BSCh-7: Difference between revisions

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{{infobox weapon
{{Infobox weapon
| name              = BSCh-7
| name              = BSCh-7
| image              = [[Image:BSCh-7.png|300px]]
| image              = BSCh-7_APC_variants_20210811.png
| caption            = Main [[Menghean Army|Army]] variants of the BSCh-7, with cross-section view
| image_size        = 300
| origin            = {{flag|Menghe}}
| alt                =
| type              = {{wp|Armoured_personnel_carrier|Armored Personnel Carrier}}
| caption            = Major variants of the BSCh-7 with the year they entered service.
| type              = {{wp|Armored personnel carrier}}
| origin            = [[Menghe]]
<!-- Type selection -->
<!-- Type selection -->
| is_ranged          =  
| is_ranged          =  
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<!-- Service history -->
<!-- Service history -->
| service            = 1996-present
| service            = 1996-present
| used_by            = {{flag|Menghe}}
| used_by            =  
| wars              =  
| wars              =  
<!-- Production history -->
<!-- Production history -->
| designer          = Taekchŏn armored vehicle design bureau
| designer          =  
| design_date        = 1992-1995
| design_date        =  
| manufacturer      = Yŏng'an April 17th Factory<br>
| manufacturer      =  
Songrimsŏng Military Automotive Plant
| unit_cost          =  
| unit_cost          = $650,000
| production_date    = 1996-present
| production_date    = 1996-present
| number            = 27,000
| number            =  
| variants          =
| variants          =
<!-- General specifications -->
<!-- General specifications -->
| spec_label        = BSCh-7B
| spec_label        =  
| weight            = 16.8 tonnes  
| weight            = 14.2 tonnes
| length            = 8.04 m
| length            = 8.19 m
| part_length        =  
| part_length        =  
| width              = 2.8 m  
| width              = 2.92 m
| height            = 2.55 m  
| height            = 2.71 m to turret roof
| diameter          =  
| diameter          =  
| crew              = 2 (driver, gunner)
| crew              = 2
| passengers        = 10 + 1
| passengers        = 11
<!-- Ranged weapon specifications -->  
<!-- Ranged weapon specifications -->  
| cartridge          =
| cartridge          =  
| cartridge_weight  =  
| cartridge_weight  =  
| caliber            =  
| caliber            =  
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| action            =  
| action            =  
| rate              =  
| rate              =  
| velocity          =
| velocity          =  
| range              =
| range              =  
| max_range          =  
| max_range          =  
| feed              =  
| feed              =  
Line 66: Line 67:
| yield              =  
| yield              =  
<!-- Vehicle/missile specifications -->
<!-- Vehicle/missile specifications -->
| armour            = welded steel plate
| armour            = 7-12mm
| primary_armament     = 12.7mm JG-77 heavy machine gun
| primary_armament   = 12.7mm [[SBK_machine_gun#GCh-75|GCh-75]] HMG
| secondary_armament   =  
| secondary_armament =  
| engine            = Ka-1212
| engine            = Samsan S730N8 V-8 diesel engine
| engine_power      = 360 kW (480 horsepower)
| engine_power      = 300 hp
| pw_ratio          = 28.6 hp/tonne
| pw_ratio          = 21.2 hp/tonne
| transmission      =
| payload_capacity  =  
| payload_capacity  =  
| suspension        = wheeled 8x8
| transmission      = 8×8
| clearance          = 45 cm
| suspension        =  
| clearance          = 497mm
| fuel_capacity      =  
| fuel_capacity      =  
| vehicle_range      = 800 km (internal fuel)
| vehicle_range      = 600 km (road)
| speed              = Level road: 90 km/h <br>Swimming: 8 km/h
| speed              = 90 km/h (road)<br>8 km/h (swimming)
| guidance          =  
| guidance          =  
| steering          =  
| steering          =  
<!-- Missiles only -->
<!-- Missiles only -->
| wingspan          =
| wingspan          =  
| propellant        =
| propellant        =  
| ceiling            =
| ceiling            =  
| altitude          =
| altitude          =
| boost              =  
| depth              =  
| depth              =  
| boost              =
| accuracy          =  
| accuracy          =  
| launch_platform    =
| launch_platform    =  
| transport          =
| transport          =
<!-- For all -->
| ref                =
}}
}}


The '''BSCh-7''' ([[Menghean language|Menghean]]: 분대 수송 장갑차, ''Budae Susong Janggabcha'', lit. "Squad Transporting Armored car") is an armored personnel carrier designed in the [[Menghe|Socialist Republic of Menghe]] as a replacement for the '70s-vintage [[BunSuCha-4]]. It features an improved internal layout and better protection against explosive threats, as well as an eight-wheel suspension with a lower center of gravity for better offroad mobility. Though still too lightly armored to serve as an {{wp|Infantry_fighting_vehicle|infantry fighting vehicle}}, it is still more capable than the "battle taxi" BSCh-4. With some 27,000 vehicles produced, it has replaced the BSCh-4 in all active units and most Mobilization Reserve formations.
The '''BSCh-7''' ([[Menghean_Army_designation_scheme#Formal_designation|formal designation]]: 7호 분대 수송 장갑차 / 七號分隊輸送裝甲車, ''Chil-ho Bundae Susong Janggabcha'', "No.7 Armored Squad Transport;" [[Menghean_Army_designation_scheme#Short_designation|short designation]]: 분수차-7 ''Bunsucha-chil'') is a wheeled 8×8 {{wp|armored personnel carrier}} designed in [[Menghe]] as a replacement for the [[BSCh-4]]. It features better mobility, better protection, and an improved internal layout, with the passengers facing inward in a rear compartment. It is currently the most common wheeled APC in the [[Menghean Army]] by a large margin, though the newer [[BSCh-10]] has begun replacing it in some units.
 
==Development==
Menghe's previous wheeled APC, the [[BSCh-4]], entered service in the early 1970s. Though it represented a major improvement over the [[BSCh-1]], the BSCh-4 still possessed a number of drawbacks. With only four wheels, it had poor offroad mobility, and it could get stuck on rough terrain easily. The rear-engine arrangement also meant that passengers could only enter and exit through a pair of side doors. While this method was still reasonably fast, it could leave the dismounts exposed to enemy fire, limiting their options in an ambush situation. Finally, because all crew members sat in a single compartment, opening the passenger doors would expose the entire interior of the vehicle to any {{wp|CBRN_defense|CBRN contaminants}} in the air outside.


==Design==
In response to these drawbacks, the Menghean People's Army issued a request for a new wheeled APC in the early 1980s. Development unfolded slowly, interrupted by [[Ryŏ Ho-jun]]'s political campaigns and the economic crisis of the mid-1980s. After the [[Decembrist Revolution]], [[Choe Sŭng-min]]'s government allowed the program to continue, but steadily reduced defense budgets in the late 1980s and early 1990s. By 1992, the BSCh-7 program existed mainly to retain domestic experience in AFV design, and the [[Ministry of National Defense (Menghe)|Ministry of National Defense]] forecast a relatively small batch of orders. Faced with these constraints, the designers incorporated a number of cost-cutting measures, resulting in an APC design that entered service in the 1990s but appeared to be out of the 1980s.
 
