
M1 Abrams
The M1 Abrams is a third-generation American main battle tank designed by Chrysler Defense and named for General Creighton Abrams. Conceived for modern armored ground warfare and now one... Wikipedia
- Type: Main battle tank
- Place of origin: United States
- In service: 1980–present
- Used by: See Operators below
- Wars: Gulf War, War in Afghanistan, Iraq War, 2011 Egyptian revolution, War in Iraq, Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen, 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Designer: Chrysler Defense (now General Dynamics Land Systems)
- Designed: 1972–1975
- Manufacturer: Lima Army Tank Plant (since 1980), Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant (1982–1996), Egyptian Defense Company Tank Plant
- Unit cost: US$6.21 million (M1A2 / FY99) Estimated in 2016 as US$8.92 million (with inflation adjustment)
- Produced: 1979–present
- Number built: approx. 10,400
- Variants: See variants
- Length: Gun forward: 32.04 ft (9.77 m), Hull length: 26.02 ft (7.93 m)
- Width: 12 ft (3.66 m)
- Height: 8 ft (2.44 m)
- Crew: 4 (commander, gunner, loader, driver)
- Elevation: +20° -10°
- Traverse: 9 seconds/360 degrees
- Armor: Composite armor
- Main, armament: M1: 105 mm L/52 M68A1 rifled gun (55 rounds), M1A1: 120 mm L/44 M256A1 smoothbore gun (40 rounds), M1A2: 120 mm L/44 M256A1 smoothbore gun (42 rounds)
- Secondary, armament: 1 × 0.50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2HB heavy machine gun with 900 rounds, 2 × 7.62 mm (.308 in) M240 machine guns with 10,400 rounds (1 pintle-mounted, 1 coaxial)
- Engine: Honeywell AGT1500 multi-fuel turbine engine, 1,500 shp (1,120 kW)
- Power/weight: From 26.9 hp/t (20.05 kW/t) to 23.8 hp/t (17.74 kW/t)
- Transmission: Allison DDA X-1100-3B
- Suspension: High-hardness-steel torsion bars with rotary shock absorbers
- Ground clearance: M1, M1A1: 0.48 m, M1A2: 0.43 m (1.41 ft)
- Fuel capacity: 504.4 USgal
- Operational, range: M1A2, road: 426 km (264.7 mi), Cross country:
- Speed: M1A1, road: 45 mph (72.42 km/h) (governed), Off-road: 30 mph (48.28 km/h), M1A2, road: 67 km/h (41.63 mph) (governed), Off-road: 40 km/h (24.85 mph)
- Data source: DuckDuckGo