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Encyclopedia > RHA (armour)

RHA stands for Rolled Homogeneous Armour. Through the end of World War 2, the armour for almost all tanks and other armoured vehicles was sheets of steel. Increasing the protection on a vehicle meant adding thicker sheets of steel, increasing the vehicle's weight and reducing its mobility. Since then, other forms of armour, incorporating empty spaces and materials such as ceramics or depleted uranium in addition to steel, have been developed.


The term is used currently as RHAe (Rolled Homogeneous Armour equivalency) to give a rough estimate of either the penetrative capability of a projectile or the protective capability of a type of armour which may or may not be steel.


This technique of estimating the protective capacity of armour by calculating how thick rolled steel would have to be (in millimeters) to afford the same degree of protection has been illustrated by some with the following:


"Using RHA equivalencies to measure the protective capacity of armour is a lot like weighing a pig in Iowa. You lay a board over a fence, and you put the pig on one side, and a load of bricks on the other. Then, you guess the weight of the bricks."


  Results from FactBites:
 
Rolled homogeneous armour - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (295 words)
Rolled homogeneous armour, or RHA, is a theoretical basic type of steel plate, used as a baseline to compare the effectiveness of military vehicle armour.
Through the end of World War II, the type of armour for almost all tanks and other armoured vehicles was sheets of steel.
The more recent term RHAe (Rolled Homogeneous Armour equivalency) is used when giving a rough estimate of either the penetrative capability of a projectile or the protective capability of a type of armour which may or may not be steel.
Armour Protection (985 words)
This armour type follow the general principle of "any projectile will be defeated be the right combination of obstacles".
Although, this is the preferred type of armour of modern tanks, no examples of this kind of armour has been actually fitted to SA armor, with the exception of some APCs, like chilean M113 command post vehicles in the form of passive appliqué armour.
During the last stages of the cold war, the front composite armour of the soviet T-72A(M1) MBT was considered a major threat to western gun makers.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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