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The Sabra (Hebrew: סברה, "prickly pear") is an extensively upgraded M60 tank developed by Israel Military Industries. [3] The Mk II version of this upgrade package was used in one of the Turkish Army's modernization programs. The Sabra is known as the M60T in Turkish service. [2]
170 M60A1 tanks were upgraded to the M60TM standard. Some were lost in Syria. [106] All M60T tanks will be upgraded to M60T1 standard under TIYK program. Ongoing upgrade. [107] [108] M60 Patton United States: 105 mm M68E1 gun M60A3 TTS 650 [99] 105mm MZK gun M60A3 TIYK Will be upgraded under TIYK program. [109] M48 Patton United States: 105 mm ...
The M60A4 was the proposed upgrade of the M60A3 TTS for the National Guard that emerged from the M60AX study conducted by the ARNG Tracked Vehicle Task Force [98] with a projected cost of $750,000 per tank. The upgrade would have included improved protection, automotive performance and combat effectiveness, but retained the same M68E1 gun as ...
The upgrade was marketed at those M60 users with the industrial capability to convert the tanks themselves. The M60-2000/120S was a GDLS supplied conversion kit that married the turret of the M1A1 variant of the M1 Abrams to the M60A1 hull of the M60, offering many features of the M1A1 Abrams to existing M60 users at a reduced cost.
M60 tank non US-operators are the non U.S. nations that operate or used the M60 Main Battle Tank. The M60 tank entered service with the U.S. military in 1960 and served until 1991 and as a training aid until 2005. During this time it was the primary tank of the U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps. The M60 tank was exported to 26 other nations, and ...
The IPO was priced above the company's previously indicated range of $65 to $67 and values it at around $6.30 billion, according to Reuters calculations. The U.S. IPO market, which was impacted by ...
Replaced the M60 A3 in 1997. Will be subject to a combat value increase in the near future. ... 3rd tank generation Czech upgrade of T-72, produced 2003-2006 ...
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.