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TAB-71

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TAB-71
A TAB-71M at the Babadag range
TypeWheeled amphibious armored personnel carrier
Place of originRomania
Service history
In service1970–present
Used bySee Operators
Wars
Production history
ManufacturerRegia Autonomă Pentru Producția De Tehnică Militară (RATMIL)
Produced1970–1990
No. built1,878
VariantsSee Variants
Specifications (TAB-71[1])
Mass11 t (24,000 lb)
Length7.22 m (23.7 ft)
Width2.83 m (9.3 ft)
Height2.7 m (8.9 ft)
Crew3 + 8 passengers

ArmorSteel
Main
armament
14.5 mm KPVT heavy machine gun (500 rounds)
Secondary
armament
7.62 mm PKT machine gun (2,000 rounds)
Engine2×SR 255 6-cylinder
140 hp (100 kW)
Power/weight25.4 hp/t (18.9 kW/t)
Suspensionwheeled 8×8
Ground clearance0.7 m (2.3 ft)
Fuel capacity290 L (77 US gal)
Operational
range
500 km (310 mi)
Maximum speed 95 km/h (59 mph) on road
10 km/h (6.2 mph) in water

The TAB-71 (Transportorul Amfibiu Blindat model 1971) is the Romanian license-built version of the BTR-60PB. It was produced between 1970 and 1990 by RATMIL (now Romarm). It is the only other license manufacture of the BTR-60PB.[2]

Design and Development

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Romania had the construction and manufacturing documentation for the BTR-60P version since 1962. A year later, the TAB-63 prototype was built however, it did not enter production as the Romanian authorities wished to acquire the license to produce the more modern BTR-60PB.[3][4]

After the request was granted by the Military Industrial Committee of the Comecon in the late 1960s, production of the TAB-71 began in 1970 by the Romanian Regia Autonomă Pentru Producția De Tehnică Militară factory. The first vehicle was unveiled at a military parade in 1972.[1]

The TAB-71 is similar to the BTR-60PB, the main difference being the more powerful engine, the exhaust pipes were also positioned horizontally. It also had more day-vision periscopes than the BTR-60PB. The TAB also had an improved turret which allowed the guns to fire at a near 90° angle. The new turret also had a land and anti-aircraft (LOTA) sight mounted on the port side.[5]

Variants

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TAB-71M turret

TAB-71M

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Compared to the previous version, the TAB-71M mounted two 130 hp Saviem 797-05 engines, locally produced by Roman.[6] A small hatch was also added between the second and third axles on either side.[1]

TAB-71A R-1450 command vehicle

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The R-1450 variant has additional communications equipment and features a second antenna on the left side of the hull.[1]

TAB-71A R-1451 command vehicle

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The R-1451 has a different turret. Instead of the regular armament, it has a small crane for the removal of batteries. A box for a generator is mounted on the right side of the roof. There are also four antennae on the right side of the hull roof. The signal equipment used are the R-410M and the R-1451.[1]

TAB-71A R1 1452 command vehicle

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Similar to the R-1451 model. It features additional communications equipment.[1]

TAB-71AR

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Mortar carrier version. Instead of the turret, it is fitted with a 82 mm mortar which fires through the roof of the vehicle. Behind the circular mortar hatches, there are two rectangular roof hatches. A PKMS machine gun is mounted in front of the left side hatch. The vehicle can carry 100 mortar bombs.[1]

TERA-71L

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The TERA-71L is modified for maintenance and recovery role. The enclosed troop compartment is located at the front, and an open compartment in the center, the engine compartment is in the rear.[1]

Operators

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Current

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  •  Moldova − 161 second-hand TAB-71M delivered between 1992 and 1995[7]
  •  Romania − In total 1,878 vehicles manufactured.[2] As of 2022, 211 remain in service[8]
  •  Ukraine − 20 TAB-71M delivered by Romania in 2022 and 2023[7]

Former

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  •  Yugoslavia - A number of 40 vehicles were purchased by Yugoslavia in 1978 and were delivered in 1980 and 1981[7]
    •  Croatia - Several TAB-71Ms were used during the Croatian War of Independence and later scrapped.[9]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Christopher F Foss (2011). Jane's armour and artillery 2011-2012. Jane's. pp. 618–619. ISBN 9780710629609.
  2. ^ a b "Soviet/Russian Armor and Artillery Design Practices: 1945-1995". Marine Corps Intelligence Activity. 11 May 1995 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Petre Opriș (5 May 2009). "Soarta lui Nicolae Ceaușescu a depins și de elicopterele franțuzești". Jurnalul.ro (in Romanian).
  4. ^ Nicolae Spiroiu (1991). Autovehiculele în armata română. Tradiție și contemporaneitate. Bucharest: Editura Militară.
  5. ^ Alexandra Șerban. "TAB-urile din dotarea Armatei Române". Historia. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  6. ^ "Istoria Roman Diesel! Date tehnice complete modele Saviem 797-05 si MAN-D 2156 HMN 8". whattruck.ro (in Romanian). 12 October 2011.
  7. ^ a b c "Arms transfer database". Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Retrieved 16 March 2024.
  8. ^ "United Nations Register of Conventional Arms - Romania 2022". United Nations. Retrieved 2023-10-01.
  9. ^ Gregurić, Boris; Jereb, Vojislav (2001). Croatian Army vehicles 1991 - 1995. Adamić. pp. 7, 17, 53. ISBN 9532190244.