Two prototypes underwent testing and evaluation in the early 1990s. Both separated the hull into a crew compartment at the front, an engine compartment in the middle, and a passenger compartment in the rear, which was judged the best response to these design requirements, but they differed slightly in layout. The first prototype, Si.316, had its turret in the driver's compartment, between the driver and front passenger but offset to the rear. The second, Si.317, had its turret over the crew compartment, resembling the later BSCh-7N variant. It was also slightly larger, and offered an extra set of side doors for the passengers. In the end, the Ministry of National Defense ordered Si-317 with the turret placed over the seat beside the driver. A prototype meeting this configuration, Si.319, was tested in 1995 and declared the winner of the competition, entering production the following year.
 
==Description==
===Layout===
===Layout===
Unlike its predecessor, the BSCh-4, the BSCh-7 has its engine located between the driver's area and the passenger compartment, with the transported squad disembarking through a large ramp-door in the rear. The hatches in the middle of the hull are retained as a backup option, though they are located on the upper half of the vehicle. The passengers are seated facing outward, with the engine's driveshaft running downward between the rows of seats and the space above used for storage. There are ten firing ports on the vehicle: three on either hull side, two on the rear ramp, and one on each forward side door. Passengers can also fire by standing in the top hatches or opening the side hatches.
[[Image:BSCh-7_5-view_20210811.png|400px|thumb|right|Blueprint of a BSCh-7N APC, including an underside view.]]
The BSCh-7G, based on the Si-319 prototype, is divided into three separate compartments. In the front of the vehicle is a crew compartment, with the driver and gunner seated side-by-side. These crew members can enter and exit either through hatches on the roof of the vehicle. Initial prototypes had side doors as well, but these were deemed redundant and deleted.
 
As on the [[BSCh-4]]N and later models, the driver and gunner have large bulletproof windows sloped to match the angle of the upper front plate. When entering combat, they can lower thin metal hatches over these windows to provide additional scratch protection; out of battle, these plates provide shade from the sun and reduce glare. The driver has four overhead periscopes and two viewing ports in the side armor, both of which are angled periscopes rather than direct viewing ports to avoid creating a line-of-sight opening in the armor. The gunner also has two side periscopes, as well as two periscopes, a large sight, and a small aiming sight on the cupola, which can rotate through 360 degrees.
 
The driver has a conventional seat, while the gunner has a rotating cupola derived from the type used on the [[JCh-4]] and [[JCh-5]] main battle tanks. This cupla allows the gunner to either manually aim and fire his 12.7mm {{wp|heavy machine gun}} from a standing position with the hatch open, or remotely aim and fire it from inside the vehicle with the help of a periscope. In addition to shielding the gunner from small-arms fire and shrapnel, this also protects him against {{wp|CBRN_defense|CBRN contaminants}}. Furthermore, because the passengers and platoon HQ members are in a separate compartment, the airtight seal around the driver-and-gunner compartment is not breached when the passengers enter or exit the vehicle.
 
Behind the driver's compartment is the engine compartment, separated by a protective firewall with an access hatch for maintenance. The firewall provides some additional protection against fire from the front of the vehicle, though any projectile which penetrates the front armor with enough energy to damage the engine is also likely to kill or injure the crew.
 
The rear half of the vehicle is devoted to the passenger compartment. The ten squad members sit on folding benches on either side of the hull, facing inward in two rows of five. This arrangement offers somewhat better ergonomics when entering and exiting the vehicle, and because the benches are fixed to the hull sides rather than the floor, it also offers some protection against mines and IEDs. It also leaves the passenger compartment with a clear floor when the benches are removed, making it easy to modify the vehicle for special-purpose variants. With all hatches closed and all firing ports closed or occupied, the passenger compartment is also sealed against CBRN contaminants, with an overpressure air filter on the roof reducing leakage through small openings.
 
The passengers have three ways to exit the vehicle: through double doors in the rear of the hull, through clamshell side doors, and through hatches in the roof. The hull rear doors provide the safest exit route when under fire from the front, and also allow the passengers to load and unload heavy equipment or stretchers more easily. The Si.316 prototype had a powered ramp with a built-in backup door, but the Si.317 and the production BSCh-7 both have manually opened double doors instead. Though a ramp would make it easier to load heavy equipment and stretchers, testing with the Si.316 and Si.317 found that the double doors allowed for significantly faster embarking and disembarking types when accounting for the time required to lower the ramp. Furthermore, the crew can disembark from the double doors while the vehicle is slowly moving forward, which is not possible with a ramp.


The front of the vehicle is taken up by the crew compartment, in which the driver is seated on the left and the eleventh passenger (either the unit commander, the platoon NCO, or the marksman in a standard motorized platoon) is seated on the right. The turret, which has a one-man crew in all variants, is centered directly behind them, with ammunition stored below. The engine is located in the center of the vehicle, allowing the passengers to disembark without breaching the forward area's airtight {{wp|CBRN_defense|CBRN seal}}.
The side doors are similar to the ones on the BSCh-4: the upper half swings outward and forward, forming a shield against fire from in front, and the lower half swings outward and downward, forming a "step" for the passengers. In another feature borrowed from the BSCh-4, the upper half of the door has a built-in firing port, meaning that it can be used as a gun shield when advancing. Because of the inward-facing seating arrangement, all passengers can easily disembark from either side door, meaning that if the vehicle is under fire from one side the passengers can use the other side as an exit. Notably, the passenger benches terminate before reaching the side doors, meaning that there is no obstruction ahead of them.
 
The four large roof hatches provide one final means of exit, though they would only be the most desirable option in rare circumstances, such as while the vehicle is in the water. The hatches fold outward and are spring-loaded to hold open in the vertical position, providing some cover to standing passengers when opened. Metal "stirrups" between the pairs of roadwheels, combined with steps and bars on the hull sides, help passengers and crew members climb up and down easily. Out of combat, passengers often ride with the hatches open or even sit on the roof itself, as this provides the best escape from the hot interior when operating in tropical climates.
 
On the BSCh-7G, the eleventh passenger sits forward of the two rows in a centerline seat. This seat is given to a member of the platoon headquarters - in a 2nd Generation unit, either the Platoon Lieutenant, the Platoon Staff Sergeant, or the Platoon Marksman. This seat has a cupola with 360 degree periscope coverage, including a large variable-zoom periscope which can rotate and elevate in position. This allows the Platoon LT or Platoon SSGT to survey the battlefield from within the vehicle and issue commands accordingly. In practice, the periscopes offer poor visibility because they do not clear the clutter on the roof, and the members of the platoon headquarters often dismount to command from the field.
 
The '''BSCh-7N''', which was introduced in 2003 and accounts for most BSCh-7s currently in Menghean service, has a modified internal arrangement. The platoon commander position in the center front of the passenger compartment is replaced by an enclosed turret, which is operated by the vehicle's gunner. The platoon LT, platoon SSGT, or platoon marksman instead rides in the forward seat beside the driver, with four periscopes, two side viewing ports, and a rotating variable-magnification periscope covering the forward 180-degree arc. This configuration gives the platoon HQ member better forward visibility, and allows the gunner to reload or un-jam the machine gun under armor, an important consideration in Menghean Army vehicle doctrine. Interestingly, the BSCh-7N retains the passenger compartment periscope, but offsets it to the 7-o'clock position behind the turret. From here, it can cover a 270-degree arc which sweeps from directly ahead over the left side and rear before terminating just short of 90 degrees right. The squad sergeant can use this periscope to cover the platoon commander's blind spots, spot targets for the gunner, and check for threats before ordering the squad to dismount. The revised arrangement compromises one of the supposed benefits of the BSCh-7's layout - namely, the fact that the crew compartment is not breached when the passengers dismount - and also forces the platoon HQ member to dismount from a top front hatch, with maximum exposure to enemy fire. The platoon LT or platoon SSGT can avoid these problems by commanding from inside the vehicle, as long as the vehicles are not far from the dismounted troops, but the platoon marksman or platoon medic must dismount as part of regular operations.


