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Nothing has fallen to pieces(it can happen only in your imagination). if you have cramped internal volume with tight space the crew will not be able to withstand soaring temp in summer desert condition.And in those soaring temp most of the electronics malfunction (without AC, but having ac is not a cure ,in tank skirmishes the AC will be the first system to stop functioning as it has exposed parts out side) .T-55 and M48 again. all LOS thickness. this time side/rear protection:
T-55:
side turret: 130mm front, 60mm rear
rear turret: 60mm
side hull: 80mm upper, 20mm lower (around suspension arms)
rear hull: 60mm
M48:
side turret: 76mm
rear turret: 51mm
side hull: 76mm over crew compartment, 51mm over engine compartment
rear hull: 51mm
looks like the smaller lighter T-55 has thicker side and rear armour than the M48.
and thus your argument about more weight = more armour falls to pieces.
Also there is no safe place to mount APU in T-90, if you mount in whatever place available outside of the tank it will be the first one to be hit in tank skirmishes and stop functioning. So network centric capacity is not available when it is needed most.
Also to avoid the typical crew squating on Ammo T-90 situation some arrangement for safe ammo storage is needed .It will add it's own bit to volume requirement and hence more weight is needed in the same LOS armor needed to cover the extra volume.
You are feigning ignorance about the above important tank efficiency enhancing and crew survival features and repeating the same old arguments that smaller russian tank has same or better LOS and armor protections .
Ofcourse they have a better LOS armor protection for no modern tank efficiency enhancing and crew survival features design requirements of T-90, but in battle this same LOS armor protection alone won't cover all the critical weakness of T-90 in these key areas.
To avoid this we need more internal volume and hence more weight on armor and all the supporting superstructure is my point of view.
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