Tulpar (IFV)

Tulpar is a Turkish heavy infantry fighting vehicle designed by the Sakarya-based automotive manufacturer Otokar.

It is named after the Tulpar (Kazakh: Тұлпар, Bashkort: Толпар, Tatar: Тулпар, Kyrgyz: Тулпар, Turkish: Tulpar) ,a winged horse in Turkic mythology.[1]

The vehicle has been designed to augment Turkey's new-generation Altay MBT in operations and to safely transport infantry to the front lines while providing fire support for other armored units.The IFV is also available in variants such as reconnaissance, command-and-control, personnel carrier, mortar, recovery, launch rocket system, air defence, ambulance and anti-tank vehicles.[2]

Tulpar IFV
Type Infantry fighting vehicle
Place of origin Turkey
Service history
In service 2013
Production history
Designer Otokar
Designed 2011
Manufacturer Otokar
Unit cost $1.2 million
Produced 2012
Number built 2
Specifications
Weight 32 tons
(up to 42 tons depending on configuration)
Length 7230 mm
Width 3400 mm
Height 2676 mm (turret ceiling)
Crew 3 (commander, gunner, driver)
9 troopers

Main
armament
30 mm dual-fed cannon L-Umtas Anti Tank Missile Launcher
Secondary
armament
7.62 mm Coaxial Machine Gun
Engine Scania DSI 14 litres or DSI 16, V8 Diesel
810 hp (410- 595 kW) 2300 Nm Turbo Diesel
Power/weight 24.1 hp/tonne
Transmission SAPA SG-850, 32-Speed Automatic
Suspension torsion bar
Operational
range
600 km
Speed 70 km/h

Background

Even though the TSK has not formally posted an immediate requirement for a new infantry fighting vehicle, Otokar has started the development of Tulpar along with the Altay. Indeed, Tulpar was designed by the same team that developed Altay. After a 3-year design and development stage, Tulpar was finally unveiled to the public in 2013 at the IDEF international defense fair in Istanbul.[2]

Design

Tulpar was designed for the dual role of providing fire support to friendly main battle tanks and safely transporting troops in a high-threat environment. Resistance against IEDs, small mines and high ballistic protection for its habitants were among the high priority design criteria. Tulpar is also fully networkable with the Altay MBT and other units.[2]

The basic composite armor of the Tulpar provides all-around ballistic protection against 14.5 mm projectiles, while parts with high-probability of attack provide additional protection against up to 25 mm armor-piercing rounds. Tulpar features modular armor. This allows the maintenance center to quickly swap any damaged armor panels and also makes the IFV easily upgradable for added protection against higher caliber projectiles. Export customers of Tulpar can decide on what level of protection is desired based on their specific threat environment, terrain and IFV configuration.[2]

Otokar plans to install a hard kill system on the future variants of Tulpar. The vehicle is fully NBC protected.

Mobility

Tulpar is powered by an 810 hp, 15.7-liter, water-cooled V8 diesel engine that is turbo charged and drives a 32-speed automatic transmission. Suspension comes standard with a hydraulic damper and can carry up to 45 tons on the hull. Tulpar's maximum speed is 70 km/h and economic range is 600 km.[2]

Armament

Otokar's Tulpar is fitted with the MIZRAK turret system armed with a 30mm dual-fed automatic cannon and a 7.62mm coaxial machine gun. MIZRAK turret will be eqquiped Umtas anti tank missile.[2]

Situational Awareness

Tulpar's crew enjoy full 360-degree day/night situational awareness thanks to an array of electro-optic sensors located on the Hull and Turret.[2]

Variants

Tulpar IFV

Basic IFV model as described above.

Tulpar-S

First unveiled at IDEF 2015, the Tuplar-S is significantly lighter (15 Tonnes), shorter and narrower than the Tulpar.[3] It is a multi-purposed vehicle platform which retains basic features of standard Tulpar-IFV and has been designed to be both a light and an amphibious platform. Like the Tupar IFV, the Tulpar has been designed to be modular and can be configured for a variety of roles with a variety of weapons platforms.

In the weapons-carrying, ATGM-armed RCT configuration, the Tulpar-S features a three-person crew (driver, commander, and gunner), with space for two dismounts. In its armoured-personnel-carrier version, the vehicle will also feature a three-person crew but with space for eight dismounts[3]

Operators

See also

References

  1. "Tulpar Infantry Fighting Vehicle | Military-Today.com". www.military-today.com. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Tulpar IFV". Army-Technology. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  3. 1 2 "IDEF 2015: Otokar launches Tulpar-S weapons carrier | IHS Jane's 360". www.janes.com. Retrieved 2016-04-21.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tulpar APC.
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