===Armament===
===Armament===
Main armament on the BSCh-7A and -7B consists of a single 12.7mm JG-77 heavy machine-gun mounted in a fully enclosed turret. The gunner is provided with a hatch in the turret roof for surveillance or rapid escape, and a forward periscope for aiming. Other variants, described below, add different armament options, but the 12.7mm turret is the most common in Army service.
On both major variants of the BSCh-7 (G and N), the main armament is a single [[SBK_machine_gun#GCh-75|GCh-75]] 12.7mm heavy machine gun. The quasi-turret of the BSCh-7G, derived from a tank commander's cupola, allows the gunner to aim and fire the machine gun from inside the vehicle, but there is only a single 200-round ammunition box on the mount and the gunner must open his hatch and expose himself to enemy fire in order to load a new box or un-jam the weapon.
 
The BSCh-7N instead gives the gunner a compact turret in the front of the passenger compartment. This is a "true" turret: the gunner sits on a seat suspended below it, with his head and part of his torso inside the turret ring, and can access the machine gun's receiver easily under armor. It also has an overhead hatch through which the gunner can enter, exit, or simply observe the vehicle's surroundings. Consequently, it is more effective than the demi-turret cupola on the BSCh-7G, and more spacious than the small turret on the BSCh-4N. It also offers the gunner better visibility: there are two vision ports on each side and one in the rear, all of them easily accessible from the gunner's seat. Front protection is somewhat compromised by the curved ammunition feed to the gun, which runs through a curved plate in the mantlet. A canvas cover maintains the airtight seal around the machine gun at different angles of elevation.
 
The turret on the BSCh-7N is not powered, and the gunner must traverse and elevate the weapon using a set of hand cranks. This also means that the gun is not stabilized in either axis, making it impossible to fire accurately while moving, though the gunner can still lay down suppressive fire. Elevation ranges from -15 degrees to +60 degrees: low enough to fire at personnel near the sides of the vehicle, and high enough to engage helicopters, low-flying aircraft, and personnel in high windows or on cliffs. Gun depression is much more limited when firing ahead or to the rear.
 
Despite occasional independent ventures by various design teams, the Menghean Army strictly opposed proposals to fit a heavier {{wp|remote controlled weapon station}} to the BSCh-7. Especially during the 2000s and early 2010s, Menghean armored doctrine staff were wary of the disadvantages of unmanned turrets, including the lack of a manual traverse backup, the impossibility of loading or un-jamming the weapon from behind armor, and the higher profile which often resulted. Furthermore, the BSCh-7 was designed as a light, inexpensive, and mobile APC, and the Menghean Army saw little need to arm it with an autocannon or ATGMs. Only in the late 2010s did the Menghean Army order a batch of BSCh-7s with remote turrets, a change which allowed a reversion to the BSCh-7G's crew seating plan.
 
Apart from the various turret options, all APC variants of the BSCh-7 are fitted with no fewer than eighteen firing ports, each one consisting of a three-layered bulletproof glass viewing slit, a pivoting firing port cover, and a simple ball mount with a rubber-lined keyhole slot. There are five on each side of the passenger compartment, including one on each side door. One pair of these firing ports is angled forward at 60 degrees from the centerline, and the firing ports on the doors can fire even further forward when the upper doors are opened. All but the door ports have an associated apparatus which, when hooked to the side of a [[JS-67]] or [[JS-103]] assault rifle, deflects spent casings to the floor and extracts fumes through a vent in the roof. There is one firing port on each of the rear doors, allowing passengers to check and clear the space behind the vehicle before disembarking. Even the roof hatches have firing ports; these can be used either to engage high-up targets on buildings or clifftops, or as side-facing firing ports when the hatches are open. The final pair of firing ports are on the outer corners of the driver's compartment, and allow the driver and forward passenger to engage nearby threats with their rifles. Because the BSCh-7's passenger seats face inward, the squad members must stand or partially kneel on their benches in order to use these firing ports, making their fire even more inaccurate than firing port fire on other vehicles. As such, the numerous firing ports are rarely used in combat, especially because Menghean APC doctrine encourages squads to dismount before initiating an engagement.


===Protection===
===Protection===
The BSCh-7's armor has the claimed capability to withstand 12.7mm armor-piercing ammunition across the 60-degree frontal arc at combat ranges. The sides and rear are protected against small-arms fire and shrapnel. Applique armor plates or slat-armor arrays can be fitted to the front and sides, though the heavier kits degrade amphibious capability. The vehicle can be {{wp|CBRN_defense|CBRN}}-sealed if necessary, with a filtration system supplying overpressure air to the crew and passenger compartments. The air filtration and ventilation system also reduces the buildup of gunsmoke in the passenger compartment when the firing ports are in use. The underside of the hull has an angled V-shape to deflect the blast from mines, and both crew and passenger seats are attached to the wall or roof in order to further insulate against blast shock.
The armor on the BSCh-7 is only slightly thicker than the armor on the BSCh-4, but it is made from a harder alloy and sloped more steeply. The upper hull sides and lower hull front are sloped at 35 degrees from vertical, and the upper hull front is sloped at 65 degrees from vertical. Due to the combination of sloping and hardening, the vehicle can withstand 12.7mm fire across the 60-degree frontal arc at ranges of down to 500 meters, and it can withstand 7.62mm, 7.7mm, and 7.5mm armor-piercing rounds at point-blank range. The roof armor is thinnest, at only 5mm, but this is still sufficient to deflect glancing rounds at all but the steepest of angles.
 
Though reasonably well-protected against small-arms fire and shrapnel, the BSCh-7 is still very vulnerable to heavier weapons. Man-portable anti-tank weapons can easily penetrate the outer hull, as can armor-piercing tank shells, armor-piercing autocannon projectiles, anti-tank guided missiles, and direct artillery or mortar hits. Armor-piercing HMG rounds from the sides or rear can also easily penetrate the armor at combat ranges. Apart from the run-flat tires and passenger benches, mine protection is also quite poor, especially for the driver's compartment.


===Mobility===
===Mobility===
The first variant, accepted into service as the BSCh-7A, was equipped with an old-model 205-kW (275-horsepower) engine. After repeated complaints about poor speed and mobility, especially when climbing rough terrain, this was replaced by a more modern 360-kW engine in the BSCh-7B. This variant can reach 95 kilometers per hour on flat roads, though speed is significantly reduced in rough terrain, especially muddy areas. All eight wheels are powered, and propulsion in water is provided by a pair of enclosed propellers on either side of the hull rear, which can bring the vehicle to 8 kilometers per hour when "swimming." This variant became standard in new production after 2001.
The BSCh-7 is powered by a [[Samsan Group|Samsan]] S730N8 300-horsepower V-8 diesel engine. This gives it a power-to-weight ratio of 21.2 horsepower per tonne. It can reach speeds of 90 kilometers per hour on level roads, and its 8×8 configuration gives better offroad mobility than the BSCh-4, which could easily get stuck on rocky or muddy terrain. In case the vehicle does become stuck, there is a powered winch in the nose, which can be used to attempt recovery if an armored recovery vehicle is not nearby.
 
