Didgori-1 Explained

Didgori II
Type:Armoured personnel carrier
Designer:Scientific Technical Center Delta
Manufacturer:Scientific Technical Center Delta
Service:2011–Present
Used By:Operators
Is Vehicle:yes
Crew:1+8
Length:5.75 m
Width:2.38 m
Height:2.20 m
Weight:8059kg (combat weight 8855 kg)
Primary Armament:7.62×51mm NATO Minigun or 12.7×108mm NSV machine gun
Secondary Armament:ATGM
Engine:Double turbo diesel engine
Engine Power:450hp
Suspension:wheeled 4x4
Speed:120 km/h
Vehicle Range:500 km

The Didgori-2 (Georgian: დიდგორი) is a Georgian-made armoured personnel carrier developed by the "Delta" research center of the Ministry of Defence and part of the Didgori-series APC family currently constructed in five baseline variants.[1]

Technical characteristics

The vehicle is assembled on and around the chassis of US Ford Super Duty pickup trucks. It is equipped with FLIR Systems thermal and night vision imaging devices provided for front and rear view. Information from the cameras is displayed on monitors for the driver, the commander and the passenger section. The system is interlinked with a special navigation system GPS.

Armor

The armour withstands impacts of 7.62×54mmR AP rounds and 6–8 kg mine blasts at direct contact and from underneath without heavy damage. Further details are unknown, since the composition of the material is classified. The two baseline models are armed with a 7.62×51mm M134 Minigun and the 12.7×108mm NSV machine gun, but can be armed with a wide range of armaments, including ATGMs.

The monocoque steel v-hull provides protection against small arms fire, artillery shell shrapnel, anti-personnel/tank mines and IEDs. Front wheel arches are designed to be blown away to free blast pockets.[1] [2]

Operators

External links


Notes and References

  1. Web site: Archived copy . 2015-07-05 . 2016-03-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304025901/http://delta.gov.ge/file/2015/04/Didgori_STC_Delta_Production-Catalogue_01.01.2015.pdf . dead .
  2. Web site: Didgori Armored Personnel Carrier. www.military-today.com.