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Al-Khalid/VT-1A | |
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Type | Main battle tank |
Place of origin | China / Pakistan |
Service history | |
In service | 2001 – present |
Used by | Operators |
Production history | |
Designer | Norinco |
Designed | 1993–1999 |
Manufacturer | Norinco (VT-1A/MBT-2000, Type 96-IIM) Heavy Industries Taxila (Al Khalid, Al Khalid-1)[1] |
Unit cost | $4.7 million – $5.8 million USD in 2011 |
Produced | 2001 – 2014 (Al-Khalid) 2020 – present (Al-Khalid-1) |
Variants | Pakistani:
Chinese:
|
Specifications | |
Mass | 46 t (51 short tons)[2] |
Length | 10.07 m (33 ft 0 in) |
Width | 3.50 m (11 ft 6 in) |
Height | 2.40 m (7 ft 10 in) |
Crew | 3 |
Armour | Composite armour, RHA, ERA[3] |
Main armament | Al-Khalid: 125 mm smoothbore gun, 39 rounds Al-Khalid I: 125 mm smoothbore gun, 49 rounds |
Secondary armament | Al-Khalid: 7.62 mm coaxial machine gun, 3000 rds 12.7 mm external AA machine gun, 500 rds[2] Al-Khalid I: 7.62 mm coaxial machine gun, 7,100 rds 12.7 mm external AA machine gun, 1,500 rds |
Engine | KMDB 6TD-2 6-cylinder diesel 1,200 hp (890 kW) |
Power/weight | 26 hp/ton[4] |
Transmission | 7 forward and 4 reverse gears, Semi-automatic |
Suspension | Torsion bar with hydraulic dampers |
Operational range | 500 km (310 mi) combat range[5] |
Maximum speed | 72 km/h (45 mph)[5][6] |
The Al-Khalid/VT-1A (Urdu: الخالد ٹینک—Al-Xālid Ṫaiŋk, pronounced [əlˈxaːlɪd̪ ʈɛːŋk], lit. 'The Eternal Tank') is a main battle tank family developed jointly by Norinco of China and Heavy Industries Taxila of Pakistan. The tank is based on the Type 90-II tank.[1] Around 310 Al-Khalid MBTs had been produced by 2014.[7] The tank has been exported to Bangladesh, Morocco and Myanmar by China. The VT-1A is also known as MBT-2000.
The Bangladesh Army ordered 44 MBT-2000s from China in 2011.[8][9] The Norinco-made MBT-2000 is also used by the Royal Moroccan Army.[10] It was trialled by the Peruvian Army for possible acquisition, but was not purchased due to financial problems.[11]
Operated by a crew of three and armed with a 125 mm smooth-bore tank gun that is reloaded automatically, the tank uses a fire-control system and night-fighting equipment.[12] Al-Khalid is named after the 7th-century Muslim commander Khalid bin al-Walid (592–642 AD).[13][14]
The current production variant of the Al-Khalid uses a diesel engine and transmission supplied by the KMDB design bureau of Ukraine.[12][15] The first production models entered service with the Pakistan Army in 2001. The country placed an order with Ukraine to further upgrade the tanks with a new engine.[16]
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