Operational range is roughly 700 kilometers when operating on roads, a relatively long distance. This allows units equipped with the BSCh-7 to operate without refueling for an extended period of time, useful when mounting a deep penetration offensive behind enemy lines or when defending a cut-off position. To further enhance autonomy, the BSCh-7 also contains more internal storage space than its predecessors, which is doubly useful when operating in a CBRN-contaminated environment.
 
Like its predecessor, the BSCh-7 is fully amphibious, with a swimming speed of 8 kilometers per hour. It can cross calm water without any preparation, though when attempting a long-distance crossing or crossing choppy water, it is necessary to attach a snorkel to the engine air intake and the reserve exhaust in order to ensure that the vehicle is not swamped by waves. Because the engine is in the front half of the vehicle, however, it cannot use waterjet propulsion like the BSCh-4. Instead, {{wp|power take-off}} shafts from the driveshaft can be linked to two shrouded propellers, one on each side of the rear of the hull. Two rudders behind each propeller provide steering, and a bilge pump clears out any water which enters through cracks, open firing ports, or penetrations in the armor.
 
A more serious drawback of the BSCh-7's configuration is that the combined mass of the engine and the front armor make the vehicle front-heavy. It rides low and level in the water, and does not handle as well as the BSCh-4. When the passenger compartment is empty, the weight distribution problem is even more severe. Menghean Army training manuals state that BSCh-7 crews should avoid crossing water obstacles with an empty passenger compartment whenever possible, and should ballast the passenger compartment with sandbags, soil, or water if an empty crossing is absolutely necessary. The Menghean Marine Infantry refused to adopt the BSCh-7 on this basis, instead continuing to use the smaller [[BSCh-6]].
 
===Optics===
Interestingly, the BSCh-7 had relatively good close-range visibility, in many respects surpassing the [[BSCh-3]], [[BSCh-5]], and [[BSCh-8]] IFVs. The driver and the adjacent crew member both have numerous periscopes and vision ports covering angles of up to 135 degrees away from the front. The passengers also have good periscope and vision port coverage, as does the gunner on the BSCh-7N. Both the BSCh-3G and the BSCh-3N have a rotating variable-zoom periscope in the passenger compartment, though they assign it to different squad members. Altogether, this suite gives the passengers and crew a good probability of spotting nearby threats at close range in the daytime, avoiding ambushes and unsafe disembark orders.
 
Where the BSCh-7 lacks is in night vision. Both the G and N variants were originally built with 70s-vintage night vision equipment: starlight-based image intensification sights for the gunner and HQ member, forward-facing active infrared headlights, and an infrared spotlight on early N-model turrets. None of the large periscopes on these early models had a passive infrared imaging mode. As such, early-model BSCh-7s had poor nighttime visibility in clear conditions and no passive night vision under an overcast sky. This was a known drawback, as the Menghean MoND mainly envisioned the BSCh-7 as a transport rather than a combat vehicle. Some vehicles received passive night vision upgrades in the late 2000s, with another round of upgrades in the late 2010s, but even these refit efforts were given low priority compared to optics improvement for IFVs and MBTs.
 
==Role and evaluation==
Compared with the BSCh-4, the BSCh-7 represented a major improvement in nearly all respects. Its layout is more comfortable and convenient, and leaves more space for supplies and large equipment. Its armament is identical, but benefits from better sighting and visibility. Its protection is moderately better: both vehicles are only armored to withstand 12.7mm fire over the frontal arc, but the BSCh-7 can withstand frontal 12.7mm fire from closer ranges. The BSCh-7 also has much better mobility, owing to its more powerful engine and its 8×8 suspension, though its swimming performance is somewhat poorer. These improvements came at only a modest increase in cost, in part due to the omission of night optics and powered turret controls.


All BSCh-7 variants have a centralized tire pressure control system, allowing the driver to adjust tension depending on the terrain type. The tires are semi-protected, and have a "run-flat" system to allow the vehicle to continue operating for a limited time after one of the tires has been punctured.
Nevertheless, the BSCh-7 is still limited to the role of a "battle taxi" APC, quickly transporting its squad into the combat zone but staying out of combat where possible. It lacks the firepower to engage fortifications and armored vehicles, and its own armor is easily defeated by enemy tanks, IFVs, and squad-level anti-tank weapons. What armor it does have is mainly intended to protect the occupants from artillery fire, airstrikes, and ambushes, and even in the latter case its armor scheme gives little consideration to mines and IEDs, as experience in the [[Innominadan Crisis|Innominadan occupation]] quickly demonstrated. Some up-armed and up-armored variants were produced, but the vast majority of BSCh-7s in Menghean service are G or N variants, and a majority of these only have rudimentary night vision gear.
 
Thus, evaluated as a combat vehicle, the BSCh-7 is relatively poor. In some respects it is inferior to the {{wp|BTR-80}}, especially in armament, though it does have the edge in visibility and passenger space. Its main advantage is its ability to achieve its basic protection, mobility, and ergonomic goals for a relatively low cost. When relations with [[Maverica]] and [[Innominada]] broke down in 2005, this allowed Menghe to produce the BSCh-7 in enormous numbers over the following decade, expanding and motorizing what in the 1990s was still an infantry-centric force. Thus, in terms of its broader strategic role as an inexpensive, mass-produced, but generally adequate troop transport, the BSCh-7 fulfilled its goals well.
 
==Production==
During peak production in the late 2000s and early 2010s, the BSCh-7 was manufactured at three sites: the Hwasŏng Armored Vehicle Plant, the West Chŏllo Military Machine Building Plant, and the Taekchŏn Heavy Machine Building Plant. More than 21,000 vehicles were produced between 1996 and 2017. From 2018 onward, the Taekchŏn facility has produced spare parts and rebuilt existing BSCh-7 hulls into BSCh-7Rs.


