The M60 tank was clearly not perfect and was made obsolete by the M1 Abrams – a truly legendary tank. And yet, the old M60 is still around today serving in quite a few militaries around the world. Here is the story of the M60: If you’ve ever driven past a veterans’ memorial building, park, or museum, you may have noticed an American tank on the lawn. This is usually an M60 main battle tank – an armored beast that served the nation well for decades. But the M60 is no museum piece for many countries that still use it. The M60 just refuses to go away totally. It has served in the militaries of 22-nations since its introduction in 1960. Egypt still has 1,700 M60s, Turkey, 932, and Israel, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Thailand, and Bahrain field hundreds of them. But what makes this old tank so unique?
History of the M60
Development of the tank that became known as the M60 began in 1959, with at least 15,000 produced since then. The M60 was based on the M48 Patton, and the new design yielded many improvements in its engine, armor, main gun, turret, and hull. The United States depended on the M60 to be the go-to tank of the 1960s and 1970s, and it was made to face off against Soviet armor during that era of the Cold War before the M1 Abrams came along. The U.S. Army took the M60 out of service in 1997.
Baseline M60 Specs
The M60 had a 105mm rifled gun barrel. Armor was around six-inches thick with a homogenous steel hull. Four soldiers crewed the tank. A 7.62mm coaxial machine gun was used for enemy troops in the open. It could produce smoke to mask movement.
Twin diesel engines pumped out 750-horsepower with a top speed of 30-miles per hour on roads and a range of 300-miles.
M60 Variants Began Appearing
The M60A1 appeared in 1963 and served in the U.S. Army until 1980. This had a larger turret to give the crew more room. Designers installed better armor.
Engineers worked on the follow-on M60A2 to give it lower profile and a 152mm gun, but that work was stopped, and efforts were then focused on the M60A3. This was the model that became popular worldwide with U.S. allies. It had a computerized ballistics system, thermal sight, a new air filtration system, and a better laser range finder.
M60A3 Was a Hit
Over the years, defense contractors such as Raytheon and General Dynamics Land Systems have worked to upgrade the M60A3 and keep it running for countries who wish to have the most modern version. These features include 120mm smoothbore guns with updated fire control systems.
Israelis Depended on the M60, and It Saw Battle in the First Gulf War
