Abhay IFV

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Abhay
Type Infantry Combat Vehicle
Place of origin Flag of India India
Production history
Designer DRDO
Manufacturer Heavy Vehicles Factory, Avadi
Specifications
Weight 23 tons
Crew 3 (commander, driver, gunner)
7 Troops

Armor Kanchan Armor with Optional ERA
Primary
armament
1x 40 mm Bofors autocannon (210 rounds)
Secondary
armament
1x 30 mm automatic Grenade Launcher
7.62 mm PKT coaxial machine gun
2x Konkurs-M or MILAN AGTM
Engine Greaves Cotton TD2V8 diesel engine
550 hp
Power/weight 24 hp/ton
Transmission Full automatic transmission
Suspension Hydropneumatic suspension
Operational
range
400 km
Speed 35 km/h (cross country)
70 km/h (road)

Abhay (Sanskrit: अभय, "Fearless") is an Infantry Combat Vehicle (ICV) being developed in India by the Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO). Abhay is being developed as a technology demonstrator for replacing Indian Army BMP-2s. At present, various systems of this vehicle are in advanced stages of development.[1]

Contents

[edit] Project

Abhay serves as a pre-technology demonstrator to develop and test technologies that will be used on a futuristic ICV (FICV), which will replace the Indian Army's BMP-2 vehicles.[2] The project started in the late 1990s, and design work was completed by 2001.[3] However, the project faced delays due to US sanctions imposed after the Pokhran-II Nuclear tests.[4]

Abhay is currently being developed by the DRDO’s Ahmednagar-based Vehicles Research & Development Establishment (VRDE). A mild steel prototype of the Abhay has been built, and is presently under testing for proving automotive systems. The pre-production prototype was rolled out in June 2005. Development of the first armoured prototype is also in progress.

[edit] Design

Abhay ICV has taken best of BMP and western equipment and will be designed for increased firepower.

[edit] Firepower

Abhay features an all-electrical turret drive system and a 40mm high-velocity cannon capable of firing APFSDS and HE rounds.

The anti-air firing range of the 40mm cannon is 4 km and 2.5 km for ground attack. The ICV comes loaded with a total of 210 rounds of ammunition, and its turret, housing a thermal imager using the Catherine FC, also contains a twin-launcher for the Kornet-E ATGM (anti-tank guided missile). The Abhay is operated by a crew of three, and carries seven infantry soldiers. An electro-mechanical all-electric drive (AED) for weapons control with independent stabilisation has been developed indigenously by DRDO in association with private sector industry for the turret. The purpose of the AED is to position the 40mm cannon on to the target in azimuth and elevation and to provide twin-axis turret stabilisation against external disturbances.

The AED uses brush-less drives with especially designed backlash-free elevation and traverse gearboxes coupled to the turret ring for rotation in azimuth, and to sector gears for elevation/depression of the cannon, respectively. The AED also employs vector-control technologies implemented through digital controllers and insulated gate bipolar transistor (IGBT)-based power amplifiers for control of the brush-less drives. It also uses fibre-optic gyros as feedback elements for the purpose of stabilisation. AED has a provision for MIL-STD-1553B databus and RS-422 interfaces for real-time connectivity.

[edit] Mobility

Abhay is powered by a Greaves Cotton TD2 V8 550 hp diesel engine (a power-to-weight ratio of 24 hp/tonne) and an automatic transmission supplied by L-3 Communications. The hydropneumatic suspension allows for increased passenger comfort. These factors will give Abhay excellent mobility and speed.

Bangalore based DRDO Lab DEBEL is designing the ergonomical layout of Abhay.[5]

[edit] Armor

Abhay will be equipped with the same Kanchan composite Armor that protects the Arjun MBT.

[edit] Sensors

[edit] References

[edit] External links