Type 87
Contents
Description
The Twin 35 mm Self-Propelled Gun Type 87 is a Rank VI Japanese Self-Propelled Anti-Aircraft Gun
with a battle rating of 8.3 (AB/RB/SB). It was introduced in Update 1.67 "Assault". It is incredibly similar to the German Flakpanzer Gepard, using the same 35mm Oerlikon KDA Autocannons with a similar turret. The key difference being that the Type 87 uses the chassis of a Type 90, compared to the Gepard being on the Leopard 1 chassis.
The Type 87 performs fairly well at its rank, being able to effectively engage aircraft quite well thanks to its high rate of fire, quick turret traverse and radar systems. It is also capable of fighting lightly armoured tanks such as most infantry fighting vehicles (BMP, Warrior, M3 Bradley) and effectively killing them in seconds with its rapid fire guns. The Type 87's default belts have less penetration than its predecessor, the M42 Duster SDF, although this is not much of a difference (72mm on M42 compared to 68mm on Type 87), however the Type 87 gains the ability to fight other MBTs when it unlocks the Armour Piercing belts, which have 116mm of penetration at 100m. While this is not advised, it is an incredibly handy ability to have in an emergency.
The Type 87 is also extremely proficient at shooting down helicopters - the AH-1G is a common nuisance that the Type 87 has no difficulty in destroying.
General info
Survivability and armour
Armour type:
- Aluminum Alloy AMS 4050A (Turret)
- Rolled homogeneous armour (Hull)
Armour | Front (Slope angle) | Sides | Rear | Roof |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hull | 30 mm (78°) Front glacis 30 mm (21-63°) Lower glacis |
20 mm | 20 mm (16°) Top 20 mm (49°) Bottom |
15 mm |
Turret | 25 mm (6-37°) 20 mm (76°) Turret underside |
20 mm Turret side 10 mm Cannons |
15 mm (3°) | 15 mm 20 mm (69°) Turret underside |
Mobility
Mobility characteristic | ||
---|---|---|
Weight (tons) | Add-on Armor weight (tons) |
Max speed (km/h) |
30.5 | N/A | 50 (AB) |
45 (RB/SB) | ||
Engine power (horsepower) | ||
Mode | Stock | Upgraded |
Arcade | 1,023 | ____ |
Realistic/Simulator | 637 | 720 |
Power-to-weight ratio (hp/ton) | ||
Mode | Stock | Upgraded |
Arcade | 26.92 | __.__ |
Realistic/Simulator | 16.76 | 18.95 |
Armaments
Main armament
Main weapons are the 35 mm Oerlikon KDA autocannons, which are essentially the same as Gepard's. They are different from KDE gun variant of type 89, if you used it - they use completely different ammunition and fire much faster.
The guns are placed in center of a turret, so if you missed one shot, you probably missed both of them. For this reason SPAA relies more on precise lengthy bursts with enemy flight path prediction, rather than "fire a 30 shot burst there and forget about it" of Chieftain Marksman. You have more ammunition for the gun, than british equivalent, to compensate for this.
35 mm gun is slightly weaker than Bofors of M42, but keep in mind that you are hunting jets, and jets suffer much heavier stress from the speed they employ, which means that even one or two hits of 35 mm HEI-T will explode them or rip off their wings, which means that ultimately you just want to hit them once or twice, which 35 mm guns are much better at doing.
For ammunition you can choose main and secondary belts. Secondary belt only has 40 shells, but it can be used to unjam overheated guns or to protect yourself on capture point, as it rearms significantly faster: Default belt, which alternates API-T and HEI-T shells - can attack planes and light tanks alike. HEI-T does fatal damage to airplanes, but has 3 mm penetration, being useless against tanks. API-T penetration is about 64 mm at 100 m at flat angle. Keep in mind that it can fail to penetrate medium tanks. Against planes API-T does kinetic damage and may rip off their wings on a good hit. Anti-air belt, which alternates 3 HEI-T and 1 API-T - 75% of this belt does critical damage to aircrafts, but does nothing to ground vehicles. Anti-tank belt, which alternates 3 API-T and 1 HEI-T - 75% of this belt does significant damage to light tanks, but does less damage to aircraft. APDS anti-tank belt, which consists purely of APDS. APDS has better penetration value, easily penetrating 100 mm at 100 m at flat angle, penetrating even decently protected tanks from the side and can threaten lightly armoured tanks even at 2km range. Cannot be chosen as a main belt.
