Challenger 1 tank
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Challenger 1 (Bovington tank museum) |
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FV 4030 Challenger | |
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General characteristics | |
Crew | 4 (commander, gunner, loader, driver) |
Length | 11.5 m (Gun forward) |
Width | 3.51 m |
Height | 2.95 m |
Weight | 62 tonnes |
Armour and armament | |
Armour | Chobham,classified |
Main armament | L11A5 120 mm rifled
64 rounds |
Secondary armament | 7.62 mm L8A2, 7.62 mm L37A2 machine guns
4,000 rounds |
Mobility | |
Power plant | Rolls-Royce CV12 26 litre diesel 1200 hp (895 kW) |
Suspension | hydropneumatic (Hydrogas) |
Road speed | 56 km/h (37 mph) |
Power/weight | hp/tonne |
Range | 450km (on road) |
The British FV4030/4 Challenger 1 was the main battle tank (MBT) of the British Army from 1983 until superseded by the Challenger 2 in the mid 1990s.
Contents |
[edit] History
The Challenger was built by the Royal Ordnance Factories (ROF). In 1986 ROF Leeds (and the Challenger production line) were acquired by Vickers Defence Systems (later Alvis Vickers). The Challenger design by the former Military Vehicles and Engineering Establishment (MVEE) near Chobham in Surrey originated in an Iranian order for an improved version of the stalwart Chieftain line of tanks in service around the world. These were the Chieftain Mk5(P)- FV4030/1, FV4030/2 Shir (Lion)1 and 4030/3 Shir 2. With the fall of the Shah of Iran and the collapse of the UK MBT80 project, the British Army became the customer and the tank was further developed by MVEE to meet Western European requirements. For a short time the tank was named "Cheviot" before becoming "Challenger", a name reused from a cruiser tank of the Second World War.
The most revolutionary aspect of the Challenger 1 design was its Chobham armour which gave protection far superior to any monolithic Rolled Homogeneous Armour (RHA), which was the then standard of tank armour material. This armour has been adopted by others, most notably the American M1 Abrams. Additionally the Hydrogas suspension fitted provided outstanding cross-country performance through the long suspension arm travel and controlled bump and rebound behaviour offered.
Challenger 1 competed in the Canadian Army Trophy Competition in 1987. It scored more direct hits than its competitors, but the poor fire control system and sights caused it to be the slowest firer, and it was placed last in the league tables. As a result the requirement for a new MBT was issued. Proposals put forward for the new specification included an improved Challenger from Vickers, the American M1 Abrams, the French Leclerc, and the German Leopard 2.
The Vickers Defence Systems design, designated Challenger 2, was eventually selected. This tank was significantly more capable than its predecessor, based on the same basic MVEE-designed hull but with a new turret based on the Vickers Private Venture Mk7 design and improved Chobham armour.
[edit] Combat service
180 Challenger tanks were deployed to Saudi Arabia for Operation Granby, the UK operation in the Gulf War. The Challenger claimed 300 kills against armoured vehicles for no losses. It also has the distinction of the longest range tank-to-tank kill in military history, destroying an Iraqi tank at a range of 2.5 miles (4 km).
[edit] Operators
Issued first to The Royal Hussars (PWO)
- United Kingdom, replaced by Challenger 2.
- Jordan, 392 Challenger 1, known locally as al-Hussein. Multiple local variants.
[edit] External links
Modern (post WW2) UK armoured fighting vehicles |
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Wheeled vehicles |
Ferret Scout Car | Fox Reconnaissance Vehicle | Saladin Armoured Car | Saracen APC |
FV1611 "Pig" | Saxon | Mastiff PPV |
Armoured personnel carriers and infantry fighting vehicles |
FV432 | Warrior | FV103 Spartan | Stormer | FV104 Samaritan | FV105 Sultan |
Light tanks and anti-tank vehicles |
FV101 Scorpion | FV107 Scimitar | Sabre | FV102 Striker | FV438 Swingfire |
Self-propelled artillery |
FV433 Abbot | AS-90 |
Main battle tanks |
Centurion | Conqueror | Chieftain | Challenger 1 | Challenger 2 |
UK unarmoured or non-fighting vehicles |