==Variants==
==Variants==
===BSCh-7Ch===
===Armored personnel carriers===
The BSCh-7Ch, also known as the BSCh-7HB (''Haegun Bobyŏng'', Marine Infantry}}, was originally produced in response to a 2003 request by the Marine Infantry for a heavily armed vehicle which could assault hostile beaches. It has a larger turret with a 22mm autocannon, also aimed by a single gunner. There is no dedicated commander in the vehicle, though the sergeant may ride alongside the driver while the platoon headquarters and marksman are seated in the passenger compartment. Despite some initial interest, the BSCh-7Ch soon lost popularity in the [[Menghean Army]]'s procurement department due to its poor commander layout and a feeling that the 22mm autocannon stood on poor middle ground between 12.7mm and 32mm weapons.
* '''BSCh-7G''' - Original production variant with a quasi-turret over the front passenger's seat. Remains in production to fill battalion headquarters units and other special roles.
** '''BSCh-7G1''' - Designation for BSCh-7G hulls refitted with the [[MChGJ-0800]] radio system.
* '''BSCh-7N''' - Improved variant with an enclosed turret over the rear passenger compartment and modified optics forward. Produced from 2003 to 2010.
** '''BSCh-7N1''' - BSCh-7N refitted with armor plates on the hull sides and front. This included completely plating over the front windows, leaving the driver to rely entirely on the periscopes. These armor plates were apparently fitted in order to raise frontal-arc protection so that the vehicle could withstand 14.5mm fire over the frontal arc, instead of 12.7mm on the baseline variant. The plates are permanently bolted in place, and are not designed to be changed out in the field. A number of vehicles were refitted this way in the late 2000s, but most BSCh-7Ns did not receive the new armor kit.
** '''BSCh-7N2''' - Designation for BSCh-7N hulls refitted with night vision and radio equipment from the BSCh-7D.
* '''BSCh-7D''' - Further improved variant with passive night vision (infrared imaging type) for the gunner, front passenger, and sergeant; lacks active IR spotlights. Produced from 2010 onward. Also fitted with the [[MChGJ-0800]] radio system.
** '''BSCh-7D1''' - BSCh-7D with the BSCh-7N1's add-on armor kit, first seen in 2013. As with the BSCh-7N1, this armor kit is relatively uncommon.
* '''BSCh-7R''' - Modernized variant with a fixed octagonal cupola and 12.7mm {{wp|Remote_controlled_weapon_station|RWS}} in place of the turret, derived from the cupola and RWS on the [[BSCh-10]]G. This allows the crew and passengers to revert to the seating arrangement used on the BSCh-7G: the gunner sits beside the driver and operates the RWS remotely, while the squad leader or platoon lieutenant sits under the fixed cupola to survey the battlefield. As on the BSCh-10, the squad leader or platoon LT has a duplicate set of controls and can take over the RWS or simply watch its video feed. All BSCh-7Rs are re-manufactured from BSCh-7N and BSCh-7D hulls, and all re-manufacturing takes place at the West Chŏllo Military Machine Building Plant. First unveiled in 2018, apparently as an offshoot of the BSCh-10G program.
* '''BSCh-7OS''' (''Otobai Susong'') - Special derivative of the BSCh-7G modified to transport motorcycles. Instead of two rear doors, it has a single rear ramp with grip surfacing. The rear four seats in each row are torn out, leaving an open space for two motorcycles or a single 4×4 ATV. Two inward-facing seats on each side are retained, as well as a rear-facing seat for a member of the platoon HQ. Though originally assigned to reconnaissance units, where it can move motorcycles across water obstacles, the BSCh-7OS has also seen service as an improvised armored cargo carrier. Externally, the BSCh-7OS can be distinguished from the BSCh-7G by the rear ramp and the presence of fewer firing ports.


===BSCh-7D===
===Other combat vehicles===
Built on the same up-engined chassis as the BSCh-7B, the -D grew out of the same request that produced the -7Ch. It uses a turret similar to that on the [[BunSuCha-4]]Ch, with a 38mm automatic grenade launcher on the right and a 7.62mm machine-gun on the left. Like the BSCh-4Ch, it was not ordered in large numbers, and is mainly issued to [[Gunchal]] brigades and divisional troops, who would be tasked with patrolling rear areas against enemy special forces or insurgents.
* '''BSCh-7SB''' - Self-propelled mortar with an SB-120 mortar in an open-topped passenger compartment. This vehicle uses the BSCh-7G base chassis, even after the BSCh-7N entered production, meaning that even with the open roof there is still a machine gun turret forward. The crew consists of five individuals: driver, commander (forward), gunner, and two loaders. The battery headquarters is in a separate vehicle.


===BSCh-7E===
===Support vehicles===
[[File:BSCh-7E_Ummayah.png|400px|thumb|right|BSCh-7E exported to Ummayah, in local paint scheme.]]Advertised as a wheeled IFV, the BSCh-7E features the turret from the [[BSCh-5]] mounted over the passenger compartment. This reduces the rear passenger capacity to six, with two more seated beneath where the original turret was located. [[Ummayah]] placed a small order in 2013, but the Menghean Army has shown little interest in the vehicle, which is thinly armored and top-heavy.
* '''BSCh-7SD''' - Battalion command vehicle with extra radio equipment and command management interface equipment. Based on the BSCh-7G chassis, and retains the quasi-turret forward, even on late-production models.
 
* '''BSCh-7SG''' - {{wp|Armored recovery vehicle}} with a 7.5-ton crane and heavy towing gear. The passenger compartment stores maintenance equipment and spare parts for other BSCh-7 APCs, as well as the crane operator and two mechanics.
===Other Variants===
[[File:BSCh-7_RRB.png|400px|thumb|right|BSCh-7 variants used by the [[Rapid Response Brigades]].]]
*'''JJYB-120''': An armored, self-propelled mortar carrier (''Janggab-Jaju-Yudan-Balsagi'') intended for Battalion fire support. The top of the rear hull is built with a large two-door hatch, allowing the crew to operate a 120mm mortar from the passenger compartment. Fire-control is performed by the commander, seated beside the driver, while two additional crew operate the mortar in its separate compartment. The 12.7mm HMG turret of the original BSCh-7B is retained, and can be operated by the commander if the vehicle comes under attack.
*'''BSCh-7DS''': Battalion command vehicle (''Daedae Salyŏngcha''). It has a distinctive raised cabin with front and side windows over the troop compartment, providing space for the command staff to stand. It also carries an open machine-gun cupola instead of an enclosed turret.
*'''BSCh-7JG''': Armored ambulance (''Janggab Gugŭbcha'') typically used at the Battalion level to evacuate wounded soldiers to a battalion medical point or higher. It has the same internal capacity as the BSCh-7JG, but loading stretchers via the rear ramp is easier, and it has better protection and offroad capability.
*'''BSCh-7NAA''': Variant for the [[Rapid Response Brigades]] of the [[Internal Security Forces]], the BSCh-7NAA is based on the BSCh-7B's chassis but uses a smaller turret with a 7.62mm GPMG.
*'''BSCh-7NAB''': Modified BSCh-7NAA in which the GPMG is replaced with a manually operated, breech-loading grenade launcher. Unlike Menghean automatic grenade launchers, it uses the 42mm caliber common on under-barrel grenade launchers. In service it would primarily be used to launch tear gas grenades over crowds.


===Users===
===Users===
*{{flag|Argentstan}}
*{{flag|Azbekistan}}
*{{flag|Dzhungestan}}
*{{flag|Menghe}}
*{{flag|Menghe}}
*{{flag|Polvokia}}
*{{flag|Republic of Innominada}}
*{{flag|Qusayn}}
*{{flag|Qusayn}}
*{{flag|Ummayah}}
*{{flag|Ummayah}}
{{Menghean postwar AFVs}}


[[Category:Menghe]]
[[Category:Menghe]]

Latest revision as of 04:18, 12 August 2021

BSCh-7
BSCh-7 APC variants 20210811.png
Major variants of the BSCh-7 with the year they entered service.
TypeArmored personnel carrier
Place of originMenghe
Service history
In service1996-present
Production history
Produced1996-present
Specifications
Weight14.2 tonnes
Length8.19 m
Width2.92 m
Height2.71 m to turret roof
Crew2
Passengers11

Armor7-12mm
Main
armament
12.7mm GCh-75 HMG
EngineSamsan S730N8 V-8 diesel engine
300 hp
Power/weight21.2 hp/tonne
Transmission8×8
Ground clearance497mm
Operational
range
600 km (road)
Speed90 km/h (road)
8 km/h (swimming)

The BSCh-7 (formal designation: 7호 분대 수송 장갑차 / 七號分隊輸送裝甲車, Chil-ho Bundae Susong Janggabcha, "No.7 Armored Squad Transport;" short designation: 분수차-7 Bunsucha-chil) is a wheeled 8×8 armored personnel carrier designed in Menghe as a replacement for the BSCh-4. It features better mobility, better protection, and an improved internal layout, with the passengers facing inward in a rear compartment. It is currently the most common wheeled APC in the Menghean Army by a large margin, though the newer BSCh-10 has begun replacing it in some units.

