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Like the Leo phone the 031's would use, is there a need for a similar phone on the back of a LAV?
Quagmire said:I was thinking more CQB in a valley or tight defile where a radio isn't always handy. I guess I'm the only one.
Yes there is. I can say this from experience. It's a very good way for a dismounted element to talk to the crew commander to indicate targets without jumping on radio bandwidth.Quagmire said:Like the Leo phone the 031's would use, is there a need for a similar phone on the back of a LAV?
recceguy said::warstory: I remember watching a young Platoon Officer trying to talk to our Tp Offr on the ITT. Got distracted and tucked it into his webbing instead of putting it back in the box. The Centurion didn't move that fast, but there was no way he was keeping up. The line broke after dragging him through a couple of ruts ;D
+1. There's enough people who think they're important clogging the airwaves as it is.vonGarvin said:Yes there is. I can say this from experience. It's a very good way for a dismounted element to talk to the crew commander to indicate targets without jumping on radio bandwidth.
Aussies Prefer to Phone
The M-1 tanks Australia is buying will come equipped with a phone on the rear fender, so the infantry can easily talk to the tank crew. The external intercom was a Second World War innovation that was missing from the Abrams until quite recently, because M-1 designers in the 1980s assured everyone that the infantry would have plenty of radios for communicating with the tank crews and the phone was obsolete. It didn't always work out that way, and most other nations continued to have the external phone, snug in its own little waterproof box.
One of the main reasons for the upgrade is precise identification of enemy targets. Prior to the war, the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force requested an infantry “grunt” phone in the back of the tank so that Marines could talk to the tank crew over the platform’s intercom, said Gaskill. This phone is an old handset tied into the vehicle’s intercom system.
“A three-star general at 1 MEF remembered the M-60 [which used to have these phones] and went out, and bought enough kits to put on the tanks,” Gaskill recalled. It was a “phenomenal success.” The Marine Corps is now looking at trying to put the phone on all its tanks, he said. “We had a debate over whether it should be wireless ... more than probably not,” he said.
The program office is examining a forward observer/forward air controller suite for the loader’s position. “We still trap the FA/FAC radios from the outside of the tank. It does not make a lot of sense, but we have had nowhere else to put them,” said Gaskill. “We are finally getting a lot smarter.”
The Marines took the spare storage box at the loader’s position, and added a couple of slots where radios could slide in, said Gaskill. “We built 15 prototypes they did not get installed in time to fight the war.”