BM-27 Uragan
BM-27 Uragan (9P140) | |
---|---|
BM-27 at the St Petersburg Artillery Museum | |
Type | Multiple rocket launcher |
Place of origin | Soviet Union |
Service history | |
In service | 1975 – present |
Used by | See Operators |
Wars |
Soviet war in Afghanistan, First and Second Chechen Wars, 2008 South Ossetia war, War in Donbass,[1] 2016 Armenian–Azerbaijani clashes |
Production history | |
Designer | Splav State Research and Production Enterprise |
Designed | 1970s |
Manufacturer | Splav State Research and Production Enterprise |
Produced | 1975 – present |
Variants | See Variants |
Specifications | |
Weight | 20 tonnes (44,092 lbs) |
Crew | 6 |
| |
Calibre | 220 mm (8.66 in) |
Barrels | 16 |
Effective firing range | 35 km (22 mi) |
Sights | PG-1 panoramic telescope |
| |
Engine | Two engines, with separate gearboxes and propeller shafts, that are longitudinally mounted, one on each side of vehicle immediately behind cab |
Suspension | 8×8 wheeled |
Operational range | 500 km (311 mi) |
The BM-27 Uragan (Russian: Ураган, "hurricane"; GRAU index 9P140) is a self-propelled multiple rocket launcher system designed in the Soviet Union. It began its service with the Soviet Army in the late 1970s, and was its first modern spin and fin stabilized heavy multiple rocket launcher.
Description
The BM-27 Uragan is capable of launching 220 mm rockets from 16 launch tubes mounted on the rear of a ZIL-135 8x8 chassis. This vehicle is extremely similar to that used in the FROG-7 free flight rocket system. It has two gasoline engines that power its 20 tonnes to a maximum speed of 65 kilometers per hour. One engine drives the four wheels on the left of the truck, while the other engine drives the four wheels on the right. The ZIL-135 has eight wheel drive, but only the front and rear axles are used for steering. It has a maximum cruising range of 500 kilometers.
The cab of the ZIL-135 is NBC protected, allowing the rockets to be fired without exposing the crew to possible contaminants.[2][3] The four-man crew can emplace or displace the system in three minutes.
Before firing, stabilizing jacks must be lowered and the blast shield raised to protect the cab and its occupants. Indirect fire aiming is achieved with the use of a PG-1 panoramic telescope. Although there are no night vision sights, the driver of the launch vehicle is equipped with a night vision device.
The BM-27 can use HE-FRAG, chemical, ICM or scatterable mine (PTM-3 or PFM-1) submunition equipped rockets, all of which are detonated by electric timing fuses. Each rocket weighs 280.4 kilograms. The warheads weigh between 90 and 100 kilograms, depending on type. A full salvo of 16 rockets can be fired in 20 seconds and can engage targets within a range of 35 kilometers.
Because of the size of the warhead, the range of the rocket and the speed that a salvo can be delivered, the BM-27 is very effective at mine laying. Each 220 mm rocket can scatter 312 anti-personnel PFM-1 mines. Minefields can be laid behind a retreating enemy or even be used to trap an enemy by encircling them with mines. Tactics such as this were often used by the Soviets in Afghanistan.
Once the rockets have been fired, 9T452 (another ZIL-135 based vehicle) is used to assist in reloading. It carries additional rockets and a crane to transfer the rockets from the reload vehicle to the launcher. The entire reloading procedure takes around 20 minutes.
Variants
- 9P140 Uragan: Standard variant on ZIL-135 truck.
- Uragan-1M: Variant presented to the public in 2007; all processes are automated. Can also fire the 300mm rockets of the BM-30 Smerch system.[4] Deliveries to the Russian Army started as of September 2016.[5]
- 9A53 Uragan-U: Successor with 2 × 15 launch tubes; presented in 2009 on 8×8 MZKT-7930. Thanks to its modular assembly the BM-30 Smerch and BM-21 Grad rockets can also be fired.
- Bastion-03: Prototype by Ukrainian company AvtoKrAZ, presented in 2010. Installed on a 6×6 truck type KrAZ-63221RA.[6]
Operators
- Armenia - some BM-27 ordered in 2011
- Afghanistan - 18 (not functional)
- Belarus - 84
- Guinea - 3
- Iran - unknown
- Kazakhstan - 180
- Moldova - 11
- Myanmar - 35
- Russia - 500–800
- Syria - 36
- Tajikistan - 12
- Tanzania - 48
- Turkmenistan - 54
- Ukraine - 139
- Uzbekistan - 49
- Vietnam - unknown
- Yemen - 13
See also
- Katyusha, BM-13, BM-8, and BM-31 multiple rocket launchers of World War II
- BM-14 140 mm multiple rocket launcher
- BM-21 Grad 122 mm multiple rocket launcher
- BM-30 Smerch 300 mm heavy multiple rocket launcher
- 9A52-4 Tornado 122 mm / 220 mm / 300 mm universal multiple launch rocket system
References
- ↑ Salem, Harriet. "'I Couldn't Move for Five Minutes from Fear': An Investigation Into Cluster Bombs in Eastern Ukraine". Vice.com. Vice. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
- ↑ Red Steel: Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of the Cold War, by Russell Phillips, pub Shilka, 2013, p140.
- ↑ WeaponSystems.net, BM-27 Uragan.
- ↑ Бикалиберная РСЗО «Ураган-1М» прошла государственные испытания, warfiles.ru, Retrieved: 25 August 2015 (Russian)
- ↑ http://www.armstrade.org/includes/periodics/news/2016/0916/160037116/detail.shtml
- ↑ KrAZ Military Vehicles, issuu.com, Retrieved: 19 February 2016
Bibliography
- Jamie Prenatt and Adam Hook, Katyusha – Russian Multiple Rocket Launchers 1941–Present, New Vanguard 235, Osprey Publishing Ltd, Oxford 2016. ISBN 978 1 4728 1086 1
External links
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