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1K17 Szhatie

Soviet experimental laser vehicle


Soviet experimental laser vehicle

FieldValue
name1K17 Szhatie
1К17 Сжатие
imageSelf-propelled laser system 1K17 Szhatie.jpg
image_size300
captionA preserved 1K17 Szhatie
originSoviet Union
typeSelf-propelled laser weapon carrier
is_vehicleyes
designerN. D. Ustinov
production_date1990
manufacturerUralmash
number1 prototype
crew2
length6.04 m
(hull)
width3.584 m
height3.3 m
weight41 t
armourHomogeneous steel
primary_armament1 x 15-lenses high-powered solid-state laser emitter
secondary_armament1 x 12.7 mm NSV machine gun
engineB-84A
engine_power840 hp
speed60 km/h on road

1К17 Сжатие (hull) The 1K17 Szhatie (Russian: 1К17 Сжатие — "Compression") is a self-propelled laser vehicle of Soviet origin. The platform uses a modified 2S19 "Msta" chassis with a battery of solid state laser projectors mounted in the turret. It was developed by the Soviet Union in order to disable the optical-electronic equipment of enemy missiles, ground and aerial vehicles.

History

The 1K17 Szhatie was developed in the 1970s and 1980s. Although the Soviet Union attempted to keep the plans secret, the Pentagon managed to obtain drawings from defectors. Western intelligence services code named it the Stiletto. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the development of the Szhatie was abandoned, as the development and manufacturing of the laser projection system had become too expensive and unnecessary. Two of these "tanks" were tested, with one being scrapped and the other being displayed in the Army Technology Museum near Moscow, but without its laser projector.

Design

The "tank" used an intense laser beam to disable the optical-electronic equipment of the enemy vehicles. This was created by focusing light through 30 kg of artificial rubies, which made the whole system very expensive to produce. The optics that produced the laser were placed at the end of a silver coated spiral which helped amplify the beam and increase convergence. The energy to power the laser was provided by a generator and an auxiliary battery system. The lenses themselves were able to operate in different environments by moving metal caps closer to protect the lens. It was also equipped with a 12.7mm NSV machine gun to defend itself against attacks by infantry and air.

A similar laser system was also developed around the same time named "Sangvin", which was based on the ZSU-23-4 self-propelled anti-aircraft gun.

Romanian folk tale

This vehicle has sparked a folk tale in Romania according to which Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu used "laser weapons" in 1968 against Russian tanks. It claims that, after the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia, Ceaușescu received a telegram from the Foreign Ministry of the United Kingdom stating that the country was a target for a large-scale attack. Believing that the Soviets would invade Romania next, especially after squashing the Prague Spring, Ceaușescu ordered the deployment of Romanian troops to reinforce the border with the USSR and equipped them with the so-called "laser weapons".

There are no witnesses or evidence to support that this encounter was real or that such weapon ever existed.

References

References

  1. "Soviet Union (1990-1992) Self-Propelled Laser Complex – 1 Prototype Built".
  2. "Боевые квантовые генераторы СССР". Армейский вестник.
  3. Teodoreanu, Daniel. (January 7, 2016). "TANCURILE RUSEŞTI topite de ARMA LASER a României, în 1968. Adevăr sau propagandă în SUPER LEGENDA COMUNISMULUI? Există informaţii, dar nimeni nu şi le asumă".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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