Development

Menghe's previous wheeled APC, the BSCh-4, entered service in the early 1970s. Though it represented a major improvement over the BSCh-1, the BSCh-4 still possessed a number of drawbacks. With only four wheels, it had poor offroad mobility, and it could get stuck on rough terrain easily. The rear-engine arrangement also meant that passengers could only enter and exit through a pair of side doors. While this method was still reasonably fast, it could leave the dismounts exposed to enemy fire, limiting their options in an ambush situation. Finally, because all crew members sat in a single compartment, opening the passenger doors would expose the entire interior of the vehicle to any CBRN contaminants in the air outside.

In response to these drawbacks, the Menghean People's Army issued a request for a new wheeled APC in the early 1980s. Development unfolded slowly, interrupted by Ryŏ Ho-jun's political campaigns and the economic crisis of the mid-1980s. After the Decembrist Revolution, Choe Sŭng-min's government allowed the program to continue, but steadily reduced defense budgets in the late 1980s and early 1990s. By 1992, the BSCh-7 program existed mainly to retain domestic experience in AFV design, and the Ministry of National Defense forecast a relatively small batch of orders. Faced with these constraints, the designers incorporated a number of cost-cutting measures, resulting in an APC design that entered service in the 1990s but appeared to be out of the 1980s.

Two prototypes underwent testing and evaluation in the early 1990s. Both separated the hull into a crew compartment at the front, an engine compartment in the middle, and a passenger compartment in the rear, which was judged the best response to these design requirements, but they differed slightly in layout. The first prototype, Si.316, had its turret in the driver's compartment, between the driver and front passenger but offset to the rear. The second, Si.317, had its turret over the crew compartment, resembling the later BSCh-7N variant. It was also slightly larger, and offered an extra set of side doors for the passengers. In the end, the Ministry of National Defense ordered Si-317 with the turret placed over the seat beside the driver. A prototype meeting this configuration, Si.319, was tested in 1995 and declared the winner of the competition, entering production the following year.

Description

Layout

Blueprint of a BSCh-7N APC, including an underside view.

The BSCh-7G, based on the Si-319 prototype, is divided into three separate compartments. In the front of the vehicle is a crew compartment, with the driver and gunner seated side-by-side. These crew members can enter and exit either through hatches on the roof of the vehicle. Initial prototypes had side doors as well, but these were deemed redundant and deleted.

As on the BSCh-4N and later models, the driver and gunner have large bulletproof windows sloped to match the angle of the upper front plate. When entering combat, they can lower thin metal hatches over these windows to provide additional scratch protection; out of battle, these plates provide shade from the sun and reduce glare. The driver has four overhead periscopes and two viewing ports in the side armor, both of which are angled periscopes rather than direct viewing ports to avoid creating a line-of-sight opening in the armor. The gunner also has two side periscopes, as well as two periscopes, a large sight, and a small aiming sight on the cupola, which can rotate through 360 degrees.

The driver has a conventional seat, while the gunner has a rotating cupola derived from the type used on the JCh-4 and JCh-5 main battle tanks. This cupla allows the gunner to either manually aim and fire his 12.7mm heavy machine gun from a standing position with the hatch open, or remotely aim and fire it from inside the vehicle with the help of a periscope. In addition to shielding the gunner from small-arms fire and shrapnel, this also protects him against CBRN contaminants. Furthermore, because the passengers and platoon HQ members are in a separate compartment, the airtight seal around the driver-and-gunner compartment is not breached when the passengers enter or exit the vehicle.

Behind the driver's compartment is the engine compartment, separated by a protective firewall with an access hatch for maintenance. The firewall provides some additional protection against fire from the front of the vehicle, though any projectile which penetrates the front armor with enough energy to damage the engine is also likely to kill or injure the crew.

The rear half of the vehicle is devoted to the passenger compartment. The ten squad members sit on folding benches on either side of the hull, facing inward in two rows of five. This arrangement offers somewhat better ergonomics when entering and exiting the vehicle, and because the benches are fixed to the hull sides rather than the floor, it also offers some protection against mines and IEDs. It also leaves the passenger compartment with a clear floor when the benches are removed, making it easy to modify the vehicle for special-purpose variants. With all hatches closed and all firing ports closed or occupied, the passenger compartment is also sealed against CBRN contaminants, with an overpressure air filter on the roof reducing leakage through small openings.

The passengers have three ways to exit the vehicle: through double doors in the rear of the hull, through clamshell side doors, and through hatches in the roof. The hull rear doors provide the safest exit route when under fire from the front, and also allow the passengers to load and unload heavy equipment or stretchers more easily. The Si.316 prototype had a powered ramp with a built-in backup door, but the Si.317 and the production BSCh-7 both have manually opened double doors instead. Though a ramp would make it easier to load heavy equipment and stretchers, testing with the Si.316 and Si.317 found that the double doors allowed for significantly faster embarking and disembarking types when accounting for the time required to lower the ramp. Furthermore, the crew can disembark from the double doors while the vehicle is slowly moving forward, which is not possible with a ramp.

The side doors are similar to the ones on the BSCh-4: the upper half swings outward and forward, forming a shield against fire from in front, and the lower half swings outward and downward, forming a "step" for the passengers. In another feature borrowed from the BSCh-4, the upper half of the door has a built-in firing port, meaning that it can be used as a gun shield when advancing. Because of the inward-facing seating arrangement, all passengers can easily disembark from either side door, meaning that if the vehicle is under fire from one side the passengers can use the other side as an exit. Notably, the passenger benches terminate before reaching the side doors, meaning that there is no obstruction ahead of them.

The four large roof hatches provide one final means of exit, though they would only be the most desirable option in rare circumstances, such as while the vehicle is in the water. The hatches fold outward and are spring-loaded to hold open in the vertical position, providing some cover to standing passengers when opened. Metal "stirrups" between the pairs of roadwheels, combined with steps and bars on the hull sides, help passengers and crew members climb up and down easily. Out of combat, passengers often ride with the hatches open or even sit on the roof itself, as this provides the best escape from the hot interior when operating in tropical climates.

On the BSCh-7G, the eleventh passenger sits forward of the two rows in a centerline seat. This seat is given to a member of the platoon headquarters - in a 2nd Generation unit, either the Platoon Lieutenant, the Platoon Staff Sergeant, or the Platoon Marksman. This seat has a cupola with 360 degree periscope coverage, including a large variable-zoom periscope which can rotate and elevate in position. This allows the Platoon LT or Platoon SSGT to survey the battlefield from within the vehicle and issue commands accordingly. In practice, the periscopes offer poor visibility because they do not clear the clutter on the roof, and the members of the platoon headquarters often dismount to command from the field.

The BSCh-7N, which was introduced in 2003 and accounts for most BSCh-7s currently in Menghean service, has a modified internal arrangement. The platoon commander position in the center front of the passenger compartment is replaced by an enclosed turret, which is operated by the vehicle's gunner. The platoon LT, platoon SSGT, or platoon marksman instead rides in the forward seat beside the driver, with four periscopes, two side viewing ports, and a rotating variable-magnification periscope covering the forward 180-degree arc. This configuration gives the platoon HQ member better forward visibility, and allows the gunner to reload or un-jam the machine gun under armor, an important consideration in Menghean Army vehicle doctrine. Interestingly, the BSCh-7N retains the passenger compartment periscope, but offsets it to the 7-o'clock position behind the turret. From here, it can cover a 270-degree arc which sweeps from directly ahead over the left side and rear before terminating just short of 90 degrees right. The squad sergeant can use this periscope to cover the platoon commander's blind spots, spot targets for the gunner, and check for threats before ordering the squad to dismount. The revised arrangement compromises one of the supposed benefits of the BSCh-7's layout - namely, the fact that the crew compartment is not breached when the passengers dismount - and also forces the platoon HQ member to dismount from a top front hatch, with maximum exposure to enemy fire. The platoon LT or platoon SSGT can avoid these problems by commanding from inside the vehicle, as long as the vehicles are not far from the dismounted troops, but the platoon marksman or platoon medic must dismount as part of regular operations.

