BSCh-8

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BSCh-8
BSCh-8D challenge 2022-05-01.png
A BSCh-8D IFV and its squad on the first day of the Second Pan-Septentrion War.
TypeInfantry fighting vehicle
Place of originMenghe
Service history
In service2021-present
Used bySee "Operators"
WarsInnominadan Crisis
Innominadan Uprising
Production history
DesignerSamsan Defense
Designed2000-2009
Produced2010-present
Specifications (BSCh-8D)
Weight25 tonnes (base)
27.5 tonnes (with G2 armor kit)
Length6.65 m
Width3.75 m (with skirts)
Height2.58 m to turret roof
Crew3
Passengers8

ArmorRolled steel armor base with applique composite and ERA kits
Main
armament
2A72 30mm autocannon
Secondary
armament
7.5mm GCh-96 co-axial MG
30mm JSB-30 grenade launcher on RWS
2 × YDCh-72 ATGM
EngineSamsan SG7N8G, V8 water-cooled multifuel diesel
740 hp
Power/weight26.9 hp/ton (with skirts)
SuspensionTorsion bar with hydropneumatic shock absorbers
Ground clearance365mm
Operational
range
600 km (road)
Speed70 km/h (road)

The BSCh-8 is a type of tracked infantry fighting vehicle developed in Menghe during the 2000s as the successor to the BSCh-5. Compared with its predecessor, it has greatly improved improved armor protection, at the cost of sacrificing its amphibious capability. Later variants also add a 35mm autocannon with greatly improved anti-armor and anti-infantry performance. The BSCh-8 is currently the main infantry fighting vehicle in high-readiness units of the Menghean Army, though the BSCh-5 remains more numerous overall.

Development

Interest in a new Menghean IFV began in the wake of the Polvokian Civil War. During Menghe's intervention in that conflict, units equipped with BSCh-5 IFVs suffered high losses. A subsequent review of Menghean losses in Polvokia concluded that most BSCh-5 losses resulted from RPG fire, 12.7mm HMG fire from the sides, and roadside bombs. Designed for use in conventional battles on open terrain, the BSCh-5 was especially vulnerable in ambushes and close-range combat due to its thin side armor.

In response, the Menghean Ministry of National Defense ordered the development of a new IFV. This time, the design requirements called for a greater focus on protection, particularly protection off the frontal arc. The new vehicle would have to withstand direct 12.7mm fire from the sides and rear at a range of 200 meters, while also withstanding 23mm armor-piercing ammunition from 200 meters over the 120-degree frontal arc. Protection from the PG-7 high-explosive anti-tank warhead was also desired, along with good protection against roadside bombs and land mines. Given the increased mass of this armor, the MoND did not require the vehicle to be amphibious, though it would need a power-to-mass ratio of at least 22 hp/tonne in order to maintain good offroad performance.

Samsan Defense, which was also working on a prototype 150mm howitzer which would become the P150G2P, also entered the new IFV program. The Chikai Heavy Machine Building Plant entered a competing prototype based on the JCh-5 main battle tank. Though the Chikai prototype had better protection, Samsan's entry offered more crew space, a lighter weight, and reduced fuel consumption, while still meeting protection requirements. Working prototype vehicles from both design teams underwent evaluation in 2004, when Samsan's entry was selected as the basis for the new IFV.

The subsequent breakdown of relations with Maverica and Innominada in 2005 forced the Ministry of National Defense to order new changes to the design. Frontal protection against 23mm APDS was no longer sufficient: the new IFV would need to be able to withstand 30mm APFSDS ammunition fired by Maverican BMP-2 IFVs. Likewise, the side armor would have to withstand 14.5×114mm ammunition from the KPV heavy machine gun, common on Maverican APCs and light vehicles. Mass-production of the vehicle was delayed as Samsan increased the hull armor accordingly and upgraded the engine to compensate for the added weight.

The final version of the Samsan prototype was finally accepted for mass production in 2009. Samsan opened a new production facility in Daegok to manufacture it, and the Ministry of National Defense retooled the Taehwa Armored Vehicle Plant to supplement production.

Design

Layout

In terms of its overall layout, the BSCh-8 resembles a conventional Western IFV, much unlike the BSCh-3 and BSCh-5 which preceded it. The driver is seated in the front left corner of the hull, but there is no separate passenger seat behind him; instead, directly behind the driver is the turret, with the passenger compartment behind that. Its profile also resembles that of Western IFVs, particularly the K21 and Bionix.

The order of the turret crew is also reversed compared to the BSCh-5, which, unique among Menghean combat vehicles, put the gunner on the right side of the turret and the commander on the left. The BSCh-8 restores the arrangement seen on tanks like the JCh-5 through JCh-8, with the commander on the right. Much like the BSCh-5, the BSCh-8 gives the commander a relatively good view of the battlefield, with seven periscopes providing 300-degree vision. The commander's only blind spot is the left-rear sector, where a mounting point for a remote weapon system sits in place of the eighth periscope. To counteract this, the gunner has four periscopes covering the rear, left rear, left, and front left, in addition to a forward-facing electro-optical sight for aiming the gun.

A metal screen wraps around the turret basket, preventing the crew and passengers' limbs from being caught while the turret is turning. The front left and rear left panels of the screen can fold open to allow the crew to exit through the passenger compartment. Following doctrinal changes during the 2005 Menghean military reforms, the squad commander in an IFV typically does not dismount, so this exit route would only be used if the crew had to evacuate while under fire from the front.

