Bandvagn 202
Volvo BM Bandvagn 202 (Bv 202) | |
---|---|
Type | Tracked frame-steered vehicle |
Place of origin | Sweden |
Service history | |
Used by | See operators |
Production history | |
Designed | 1957-1961[1] |
Manufacturer | Bolinder-Munktell |
Produced | 1964–1981 |
No. built | 1 700 [1] |
Variants | mk I, mkII, see variants |
Specifications | |
Mass | 2,900 kg (6,400 lb)[1] |
Length | 6.175 m (20 ft 3.1 in)[1] |
Width | 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in)[1] |
Height | 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in)[1] |
Crew | Driver + 1 passenger (front car) |
Passengers | 8 passengers (rear car) |
Secondary armament | Ksp58 machine gun on pintle mount |
Engine | Volvo B18B in mkI, mkII B20B 82.5 hp/97 hp |
Payload capacity | 800 kg (in terrain).[1] |
Drive | tracked, with 0.1 kg/cm2 ground pressure |
Transmission | mkI VOLVO M 42 , mkII ZF[2] |
Fuel capacity | 78 litres[2] |
Operational range | 200 km |
Maximum speed | 39 km/h (24 mph) (roads) 5 km/h (3.1 mph) (water) |
Steering system | Articulated frame-steering, mkI mechanical hydraulic, mkII orbitrol hydraulic |
Bandvagn 202 (Bv 202) is an amphibious oversnow tracked articulated, all-terrain vehicle developed by Bolinder-Munktell, a subsidiary of Volvo, for the Swedish Army in the early 1960s.
Description
[edit]The vehicle is formed by two rubber Kegresse track units with a multi-directional pivot in between. The front unit contains the engine and gearbox through which power is delivered to the front and, via a propshaft in the pivot mechanism, the rear tracks. A hydraulic ram on the pivot "bends" the vehicle in the middle to steer it—there is no braking of track units for steering as on conventional tracklaying vehicles. The controls are a conventional steering wheel on the left-hand front of the vehicle. It can reach a speed of 35 km/h on land and 7 km/h (4 kn) on water.
The Bv 202 carries a driver and a commander in the front unit and up to 8 troops or 800 kg in the trailer unit. It can be adapted for other applications.
Production started in Arvika in 1964 and ended in 1981. The Bv 202 has since been succeeded by the Bandvagn 206, originally designed and built by Swedish engineering company Hägglund & Söner and now produced by BAE Systems AB.
The Bv 202 was designed to transport troops and equipment through snow or boglands in northern Sweden. The last Swedish unit to use this vehicle was the Cavalry, who found that the manual gearbox Bv 202 was much quieter than the automatic transmission Bv 206.
The Norwegian army units that had both Bv 202 and Bv 206 ran the Bv 202 as the first vehicle if the snow conditions were challenging. The Bv 202 performed better in deep and/or difficult snow conditions.
The Mk1 Bv 202 is powered by an 82.5 bhp (61.5 kW) Volvo B18, the MK2 by the 97 bhp (72 kW) B20. It has less ground pressure than a skier and is fully amphibious.
The Bv 202 was used by NATO forces, and replaced the older Swedish Snow Trac ST4 Over-snow Vehicle, which was employed by the British Royal Marines under NATO.
Operators
[edit]- Canada
- Czechoslovakia 1
- Finland - replaced by Bv 206 and Sisu Nasu
- Netherlands
- Norway - replaced the M29 Weasel and subsequently replaced by Bv 206
- Sweden - replaced by Bv 206
- United Kingdom - replaced "ST4 Snow Trac Over-snow Vehicle" and subsequently replaced by Bv 206
- Ukraine - donated by Sweden an unnamed amount of vehicles[3]
Civilian operators
[edit]- Russia At least 27 ex-Norwegian vehicles sold to Russian company for tourist use in the Murmansk area.[4]
See also
[edit]Similar vehicles to the Bv 202 ATV include:
- Sisu Auto Sisu Nasu Finland
- ST Kinetics Bronco All Terrain Tracked Carrier Singapore
- Hägglund & Söner Bv206 Sweden
- BAE Systems AB BvS 10 Sweden
- (Ishimbai Transport Machine-Building Plant) Vityaz (ATV) Soviet Union
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g "BM-Volvo Bandvagn 202". Archived from the original on 2004-07-10. Retrieved 2020-01-05.
- ^ a b Bv 202 SMHS
- ^ "Rare Sweden-made tracked carriers spotted in Ukraine". defence-blog.com. 2023-01-03. Retrieved 2023-01-04.
- ^ "Forsvaret solgte beltevogner til russere".
External links
[edit]- Pictures
- The P5 museum
- The Munktell museum (Swedish)
- Volvo Construction Equipment historical page about BV202
- UK site on the BV202
- [www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWf9mnzmXGA Presentation video of Bv 202 (in Swedish)]