KTO Rosomak
KTO Rosomak | |
---|---|
300px | |
Place of origin | Finland |
Service history | |
Used by | Poland |
Specifications | |
Weight | 22,000 kg (49,000 lb) |
Length | 7.7 m (25 ft) |
Width | 2.8 m (9 ft 2 in) |
Height | 2.3 m (7 ft 7 in) |
Crew | 3(commander, driver, gunner) 8 passengers |
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Main
armament |
1 × 30×173 mm ATK Mk44 Bushmaster II gun 1 × 12.7 mm WKM-B or 1 × 40mm Mk 19 in Rosomak M3 |
Secondary
armament |
1 × 7.62×51mm NATO UKM-2000C coaxial general purpose machine gun |
Engine | DI 12 Scania Diesel 360 kW (480 hp) or 405 kW (543 hp) |
Power/weight | 15.6 kW/t (21.2 PS/t) (max weight) |
Suspension | 8×8 wheeled |
Operational
range |
800 km (500 mi) |
Speed | over 100 km/h (60 mph) on land up to 10 km/h (6.2 mph) in water |
The KTO Rosomak (KTO for Kołowy Transporter Opancerzony – pol. Wheeled Armored Vehicle; Rosomak is Polish for Wolverine) is 8×8 multi-role military vehicle produced by WZM S.A. (Wojskowe Zakłady Mechaniczne Spółka Akcyjna w Siemianowicach Śląskich – lit. Military Mechanical Works Joint Stock Company in Siemianowice Śląskie). The vehicle is a licensed variant of Patria's Armored Modular Vehicle.
Contents
History
In December 2002, the Polish Ministry of National Defense signed a contract to buy 690 Patria AMV vehicles, to be manufactured in Poland. The main competitors of the AMV were the MOWAG Piranha and Steyr Pandur. As part of the initial order of 690 vehicles were to be delivered in two basic variants: 313 combat IFV and 377 transport/special base vehicles. In October 2013 order increased to 997 for delivery between 2014 and 2019,[1] vehicles will be delivered in following versions:
- 359 combat vehicles armed with a 30 mm gun turret, some also armed with Spike ATGM;[2]:{{{3}}}
- 122 combat vehicles armed with an unmanned 30 mm gun turret and Spike ATGM;[3]
- 516 base line vehicles used as a base for other variants.
The name Rosomak (Polish for Wolverine) was chosen following a contest organized by the Nowa Technika Wojskowa magazine. The Rosomak will replace obsolete OT-64 SKOT APCs and partially the BWP-1 IFV currently in service with Polish Land Forces.[2]
Variants
KTO Rosomak
Infantry fighting vehicle variant with to Oto Melara Hitfist-30P gun turret armed with 30 mm ATK Mk 44 chain gun and 7.62mm NATO UKM-2000C machine gun. The turret has advanced fire control system with thermal sight and Obra laser warning system connected to six 81 mm 902A ZM Dezamet smoke grenade launchers.
KTO Rosomak-M1M
Infantry fighting vehicle variant modified for war in Afghanistan equipped with additional steel-composite armor, upgraded communications, wire cutters in front of driver and commander hatch, video cameras showing back and sides of vehicle on two LCD screens in troop compartment, Pilar system that detects the direction of fire. Because of additional armor this variant cannot float and has no water propellers. This variant was further upgraded to standard known as M1M. Most noticeable change is addition of QinetiQ RPGNet anti RPG net and new "sand" camouflage. Other changes include installation of Duke anti IED system and Blue Force Tracking BMS system (systems on loan from US Army). All older ("green") Rosomaks in M1 standard also received RPG Net.
KTO Rosomak-M3
Armored personnel carrier variant modified for mission in Afghanistan equipped with similar task equipment (including additional armor) as M1 variant. The main difference is that this variant is equipped with OSS-D open turret with 40 mm Mk-19 grenade launcher or 12.7 mm NSW/WKM-B heavy machine gun.
KTO Rosomak-WEM
(WEM for Wóz Ewakuacji Medycznej – lit. Medical Evacuation Vehicle) – armored ambulance vehicle with crew of 3, capable of transporting 3 injured soldiers on stretchers and an additional four in sitting position. The WEM-M variant for Afghanistan was equipped with additional armor and RPGNet same as in M1M variant.
KTO Rosomak-S
Armored personnel carrier variant for two anti-tank teams armed with Spike anti-tank guided missile.
KTO Rosomak-WD
(WD for Wóz Dowodzenia – lit. Command Vehicle) – command vehicle for battalion commander. Demo vehicle prepared by WB Electronics was shown in late 2008.
KTO Rosomak-Łowcza
Air defence command vehicle equipped with Łowcza system. Similar to ZWD-10R Łowcza-3.
Combat history
- War in Afghanistan (2001–14)
- The Polish Land Forces contingent, which was a part of the International Security Assistance Force operated over 100 KTO Rosomak vehicles (including 5 medivac) during the Afghanistan War. The APC's were equipped with additional steel-composite armor. In early 2008 a Polish Rosomak serving in Afghanistan (the version with upgraded armor) was attacked by the Taliban. The vehicle was hit by two RPG-7 rockets, but it managed to fire back and then returned to base without any help required.[4] In June 2008 a Rosomak was attacked by Taliban and was hit in its frontal armor with a RPG. The armour was not penetrated. In 2009 the first soldier was reported killed while inside a Rosomak, after an improvised explosive device exploded under the vehicle; which rolled over and crushed the gunner sitting in the open turret, similar attacks had occurred before, but without casualties.
- European Union mission in Chad (2007–2008)
- European Union Force Chad/CAR
Operators
Poland is the sole user of KTO Rosomak but as the first export customer of Patria Oy AMV & WZM SA has the right to export the KTO Rosomak in some markets. In 2006 the KTO Rosomak was tested in Malaysia.
Units equipped with the KTO Rosomak:
- 12 Brygada Zmechanizowana (12th Mechanized Brigade) - Szczecin (second user, crews of the IIIrd rotation in Afghanistan are from this unit.)
- 17 Wielkopolska Brygada Zmechanizowana (17th Mechanized Brigade) – Międzyrzecz (first user, vehicles and crews for the first and second rotations in Afghanistan and Chad are from this unit.)
See also
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