Radars
The Type 87 is equipped with a MPDR 12 search radar and an Albis tracking radar. Both radars are mounted at the rear of the turret, with the search radar mounted on top of an arm and the tracking radar mounted at the base of the arm. The radar system is capable of tracking a target while scanning, but can only track targets within a 200° arc from the front of the turret. It is not possible to fold the radars at this time.
Search radar of this tank may often fail to catch bypassing planes at closer ranges, which can be still locked on by tracking radar. In such case you can try to go to sniper mode and aim guns at enemy aircraft, then press "lock on" to trigger manual tracking radar scan (will be visible by a quick sweep on radar display). If it failed, then enemy plane have way too low relative speed to be consistently tracked.
MPDR 12 - Target Detection Radar | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maximum Detection Range |
Minimum Detection Range |
Max Azimuth Scan Angle |
Max Elevation Scan Angle |
Minimum relative speed |
15,000 m | 500 m | 360° | ??? | 10 m/s (36 km/h) |
Albis - Target Tracking Radar | ||||
Maximum Tracking Range |
Minimum Tracking Range |
Azimuth Tracking Angle |
Elevation Tracking Angle |
Minimum target speed |
15,000 m | 75 m | ±100° | -20°/+85° | 15 m/s (54 km/h) |
Usage in battles
As an Anti-Aircraft vehicle, you should push with your team and defend cap points by protecting allies from aircraft with your powerful 35 mm guns. It should not be a problem to stay away from main battle unless you are being pushed or being overran. In case if you see enemy light SPG or light tank, you can try to destroy them as well.
Despite having radar, staying too far away from allies in arcade mode may backfire, as shells still take some time to reach enemy aircraft and hostile bombers only have to be 1.8 km away from them to drop bombs in the most efficient way possible, and it doesn't take long time for them to reach that distance. If enemy aircraft is constantly wiggling, radar supported aim will also go all over the place, so try to guess where they are going, or press them to force them to change direction to one away from your allies.
In case if you actually got attacked by ground forces, you should then aim for cannon barrels and tracks of enemy vehicles. Your hull armour may deflect inbound shots if angled correctly, but don't expect your turret to do the same, as its armor is very thin and generally will be penetrated by everything at your battle rating and rank. Keep in mind, that your tank is a hull breakable vehicle, so avoid being hit By HEAT-FS rounds or by large kinetic shells into the engine compartment area.
Use Hydropneumatic suspension to get better search radar coverage and gun depression on your targets, or to keep yourself standing flat. Standing flat is important, as being angled too much may add horizontal targeting error.
Pros and cons
Pros
- Powerful, fast firing 35mm twin Oerlikon KDA cannon
- Quick with the Type 74 chassis, up to 58 km/h
- Hydropneumatic suspension with the Type 74 chassis
- Can engage tanks from their sides
Cons
- -5 degrees of gun depression (bad compared to the Flakpanzer Gepard)
- 30mm armor maximum
- Any main ammunition belts other than the default cost 6600 silver lions
- You can only have one secondary belt selected with a meager ammo count
- Spinning radar dish may make you more visible in tank realistic battles
History
Describe the history of the creation and combat usage of the ground vehicle in more detail than in the introduction. If the historical reference turns out to be too big, take it to a separate article, taking a link to an article about the vehicle and adding a block "/ History" (example: https://wiki.warthunder.com/(Vehicle-name)/History) and add a link to it here using the main
template. Be sure to reference text and sources by using <ref>
, as well as adding them at the end of the article.
Media
Skins and camouflages for the Type 87 from live.warthunder.com.
See also
Links to the articles on the War Thunder Wiki that you think will be useful for the reader, for example:
- reference to the series of the vehicles;
- links to approximate analogues of other nations and research trees.
External links
Japan anti-aircraft vehicles | |
---|---|
Ke-Ni Derivatives | Ta-Se · So-Ki |
Wheeled | Type 94 |
Tracked | SUB-I-II |
Radar SPAAG | Type 87 |
Missile SPAA | Type 93 · Type 81 (C) |
USA | ▅M16 MGMC · ▅M19A1 · ▅M42 |