tbeard1999
SOC-14 1K
IMHO the designers of grav tanks made the error of thinking of them as flying tanks rather than heavily armored helicopters - which is the closes analogy to the grav tank.
Imagine an Apache with the armor of an Abrams.
An Apache with the armor of an Abrams would no longer be an Apache. Nor would it be required to *act* like an Apache, since a significant percentage of attack helicopter tactics exist to minimize helicopter vulnerabilities that would not exist with grav tanks.
IMHO the defining combat characteristics of attack helicopters are:
1. Airmobility.
2. Very light armor (even the Apache, one of the best protected helicopters in the world, is at least as vulnerable as the lightest armored vehicles). I'd add that most helicopter armor is designed to ensure crew survivability, rather than mission survivability. So the Apache can be rendered mission-incapable almost as easily as an unarmored helicopter. The difference is that the Apache will get back to base most of the time.
3. Very limited endurance.
4. Heavy armament but limited ammo (compared with Main Battle Tanks)
The defining combat characteristics of main battle tanks are:
1. Limited mobility (compared with attack helicopters).
2. Extremely heavy armor.
3. High endurance (compared with attack helicopters).
4. Heavy armament capable of defeating any armor likely to be encountered. Lots of ammunition (45-60 rounds vs 8-16 for attack helicopters).
The defining combat characteristics of Traveller grav tanks are:
1. Airmobility.
2. Extremely heavy armor.
3. High endurance (fusion power plants).
4. Heavy armament capable of defeating any armor likely to be encountered. Lots of ammunition.
At the end of the day, they are much more like highly mobile tanks, than well protected helicopters.
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