Israel: Merkava Tank Platoon (2025)

After the 1967 war, the purchase of modern military equipment became more difficult and the Israeli government decided to design, develop, and build an indigenous main battle tank. The design prioritised armour, armament and mobility in that order, with the key characteristic of the new tank being its armour and crew protection. The new design drew from the experience of ordnance experts, who had been upgrading and maintaining Israel’s older tanks, and the tank commanders who knew the combat capabilities they required.

The eventual design was the Merkava (Hebrew for chariot). The emphasis on crew protection led to the unique design aspect of the Merkava being its front mounted engine. This meant the crew were protected from the front by the tank’s front armour, the transmission, the engine, a layer of spaced armour, the fuel tank, and another layer of spaced armour. The Merkava 1, 2, and 3 are indigenous Israeli designs and are replacing the US and British designs that saw service in the 1967 and 1973 wars.

Like much of the IDF, the tankers of the Armoured Corps are conscripts doing their term of service for the defence of their nation. However, many volunteer to be part of this prestigious corps. All members undergo basic training of two months involving rigorous physical training, infantry weapons training, as well as psychological and physical evaluation. Those chosen to be tankers are sent to the IDF armoured school where they are trained to be drivers, gunners or signaller/loaders for a month. They are then dispatched to an armoured unit where they learn to work as a crew and to operate in platoons and at higher command levels. On completion of this training some are selected to become tank commanders and undergo further training on a tank commander course. Some of these go for further training to become tank platoon commanders and are selected for officer training.

Merkava 1
The fighting compartment of the Merkava tank did away with the traditional turret basket and used the full width of the hull, rather than isolating the driver from the commander, gunner and loader. The low turret was fitted with the M68 105mm rifled gun (the US version of the British L7). It was also fitted with a co-axial 7.62mm machine-gun and two more 7.62mm FN MAG anti-aircraft machine-guns at the loaders and commanders hatches. Finally an M2 .50 cal machine-gun was mounted over the main gun mantlet. This can be fired remotely by the gunner. A 60mm mortar was also fitted for firing smoke rounds.

After the 1982 Lebanon operations improvements were made to the Merkava 1 design, ball and chain armour was added to the rear of the turret as additional protection from infantry anti-tank weapons. In 1984 improved armoured side skirts and additional appliqué armour were added.

Merkava 2
The Merkava 2 was introduced in 1983. Its design took on many of the lessons learnt from the war in Lebanon in 1982. Layers of appliqué armour were added to the front and sides of the turret, the hull’s front armour was redesigned, the 60mm mortar could be reloaded internally, the side skirt armour was improved, and a number of other mechanical improvements were made to the design.

Merkava 3
The latest Merkava mark is the most powerful yet fielded by the IDF. In the hands of the well-drilled Israeli tankers this powerful main battle tank can deal with any enemy tank they are likely to encounter. Its 120mm IMI gun is more powerful than the 105mm gun of the previous models, able to deal with any of the Soviet designed tanks they may face in the hands of Arab forces, or any other enemy they may face.

The Merkava 3 has enough frontal armour to protect it from any known tank gun or anti-tank missile. It also has good side and top protection. Its armour system also incorporates composite armour technology to enhance its protection from HEAT and other shaped charge rounds. Its sophisticated stabiliser and fire control system give it great tactical mobility without a reduction of firepower on the move.

THIS PRODUCT CONTAINS:

5x Merkava 1, Merkava 2 or Merkava 3 Tanks

These miniatures are supplied unassembled and unpainted

Not recommended for children under 36 months due to small parts and essential pointed components. Battlefront miniatures are fine scale models designed for gamers and collectors. It is NOT A TOY and is not intended for sale to children under 14 years of age

Models supplied unpainted and require assembly. Scenery, glue, and paint not included. Contents may vary from those shown.

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For the assembly of plastic models, we recommend the use of precision sidecutters, a knife and poly cement.
For the assembly of resin and metal models, we recommend the use of sidecutters, a knife, micro-files and super glue.
For the assembly of thermoplastic and SiOCAST models, we recommend the use of sidecutters, a knife and super glue.

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Flames Of War and World War III miniatures are 1/100 or 15mm in scale.
Some miniatures, such as planes are 1/144 in scale.
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