BTR-D | |
---|---|
Type | Airborne Amphibious Multi-Purpose Tracked Armoured Personnel Carrier |
Place of origin | Soviet Union/Russia |
Service history | |
In service | 1974–present |
Used by | See Operators |
Wars | Soviet–Afghan War Russian invasion of Ukraine[1] |
Production history | |
Designer | Volgograd Tractor Factory |
Designed | Early 1970–1974 |
Manufacturer | Volgograd Tractor Factory |
Produced | 1974 – ? (out of production) |
Variants | See Variants |
Specifications (BTR-D) | |
Mass | 8 tonnes 8.5 tonnes (combat weight) |
Length | 6.74 m (22.1 ft) |
Width | 2.94 m[2] |
Height | 1.67 m[3][4] |
Crew | 3 (commander, driver and bow machine gunner) (+ 10 troops) |
Armor | 15 mm at 78° upper hull front[citation needed][5] |
Main armament | Pintle-mounted automatic grenade launchers (AGS-17, AGS-30 or AGS-57) and/or machine guns (PKM, 6P41, "Utyos" or "Kord"). |
Secondary armament | 2×7.62 mm PKB bow general purpose machine guns (2,000 rounds) |
Engine | 5D-20 6-cylinder 4-stroke V-shaped liquid cooled 15.9-litre diesel 245 hp (180 kW) at 2,600 rpm |
Power/weight | 30.1 hp/tonne (22.5 kW/tonne) 28.4 hp/tonne (21.3 kW/tonne) (loaded with equipment) |
Suspension | torsion-bar |
Ground clearance | Adjustable 100 mm to 450 mm |
Fuel capacity | 300 l |
Operational range | 500 km (road)[3][4] 116 km (water) |
Maximum speed | 61 km/h (road)[3][4] 35 km/h (cross country)[3][4] 10 km/h (swimming)[3][4] |
The BTR-D is a Soviet airborne multi-purpose tracked armoured personnel carrier. It was introduced in 1974 and first seen by the West in 1979 during the Soviet–Afghan War. BTR-D stands for Bronetransportyor Desanta (БТР-Д, Бронетранспортер Десанта, literally "armoured transporter of the Airborne").[6] It is based on the BMD-1 airborne IFV. NATO gave it the designation BMD M1979.[2][3][4]