Jump to content

BTR-T

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tea4life (talk | contribs) at 11:20, 7 August 2023 (Improved grammar). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

BTR-T
A Russian BTR-T
TypeHeavy armored personnel carrier
Place of originRussia
Production history
DesignerOmsktransmash
Designed1994-1996
ManufacturerOmsktransmash
Unit cost$640,110 (with 30mm cannon) & $440,180 (without cannon)
Produced1997 (cancelled)
Specifications
Mass38.5 tonnes
Length6.45 m
Width3.27 m
Height2.4 m
Crew2 (+5 passengers)

Armor600 mm max with ERA
Main
armament
Turret with either 2A42 30mm autocannon and 9M113 Konkurs ATGMs or 2A42 and AGS-30 or twin 30mm 2A38M autocannons or 12.7mm NSV machine gun and AGS-17D grenade launcher
Enginediesel V-55 with 12 cylinders
620hp
Power/weight18,70hp/tonne
Suspensiontorsion bar
Operational
range
500 km
Maximum speed 50 km/h off-road: 25 km/h

The BTR-T (Russian: Бронетранспортёр-Тяжелый (Bronetransporter-Tyazhelyy), ‘Armoured Transporter–Heavy’) was a Russian heavy APC (armored personnel carrier), designed by the Design Bureau of Transport Machine-Building (Omsktransmash) state-run production association.

Description

The vehicle is based on the hull of the T-55 tank and answers the need for a heavy, well protected and well armed vehicle adapted to urban combat.[1] The need for a heavy APC appeared after the First Chechen War during which APCs like the BTR-80 were annihilated in urban areas at the hands of Chechen rebels using RPG shoulder-launched anti-tank weapons. Consequently, the design incorporates the T-55 tank's thick hull armor, with built-in Kontakt-5 reactive armour. It also had a heavier armament (similar to the BMP-2) with sufficient elevation to engage targets in multi-story buildings.

First appearance of this vehicle was in exhibition in Omsk in 1997. Due to lack of funding, the vehicle never had adequate testing and never entered service in the Russian military. There is no information about the number of vehicles converted. No export contracts have been signed.

Design

The choice of the T-55 hull rather than that of a more modern tank was decided on as an efficiency measure and also probably to validate a conversion for the many T-55s in use around the world. It was influenced by Israel's IDF Achzarit that created virtually the same modifications in the 1980s.

After removing T-55 gun and heavy turret, designers used a light, low-profile turret with a basket under it. The gunner was supposed to sit in that basket and rotate together with the turret. By removing stocks of 100 mm ammunition and using a space where empty shells were discarded inside the vehicle, designers made a space for five fully-equipped infantrymen (plus driver and gunner). That was not enough to make it a decent personnel carrier. With turret and armament similar to BMP-2 and 5+2 people inside, it turned out to be the first Russian heavy IFV rather than a heavy APC.

The roof plate of the hull was replaced with a new one that had four hatches for entering and leaving the vehicle. Frontal armor, side armor and roof plate were reinforced with Kontakt-5 ERA blocks. The side of the vehicle was reinforced with spaced armor and rubber side skirts. Armored fuel tanks were positioned in the rear of the vehicle. Floor armor plate was reinforced with anti-mine protection.

Armament

The turret can accommodate several weapon configurations:

See also

References

  1. ^ "BTR-T Heavy Armored Personnel Carrier". www.military-today.com.