Strunkriidiisk
THE LEGEND
- Location
- Canada
- Pronouns
- He/Him
Your first design group wanted a harsh, angular forward array. With Yves backing them, the plan was to use a sharp, 45-degree leading edge to create four mirrored slopes of perfectly homogeneous rolled armor plate of 35mm. The pilot would have an armored 'conning box' to place his head in with vision slits, and a top hatch. The sides would be flat 7mm sheet steel, with the hips protected by a set of stamped covers of the same hiding them. Internal protection would consist of placing the drive train in an armored alleyway of the same 35mm steel, the driver in a box of 10mm rolled steel, and the loader being issued a rosary in case of a penetrating hit. The largest issue with the design would be getting all that forward armor plate to stay welded to the frame, followed shortly by all the added nose weight.
The second team, by contrast, wanted a smooth, single-piece cast and gently sloping dome piece, of approximately 50mm, with an upper panel of 35mm. The pilot would sit, protected by the lower glacis, with his head and shoulders protected by the 35mm panels, with vision blocks and a topside hatch. The sides would have a tumblehome slope, composed of 15mm rolled steel, with no internal armor divisions. The hips would be shadowed by the tumblehome, and the rear would be protected with a downward-facing pair of skid plates in 35mm steel.
The last team, meanwhile, was simplest. Their plan was a single rolled and cemented 55mm plate, at 25-degree back slant, with a series of six bulletproof, tempered glass panels in a near-115mm thick array that was two panels wide and three deep (with the center at steep angle) to stop any incoming fire. There was also a conning box above, but it was marked 'secondary' on the armor proposal. The rest of the mecha would be covered in near-flat 15mm armor, with the sides protected by a thin, 4mm corrugated sheet steel layer of ablative armor to promote rifle fire ricochets. This skirt would also extend to completely enclose the hips.
Design 1 | Design 2 | Design 3 |
Pros - heavy frontal armour, effective ~70mm thickness depending on angle of attack; greatest protection for the front angle, which is most important. - internal divisions of armour - may improve kill-resistance - thickest hip armour | Pros - fewer individual armour plates means fewer points of potential failure/less chance of manufacturing flaws - more protection for rear section noted; good for the loader and the engine - more balanced outer armour distribution, with crew behind thicker sections | Pros - cheapest design - best visibility for the pilot? - armour skirt arguably best for protecting hip against enemy fire - ablative armour may be spaced(?) and foul shots that punch through |
Cons - thinnest side armour, no notable rear armour (so assume same as sides?); weakest against side and rear attack - leg armour may have more chance to let shots through to hip mechanisms - expensive, due to complexity of construction - may have pitch issues in the field | Cons - no sectioning - possible expense | Cons - no sectioning - less angled armour means less effective armour thickness |
Someone let me know if I'm completely off-base here, or feel free to offer additional suggestions.
@7734 are all these armour patterns projected to weigh about the same? Or how does the gross weight of each compare?
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