miss is that Land Forces Command had chance to trial competitors of Leopard 2A6EX in Tank 2000 Tender. In trials 2A6EX beat the competition by large margin, ommand witness how badly Leclerc and Yatağan performed and how problematic and expensive to maintain Abrams was. Sadly 2A6EX acquisition was never finalised and the closest think we could get after Tank 2000 was 2A4.

Acquisition of Leopard was no blind-purchase it was best bang for its buck and there were no other proper option (also it was easiest to acquire). 2A4 has been neglected for too much far too long, and we suffered its catastrophic results.
 
Last edited:

Huelague

Experienced member
Messages
3,611
Reactions
4 3,862
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
Turkey
Maybe, but that is not on the Germans, it's on the officials that chose them, because as I said, we tried multiple tanks and decided on the Leopards.
We made 'wrong' decision and Germany made wrong tanks.
 

Huelague

Experienced member
Messages
3,611
Reactions
4 3,862
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
Turkey
I just can't comprehend this hate against the Leopard right now. Can we take a minute and accept the fact that Leopard was the best thing we could get at that time
No. It was a 'political' decision. Not a military. Like our decision on Pakistan Mushshak.
 

lLiberté

Member
Messages
20
Reactions
2 43
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
No. It was a 'political' decision. Not a military. Like our decision on Pakistan Mushshak.

Arms industry and politics goes hand-in-hand, there's no denying that. What were the other options then ? I don't know much of Mushshak thing, so cannot make any comments.
 

Sanchez

Experienced member
Moderator
Think Tank Analyst
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
1,681
Reactions
61 7,624
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
No. It was a 'political' decision. Not a military. Like our decision on Pakistan Mushshak.
I mean, all arms procurements are political decisions. Still, Leo2 came out on top of all tests we ran and it was the best tank available for our needs. Original Altay was basically a Turkish Leopard 2A7. There were no other tanks we liked at the time, literally. K2 came much later and even then, K2 we chose is a heavily modified one to suit our needs.
 

Follow us on social media

Top Bottom