
Those side skirts are going to make fixing tracks suck....
Those can still be thrown or break. And the side skirts are absolutely in the way for that.Not much to fix usually. DRDO has effectively reinvented Soucy-style, one-piece rubber tracks for the Zorawar.
The bolt on side skirts are to provide buoyancy for amphibious operations. During earlier trials, the skirts haven't been present.![]()
Those side skirts are going to make fixing tracks suck....
Soucy itself is claiming a weight capacity of up to 42 tons, by their own estimation an upgrade option for a Leopard I. As recollect, rubber tracks can save several tons of weight over conventional steel tracks, which had to be a major selling point. I don't know where India is sourcing the rubber tracks, or if Soucy has direct completion? Still, it seems that 25 tons is within the technical limits of the rubber track concept.Not much to fix usually. DRDO has effectively reinvented Soucy-style, one-piece rubber tracks for the Zorawar.
... I don't know where India is sourcing the rubber tracks, or if Soucy has direct completion? Still, it seems that 25 tons is within the technical limits of the rubber track concept.
I don't think that's much of an issue. It's just a different specification they're building to.AFAIK, DRDO is still looking for a manufacturer for their track design for the Zorawar. There are domestic rubber track makers (but mainly for the agricultural vehicle market).
I'd rather have however long a chunk of rubber tracks equals about 50kg as the standard unit to replace. 2-4 bolts at each end of the length.I was mistaken, however, when I said "one-piece rubber tracks for the Zorawar." The DRDO-designed units are, in fact, Segmented Rubber Tracks (SRT). And, I suppose, that distinction is why the Indian media is using superlatives like "innovative" or "revolutionary" to describe this track system.
So, as it turns out, Indian Army tankers will be replacing individual track links somewhere near the LAC!
I don't think that's much of an issue. It's just a different specification they're building to.
DRDO is probably complaining about the cost the existing makers are wanting to charge for this.
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Granted. So you'd need to mess with not only rubber formula but also extra bits like the steel braid and bolt connections cast into the tracks.Durability at speed would be my concern. Surface conditions on mountains roads near the LAC are going to be a lot less forgiving than farmers' fields. (Agricultural CRTs are optimised to reduce soil compaction rather than for durability on asphalt or over rocky surfaces.)
Once you have everything figured out, it's a matter of finding which companies can make the tracks for you. Not just "who has the technical capabilities" but "who has the production capacity" and "who is interested in dealing with government contracts."DRDO may or may not have cost issues but we all know how dragged out the RfP process, etc., can get. To make CRTs work for military use, Soucy had to get the rubber formula just right (part of why it took them decades to develop successful military band tracks). DRDO now needs to find Indian manufacturers who can do the same for SRTs.
As well as who has the right political contacts, I fear.Once you have everything figured out, it's a matter of finding which companies can make the tracks for you. Not just "who has the technical capabilities" but "who has the production capacity" and "who is interested in dealing with government contracts."
Hopefully not, but it sure seems like "who has the right political contacts" matters more than "technical capabilities" or "production capacity" in Indian defense contracting...As well as who has the right political contacts, I fear.