Armament

On both major variants of the BSCh-7 (G and N), the main armament is a single GCh-75 12.7mm heavy machine gun. The quasi-turret of the BSCh-7G, derived from a tank commander's cupola, allows the gunner to aim and fire the machine gun from inside the vehicle, but there is only a single 200-round ammunition box on the mount and the gunner must open his hatch and expose himself to enemy fire in order to load a new box or un-jam the weapon.

The BSCh-7N instead gives the gunner a compact turret in the front of the passenger compartment. This is a "true" turret: the gunner sits on a seat suspended below it, with his head and part of his torso inside the turret ring, and can access the machine gun's receiver easily under armor. It also has an overhead hatch through which the gunner can enter, exit, or simply observe the vehicle's surroundings. Consequently, it is more effective than the demi-turret cupola on the BSCh-7G, and more spacious than the small turret on the BSCh-4N. It also offers the gunner better visibility: there are two vision ports on each side and one in the rear, all of them easily accessible from the gunner's seat. Front protection is somewhat compromised by the curved ammunition feed to the gun, which runs through a curved plate in the mantlet. A canvas cover maintains the airtight seal around the machine gun at different angles of elevation.

The turret on the BSCh-7N is not powered, and the gunner must traverse and elevate the weapon using a set of hand cranks. This also means that the gun is not stabilized in either axis, making it impossible to fire accurately while moving, though the gunner can still lay down suppressive fire. Elevation ranges from -15 degrees to +60 degrees: low enough to fire at personnel near the sides of the vehicle, and high enough to engage helicopters, low-flying aircraft, and personnel in high windows or on cliffs. Gun depression is much more limited when firing ahead or to the rear.

Despite occasional independent ventures by various design teams, the Menghean Army strictly opposed proposals to fit a heavier remote controlled weapon station to the BSCh-7. Especially during the 2000s and early 2010s, Menghean armored doctrine staff were wary of the disadvantages of unmanned turrets, including the lack of a manual traverse backup, the impossibility of loading or un-jamming the weapon from behind armor, and the higher profile which often resulted. Furthermore, the BSCh-7 was designed as a light, inexpensive, and mobile APC, and the Menghean Army saw little need to arm it with an autocannon or ATGMs. Only in the late 2010s did the Menghean Army order a batch of BSCh-7s with remote turrets, a change which allowed a reversion to the BSCh-7G's crew seating plan.

Apart from the various turret options, all APC variants of the BSCh-7 are fitted with no fewer than eighteen firing ports, each one consisting of a three-layered bulletproof glass viewing slit, a pivoting firing port cover, and a simple ball mount with a rubber-lined keyhole slot. There are five on each side of the passenger compartment, including one on each side door. One pair of these firing ports is angled forward at 60 degrees from the centerline, and the firing ports on the doors can fire even further forward when the upper doors are opened. All but the door ports have an associated apparatus which, when hooked to the side of a JS-67 or JS-103 assault rifle, deflects spent casings to the floor and extracts fumes through a vent in the roof. There is one firing port on each of the rear doors, allowing passengers to check and clear the space behind the vehicle before disembarking. Even the roof hatches have firing ports; these can be used either to engage high-up targets on buildings or clifftops, or as side-facing firing ports when the hatches are open. The final pair of firing ports are on the outer corners of the driver's compartment, and allow the driver and forward passenger to engage nearby threats with their rifles. Because the BSCh-7's passenger seats face inward, the squad members must stand or partially kneel on their benches in order to use these firing ports, making their fire even more inaccurate than firing port fire on other vehicles. As such, the numerous firing ports are rarely used in combat, especially because Menghean APC doctrine encourages squads to dismount before initiating an engagement.

Protection

The armor on the BSCh-7 is only slightly thicker than the armor on the BSCh-4, but it is made from a harder alloy and sloped more steeply. The upper hull sides and lower hull front are sloped at 35 degrees from vertical, and the upper hull front is sloped at 65 degrees from vertical. Due to the combination of sloping and hardening, the vehicle can withstand 12.7mm fire across the 60-degree frontal arc at ranges of down to 500 meters, and it can withstand 7.62mm, 7.7mm, and 7.5mm armor-piercing rounds at point-blank range. The roof armor is thinnest, at only 5mm, but this is still sufficient to deflect glancing rounds at all but the steepest of angles.

Though reasonably well-protected against small-arms fire and shrapnel, the BSCh-7 is still very vulnerable to heavier weapons. Man-portable anti-tank weapons can easily penetrate the outer hull, as can armor-piercing tank shells, armor-piercing autocannon projectiles, anti-tank guided missiles, and direct artillery or mortar hits. Armor-piercing HMG rounds from the sides or rear can also easily penetrate the armor at combat ranges. Apart from the run-flat tires and passenger benches, mine protection is also quite poor, especially for the driver's compartment.

Mobility

The BSCh-7 is powered by a Samsan S730N8 300-horsepower V-8 diesel engine. This gives it a power-to-weight ratio of 21.2 horsepower per tonne. It can reach speeds of 90 kilometers per hour on level roads, and its 8×8 configuration gives better offroad mobility than the BSCh-4, which could easily get stuck on rocky or muddy terrain. In case the vehicle does become stuck, there is a powered winch in the nose, which can be used to attempt recovery if an armored recovery vehicle is not nearby.

Operational range is roughly 700 kilometers when operating on roads, a relatively long distance. This allows units equipped with the BSCh-7 to operate without refueling for an extended period of time, useful when mounting a deep penetration offensive behind enemy lines or when defending a cut-off position. To further enhance autonomy, the BSCh-7 also contains more internal storage space than its predecessors, which is doubly useful when operating in a CBRN-contaminated environment.

Like its predecessor, the BSCh-7 is fully amphibious, with a swimming speed of 8 kilometers per hour. It can cross calm water without any preparation, though when attempting a long-distance crossing or crossing choppy water, it is necessary to attach a snorkel to the engine air intake and the reserve exhaust in order to ensure that the vehicle is not swamped by waves. Because the engine is in the front half of the vehicle, however, it cannot use waterjet propulsion like the BSCh-4. Instead, power take-off shafts from the driveshaft can be linked to two shrouded propellers, one on each side of the rear of the hull. Two rudders behind each propeller provide steering, and a bilge pump clears out any water which enters through cracks, open firing ports, or penetrations in the armor.

A more serious drawback of the BSCh-7's configuration is that the combined mass of the engine and the front armor make the vehicle front-heavy. It rides low and level in the water, and does not handle as well as the BSCh-4. When the passenger compartment is empty, the weight distribution problem is even more severe. Menghean Army training manuals state that BSCh-7 crews should avoid crossing water obstacles with an empty passenger compartment whenever possible, and should ballast the passenger compartment with sandbags, soil, or water if an empty crossing is absolutely necessary. The Menghean Marine Infantry refused to adopt the BSCh-7 on this basis, instead continuing to use the smaller BSCh-6.

