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Tulpar is a Turkish heavy infantry fighting vehicle designed by the Sakarya-based automotive manufacturer Otokar. It is named after the Tulpar , a winged horse in Turkic mythology . [ 1 ]
Borsuk infantry fighting vehicle Poland: Polish Land Forces [62] The Borsuk is an amphibious IFV. ZSSW-30 turret (by HSW and WB Electronics) equipped with: [a] Mk44S Bushmaster II [b] UKM-2000C (7.62×51mm NATO) [f] 2 × Spike-LR [d] 2 × 4 GAk-81 (81 mm) CV90 Mk IV "Combat Vehicle 90" CV9035 SLO
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Infantry fighting vehicles of Turkey" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total ...
The K21 is a South Korean infantry fighting vehicle. A replacement for the K200 -series, it was formerly designated as K300 or XK21 KNIFV (Korea Next-generation Infantry Fighting Vehicle). The initial production began in 2009, with the Republic of Korea Army planning to field approximately 466 units.
Tulpar (IFV)—tracked armoured infantry fighting vehicle designed to provide ballistic and mine protection to support new generation main battle tanks on the battlefield and to provide fire support for infantry. [15] Otokar Ural—armoured personnel carrier with a versatile modular platform and an innovative feature set. [16]
M-80A infantry fighting vehicle (planned to be upgrade to M-98 Vidra) BOV M-86 armoured personnel carrier, used by military police; M-84AI armoured recovery vehicle version of M-84, used in tank battalions; BOV-1 antitank guided missile vehicle; Lazar BVT mine resistant, ambush protected armoured fighting vehicle
The 9 variants of the PARS ALPHA 8x8 adapt the vehicle for various roles by modifying weapons, turrets, and systems. Changes include different calibers for direct fire, autocannons with manned or remote turrets, mortars for indirect fire, air defense guns or missiles, and specialized configurations for engineering or command operations ...
The Warrior incorporates several design features in keeping with the UK's battlefield experience. In particular, there are no firing ports in the hull, in line with British thinking that the role of the armoured personnel carrier/infantry fighting vehicle (APC/IFV) is to carry troops under protection to the objective and then give firepower support when they have disembarked.