Fire control and vision The gunner is provided with a Nanoquest L30 telescopic laser sight as his main sight. This sight is mounted through the rotor co-axially with the main gun, thus eliminating the errors normally associated with mechanical linkages. The monocular sight has a magnification of ×10 and is fitted with a
Nd-YAG laser rangefinder and a
cathode-ray tube for injection of fire-control data and the thermal image when selected. In addition to his main sight, the gunner is also provided with a Vickers Instruments GS10
periscope sight mounted in the turret roof and providing a wide-angle field of view and is used for surveillance and target acquisition. The tank commander is provided with a ring of six fixed ×1 periscopes around his hatch to give all-around vision. The commander’s main sight is a French SFIM VS 580-10 panoramic day sight that allows him to scan through a full 360 degrees without moving his head. Two degrees of magnification; ×3 and ×10, are provided and the gyrostabilised head enables the commander to hold the sight accurately on the target from the moving vehicle. An Nd-YAG laser rangefinder incorporated in the sight enables the commander to engage targets and to fire on the move. Indicators in the commander’s sight right eyepiece show the position of the sight axis, and the gun axis. Fire-control information from the computer and laser is displayed on the left eyepiece. When used in the surveillance mode the commander has the facility to align his main sight with any one of his six periscopes. This is achieved by pushing a button mounted under each periscope. A gyrostabilised Dutch
Philips UA 9090 panoramic
thermal sight is mounted on the turret roof. This provides a thermal picture on 625-lines monitors for both the commander and gunner. An aiming mark injected into the sight picture enables the sight to be used for engaging targets in the normal way. The loader has a single-piece hatch cover that opens to the rear, in front of which is an AFV No 30 Mark 1 observation periscope.
Armament The main armament consisted of a
Royal Ordnance L11A5 120 mm rifled gun, it was fitted with an experimental rigid thermal sleeve optimized for hot weather operations, it was made of a new material called
Fibrelam, it was also featured on the Vickers
Valiant MBT. The turret left rear housed an ammunition compartment sealed off from the crew by an armoured bulkhead with a sliding door. 120 mm rounds such as the L23A1 APFSDS could be vertically stacked in rows. Other main armament options included the
Rheinmetall Rh-120 L44 and
GIAT G1 120 mm smoothbore guns. A total of 44
120×570mm rounds could have been carried, 15 of which were to stored in a separated compartment in the turret bustle behind the loader station. A 7.62-mm McDonnel-Douglas Helicopter Chain Gun mounted co-axially to the left of the main gun is belt-fed from an ammunition bin that is replenished by the loader. A 12.7-mm anti-aircraft machine-gun is available as optional equipment.
Protection The protection is provided by British
Chobham armour. The crew area of the turret and the hull front are protected over a frontal arc of plus or minus 30 degrees about the center line from APDS and
APFSDS up to 120 mm caliber,
anti-tank guided missiles such as the
MILAN and the
Swingfire and man-portable anti-tank weapons such as the
Carl Gustaf and the
RPG-7. The turret right rear housed an
NBC air filtration system made by Westair Dynamics. A set of 66 mm grenade dischargers were mounted on either sides of the turret and were later relocated on the turret cheeks. The Mark 7 has three features that reduces the likelihood of its detection by night sights and other heat-sensing devices. These are its coat of
infra-red reflective paint; the mixing of the hot exhaust gases with the cooling air before discharge; and a new design of thermal sleeve.
Mobility The hull of the Leopard 2 incorporates a
MTU MB 873 Ka-501
V12 diesel engine rated at at 2600
RPM. The engine is cooled by two annular radiators mounted horizontally above the transmission. The
Renk HSWL 354 gearbox features four forward and two reverse gears and its hydrostatic steering mechanism provides regenerative steering at all steering radii. The suspension is of the torsion-bar type with seven dual rubber-tyred road wheels on each side. The first, second, third, sixth and seventh wheel stations incorporate rotary
shocks absorbers.
Versions •
Vickers Mk. 7/1 : original version, it was successfully tested in Egypt in 1985. •
Vickers Mk. 7/2 : new turret with improved armour protection and fire control system for better fire-on the-move capability. The new turret is designed to better suit the 1.98 m turret ring of the Leopard 2 hull instead of the 2.15 m of the
Vickers Valiant. ==See also==