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M2010 8×8 – Following the acquisition of 32 BTR-80As, North Korea appears to have produced and put into service a domestic clone of the vehicle of an unknown designation. It carries 3 crew and 7–8 troops and is fitted with an indigenous turret equipped with two 14.5 mm and one 7.62 mm machine guns.
Wheeled vehicle-launched bridge Unknown Russia: TMM-3M2 variant replacing TMM-3M entered service in 2016 and is based on a KAMAZ-53501 vehicle. [165] [166] [167] As of 10 May 2024 at least 26 have been lost in the Russian Invasion of Ukraine. [46] TMM-6: Wheeled vehicle-launched bridge Unknown Russia: GMZ-3: Minelayer: Unknown Soviet Union
The VPK-7829 Bumerang (Russian: Бумеранг, Boomerang) is a modular amphibious wheeled infantry fighting vehicle and armored personnel carrier being developed by Russian Military Industrial Company (MIC) for the Russian army. [4] [5]
Designed in the 1960s, the MAZ-543 was presented on 7 November 1965 during the Moscow Red Square military parade as part of SS-1с Scud B (9K72 Elbrus) system. The vehicle is powered by a 38.9 litre D12A-525 tank diesel engine producing around 525 horsepower, and gives a maximum road speed of 37 mph (60 km/h). There have been a number of variants.
The BTR-3 is an all-new production vehicle, rather than an upgrade of the existing in-service vehicle, such as the BTR-80. BTR-4 – Another Ukrainian eight-wheeled APC (2006) with rear doors designed in Ukraine by the Kharkiv Morozov Machine Building Design Bureau (SOE KMDB) as a private venture. The prototype was unveiled at the Aviasvit 2006 ...
One of the primary applications of these vehicles will be carrying RS-24 Yars missiles. [1] State tests of the Platforma-O family were completed in August 2018, and it entered service in March 2019. The Russian military is set to receive five versions of the vehicle: - 8x8: Payload capacity of 25 tons. - 12x12: Payload capacity of 50 tons.
The BTR-70 is powered by two petrol engines. Early production vehicles used 115 hp GAZ-69B 6-cylinder engines, but most vehicles have now been retrofitted with the more powerful ZMZ-49-05 V-8 engines. The vehicle is fully amphibious, propelled when afloat by a single water jet mounted at the rear of the hull.
MZKT-7930 Astrolog (Russian: МЗКТ-7930 Астролог) is a Russian army 8×8 transporter-erector-launcher designed and developed by the MZKT in Belarus.It was first developed in the early 1990s, with the first prototype being made in 1994 (although it would not see service until 2000 when it was adopted by Russia).