Optics

Interestingly, the BSCh-7 had relatively good close-range visibility, in many respects surpassing the BSCh-3, BSCh-5, and BSCh-8 IFVs. The driver and the adjacent crew member both have numerous periscopes and vision ports covering angles of up to 135 degrees away from the front. The passengers also have good periscope and vision port coverage, as does the gunner on the BSCh-7N. Both the BSCh-3G and the BSCh-3N have a rotating variable-zoom periscope in the passenger compartment, though they assign it to different squad members. Altogether, this suite gives the passengers and crew a good probability of spotting nearby threats at close range in the daytime, avoiding ambushes and unsafe disembark orders.

Where the BSCh-7 lacks is in night vision. Both the G and N variants were originally built with 70s-vintage night vision equipment: starlight-based image intensification sights for the gunner and HQ member, forward-facing active infrared headlights, and an infrared spotlight on early N-model turrets. None of the large periscopes on these early models had a passive infrared imaging mode. As such, early-model BSCh-7s had poor nighttime visibility in clear conditions and no passive night vision under an overcast sky. This was a known drawback, as the Menghean MoND mainly envisioned the BSCh-7 as a transport rather than a combat vehicle. Some vehicles received passive night vision upgrades in the late 2000s, with another round of upgrades in the late 2010s, but even these refit efforts were given low priority compared to optics improvement for IFVs and MBTs.

Role and evaluation

Compared with the BSCh-4, the BSCh-7 represented a major improvement in nearly all respects. Its layout is more comfortable and convenient, and leaves more space for supplies and large equipment. Its armament is identical, but benefits from better sighting and visibility. Its protection is moderately better: both vehicles are only armored to withstand 12.7mm fire over the frontal arc, but the BSCh-7 can withstand frontal 12.7mm fire from closer ranges. The BSCh-7 also has much better mobility, owing to its more powerful engine and its 8×8 suspension, though its swimming performance is somewhat poorer. These improvements came at only a modest increase in cost, in part due to the omission of night optics and powered turret controls.

Nevertheless, the BSCh-7 is still limited to the role of a "battle taxi" APC, quickly transporting its squad into the combat zone but staying out of combat where possible. It lacks the firepower to engage fortifications and armored vehicles, and its own armor is easily defeated by enemy tanks, IFVs, and squad-level anti-tank weapons. What armor it does have is mainly intended to protect the occupants from artillery fire, airstrikes, and ambushes, and even in the latter case its armor scheme gives little consideration to mines and IEDs, as experience in the Innominadan occupation quickly demonstrated. Some up-armed and up-armored variants were produced, but the vast majority of BSCh-7s in Menghean service are G or N variants, and a majority of these only have rudimentary night vision gear.

Thus, evaluated as a combat vehicle, the BSCh-7 is relatively poor. In some respects it is inferior to the BTR-80, especially in armament, though it does have the edge in visibility and passenger space. Its main advantage is its ability to achieve its basic protection, mobility, and ergonomic goals for a relatively low cost. When relations with Maverica and Innominada broke down in 2005, this allowed Menghe to produce the BSCh-7 in enormous numbers over the following decade, expanding and motorizing what in the 1990s was still an infantry-centric force. Thus, in terms of its broader strategic role as an inexpensive, mass-produced, but generally adequate troop transport, the BSCh-7 fulfilled its goals well.

Production

During peak production in the late 2000s and early 2010s, the BSCh-7 was manufactured at three sites: the Hwasŏng Armored Vehicle Plant, the West Chŏllo Military Machine Building Plant, and the Taekchŏn Heavy Machine Building Plant. More than 21,000 vehicles were produced between 1996 and 2017. From 2018 onward, the Taekchŏn facility has produced spare parts and rebuilt existing BSCh-7 hulls into BSCh-7Rs.

Variants

Armored personnel carriers

  • BSCh-7G - Original production variant with a quasi-turret over the front passenger's seat. Remains in production to fill battalion headquarters units and other special roles.
    • BSCh-7G1 - Designation for BSCh-7G hulls refitted with the MChGJ-0800 radio system.
  • BSCh-7N - Improved variant with an enclosed turret over the rear passenger compartment and modified optics forward. Produced from 2003 to 2010.
    • BSCh-7N1 - BSCh-7N refitted with armor plates on the hull sides and front. This included completely plating over the front windows, leaving the driver to rely entirely on the periscopes. These armor plates were apparently fitted in order to raise frontal-arc protection so that the vehicle could withstand 14.5mm fire over the frontal arc, instead of 12.7mm on the baseline variant. The plates are permanently bolted in place, and are not designed to be changed out in the field. A number of vehicles were refitted this way in the late 2000s, but most BSCh-7Ns did not receive the new armor kit.
    • BSCh-7N2 - Designation for BSCh-7N hulls refitted with night vision and radio equipment from the BSCh-7D.
  • BSCh-7D - Further improved variant with passive night vision (infrared imaging type) for the gunner, front passenger, and sergeant; lacks active IR spotlights. Produced from 2010 onward. Also fitted with the MChGJ-0800 radio system.
    • BSCh-7D1 - BSCh-7D with the BSCh-7N1's add-on armor kit, first seen in 2013. As with the BSCh-7N1, this armor kit is relatively uncommon.
  • BSCh-7R - Modernized variant with a fixed octagonal cupola and 12.7mm RWS in place of the turret, derived from the cupola and RWS on the BSCh-10G. This allows the crew and passengers to revert to the seating arrangement used on the BSCh-7G: the gunner sits beside the driver and operates the RWS remotely, while the squad leader or platoon lieutenant sits under the fixed cupola to survey the battlefield. As on the BSCh-10, the squad leader or platoon LT has a duplicate set of controls and can take over the RWS or simply watch its video feed. All BSCh-7Rs are re-manufactured from BSCh-7N and BSCh-7D hulls, and all re-manufacturing takes place at the West Chŏllo Military Machine Building Plant. First unveiled in 2018, apparently as an offshoot of the BSCh-10G program.
  • BSCh-7OS (Otobai Susong) - Special derivative of the BSCh-7G modified to transport motorcycles. Instead of two rear doors, it has a single rear ramp with grip surfacing. The rear four seats in each row are torn out, leaving an open space for two motorcycles or a single 4×4 ATV. Two inward-facing seats on each side are retained, as well as a rear-facing seat for a member of the platoon HQ. Though originally assigned to reconnaissance units, where it can move motorcycles across water obstacles, the BSCh-7OS has also seen service as an improvised armored cargo carrier. Externally, the BSCh-7OS can be distinguished from the BSCh-7G by the rear ramp and the presence of fewer firing ports.

Other combat vehicles

  • BSCh-7SB - Self-propelled mortar with an SB-120 mortar in an open-topped passenger compartment. This vehicle uses the BSCh-7G base chassis, even after the BSCh-7N entered production, meaning that even with the open roof there is still a machine gun turret forward. The crew consists of five individuals: driver, commander (forward), gunner, and two loaders. The battery headquarters is in a separate vehicle.

Support vehicles

  • BSCh-7SD - Battalion command vehicle with extra radio equipment and command management interface equipment. Based on the BSCh-7G chassis, and retains the quasi-turret forward, even on late-production models.
  • BSCh-7SG - Armored recovery vehicle with a 7.5-ton crane and heavy towing gear. The passenger compartment stores maintenance equipment and spare parts for other BSCh-7 APCs, as well as the crane operator and two mechanics.

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