Donghae DG84

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The Donghae DG84 is a family of 4×4 military light utility vehicles designed in Menghe. It was first introduced in 2014. It serves as a unified replacement for the Chŏnsŏ G242, Donghae D1725, Chŏnsŏ G586, and Chŏnsŏ J107, with a wide variety of armored and unarmored variants filling a wide variety of combat and non-combat roles.

Development

Unlike the Donghae D1725, which was an independent venture, the DG84 was developed in response to a special request from the Menghean Ministry of National Defense. After procuring limited numbers of D1725s, Chŏnsŏ G242s, and Chŏnsŏ J107s over the course of the 2000s, the Menghean Armed Forces had acquired a large number of redundant vehicle types, and the MoND hoped to streamline future procurement by adopting a modular 4×4 chassis which would share automotive components across a wide range of light utility roles. The design requirement for the new vehicle was issued in 2009, after a period spent evaluating existing vehicles for the role.

Donghae Motors, the producer of the D1725, responded by launching design work on a new vehicle with the required specifications. Chŏnsŏ Automotive produced a competitor in a slightly lighter weight class. Both designs underwent evaluation in the early 2010s, with the heavier DG84 winning the development competition in 2013. Mass-production of the light utility variant began the following year.

Description

The DG84 has a conventional front-engine, four-wheel-drive layout, and broadly resembles other military light utility vehicles in its weight class, including the Dayashinese Mega Cruiser and the Sylvan URO VAMTAC. It is built with body-on-frame construction, with the sides of the body extending below the frame to lower the vehicle's overall height and center of gravity. This also means that a variety of cab types can be installed on the same basic chassis in construction. There are several extended chassis models which retain near-total parts commonality with the basic DG84 models, and all variants can share the same engine and powertrain.

The baseline DG84G has a 1+4 seating layout, with a single driver in the front left, a single passenger on the front right, and three side-by-side passenger seats in the next row to the rear. The pickup bed to the rear measures 1,250 by 1,850 millimeters, with 1,220mm between the wheel wells. It is possible to install benches on top of the wheel wells, allowing four passengers to ride in the pickup bed. The vehicle can carry 1,000 kilograms of cargo on board, and tow loads of up to 1,500 kilograms. The trailer capacity allows the DG84 to tow a 1,200-liter fuel or water trailer, an SB-120 Type 84 mortar, or a diesel generator of up to 15KW output.

The baseline engine is a Donghae GiS-108 with a 6.7L displacement generating 200 horsepower. With passengers and light cargo only, the DG-84 can reach a top speed of 120 kilometers per hour on a level road. With a full cargo load or heavy trailer, its maximum road speed falls to 90 km/h. In offroad conditions, the vehicle's double-wishbone suspension and portal gear hubs give it good ground clearance and mobility, and a central tire inflation system on offroad "N" variants allows the driver to manage air pressure to optimize performance on different terrain types. Later variants have a raised air intake and exhaust with rubber sealant around the doors, allowing the DG84 to cross water obstacles 1.5 meters deep. While insufficient for large river crossings, this is enough to cross deep streams and transit between a beached landing craft and the shore.

Utility variants of the DG84 only have a thin aluminium sheet metal body to save weight, and therefore do not offer any protection for the crew. Some fast attack vehicle variants are open-topped as well. Combat variants use a special steel body which protects the driver and passengers against enemy small-arms fire and shrapnel.

Variants

DG841

The DG841 is the standard variant described above. It can most easily be identified by the lack of any armament on the roof. The pickup bed can be covered by a canvas tarp on metal arches to protect the cargo. When moving personnel, a taller frame is used. A hard shell cover with a rear door is also on the market, mainly for police and other paramilitary forces in cold climates. Models with full offroad and fording gear are designated DG841N, and models with only the basic features are designated DG841G.

DG842

This designation is applied to DG84 variants with a 750mm turret ring with pintle mount centered on the roof. The common pintle mount can support a GCh-96 or GCh-114 general-purpose machine gun, a GCh-75 heavy machine gun, a JSB-30 30mm automatic grenade launcher, or an ATGM tube. The turret ring can also be fitted with a metal shield to protect the gunner against small-arms fire and shrapnel, though the body of the vehicle is still unarmored. As with the DG841, the DG842G is the baseline variant, while the DG841N has a larger front bumper, a snorkel, a raised exhaust exit, and central tire inflation controls.

DG82

The DG82 is a cargo-carrying variant of the DG84. It has a stretched chassis with a revised two-door body. The open-topped cab can accommodate a driver and one passenger, while the 2,500×1,850mm rear bed can carry 2,000 kilograms of cargo or ten soldiers on inward-facing benches. This makes the DG82 a slightly less capable replacement for the Chŏnsŏ G586, with slightly less cargo capacity but easier maintenance and more parts commonality. The 1+11 passenger layout allows a single DG82 to move a 10-man infantry squad and one member of the platoon HQ, whereas two DG-84s are required to transport the same number of passengers. The total lack of armor protection and modest offroad mobility prevent the DG-82 from being used as an effective APC, but it is useful for rapidly shuttling light infantry units between different points within friendly territory.

There are also custom hardshell modules for the DG82. These include the following:

  • DG82DGP - Carries a DGP-23-2 twin 23mm anti-air gun in the pickup bed. Crew: 4 (driver, commander, two gun crew). Mainly marketed for export, with no domestic orders.
  • DG82DM - Battalion-grade signal vehicle with radio equipment. Crew: 4.
  • DG82DS - Battalion command vehicle with computer stations. Crew: 5.
  • DG82GG - Field ambulance with life support stabilization equipment. Capacity: 1 driver, 2 attendants, 2 stretchers.
  • DG82YJ - Mobile maintenance workshop. Similar in capability to the Chŏnsŏ G586YJ, with numbered variants specializing in tanks, APCs, IFVs, lorries, and special equipment. Crew of 4; usually tows a generator on a trailer.

Operators

See also