The passenger compartment has eight seats in two inward-facing rows of four. The original design requirement for the BSCh-8 requested a 3+7 crew-passenger capacity, the same as that of the BSCh-5, but the symmetrical all-rear passenger compartment of the BSCh-8 would have unused space if only seven passengers were carried. During the design process, this space was initially reserved for supplies, ammunition, or even a chemical toilet with a wraparound modesty curtain, but in the end the Menghean Army opted to add a seventh dismount to the mechanized rifle squad in BSCh-8-equipped units. The eightht seat is filled by a member of the platoon headquarters: either the platoon LT, the platoon SSGT, or the platoon sharpshooter.

The roof of the passenger compartment has two large square hatches, much like the hatches on the BSCh-5. These allow the four rearmost dismounts in the passenger compartment to stand up and fire over the sides of the vehicle. Because the BSCh-8 lacks firing ports, this is the only way to perform a mounted assault. There is also a circular hatch with periscopes covering 245 degrees to the rear. In the lead vehicle of each platoon, the platoon LT uses this hatch to survey the battlefield, either from under armor or with his head and shoulders sticking through. Otherwise, a member of the squad uses it to maintain situational awareness. Compared to the BSCh-5, which puts the platoon LT behind the driver, the BSCh-5 offers poor forward visibility, though the LT can stand in the hatch to peer over the turret. The commander also has access to a multifunction display in the passenger compartment, and can take video feed from the commander's sight or even control the commander's sight directly.

The dismounts exit through a single door in the rear of the hull. The designers chose a door over a mechanical ramp on the basis that the former option is less prone to failure and quicker to open, while still being large enough that all passengers can easily dismount.

Protection

Variant Mass Power-to-mass ratio
BSCh-8G 25 t 29.6 hp/t
BSCh-8G2 27.5 t 26.9 hp/t
BSCh-8N 31 t 23.8 hp/t
BSCh-8N1 28.6 t 25.8 hp/t
BSCh-8D 28.2 t 26.2 hp/t

The armor protection of the BSCh-8 is one of its most important advances over previous Menghean IFVs. The base hull armor is able to withstand 12.7mm HMG fire from all directions at 200 meters, and 25mm APFSDS fire over the 60-degree frontal arc. The applique plate kit used by production-model G variants increases this to 14.5mm fire over the forward 270-degree arc and 30mm APFSDS fire over the 60-degree frontal arc, again at 200 meters each. Because 14.5mm and 30mm are the gun calibers of Maverica's main APCs and IFVs, respectively, this gives a mechanized infantry company with the BSCh-8 a significant edge over an opponent with BTRs or BMP-2s: at typical combat ranges, it can penetrate their armor, but they cannot penetrate its armor.

On most production BSCh-8 vehicles, the hull armor is supplemented by some type of applique armor kit. All of these kits aimed to provide 270-degree forward protection (that is, everywhere except the rear plate) against anti-tank weapons likely to be carried by an enemy mechanized infantry squad, particularly the ubiquitous RPG-7.

The G1 variant, hastily introduced during the Innominadan Crisis, has slat armor surrounding the G variant's existing applique plates. Combat experience and controlled testing, however, found that slat armor only prevented RPG-7 projectiles from detonating 50% of the time, and where they did detonate, the additional standoff distance did not have a major impact on explosive jet penetration. Subsequent variants, like the G2, N1, and D, reduced the slat armor coverage to the lower half of the hull only, where a direct RPG hit is unlikely and the additional space between the slat grid and the hull side armor helps disperse the HEAT jet.

Early models of the N variant added a much heavier applique armor kit comprised of stacked steel and ceramic composite armor plates. These reportedly used a proprietary composite armor configuration developed by Samsan, distinct from the composite armor used on the JCh-6 and JCh-8 main battle tanks. Combat experience in Innominada revealed that these armor plates were not as efficient against heavier RPG-7 rockets as designers had anticipated. They were also very heavy, adding 12 tonnes to the vehicle's mass. Plans to retrofit existing G hulls with composite armor plates were suspended in 2015.

As a lighter solution, the Menghean Army proposed mounting explosive reactive armour (ERA) blocks on top of a steel applique backing similar to the type used on the BSCh-8G. This caused concern among some officers, who feared that detonation of ERA blocks could injure infantry advancing on foot alongside the vehicle. Samsan conducted tests in 2016 to evaluate the blast and shrapnel threat from various ERA types, and reported that its proprietary "Hodu" ERA blocks produced a blast area comparable to that of an impacting PG-7VL projectile, meaning that the threat to surrounding infantry is comparable to that of an anti-tank rocket impacting on composite armor. Samsan's Hodu ERA is also insensitive to projectiles impacting below a certain velocity, meaning that small-arms fire and autocannon fire will not detonate it, though shaped charges will. Hodu blocks were applied to a limited number of G variants, designated G2, prior to the testing period in 2015, and in 2017 they became standard on the N1 and subsequent D variants. The combined ERA, steel backing, and lower-hull slat armor kit is considerably lighter than the BSCh-8N's composite armor kit, adding only 8 tonnes to the vehicle's mass.

An added benefit of the BSCh-8's modular armor scheme is that damaged panels, grates, and ERA blocks can be removed and replaced in the field. In the design of each armor kit, designers paid great attention to minimizing the number of distinct armor panel shapes so that damaged vehicles could replace their armor from a simplified stockpile of common panels. The different armor kits all share the same mounting system as well, making it easy for a unit to upgrade to a heavier or more advanced armor scheme.

Armament

The G variant of the BSCh-8 is armed with a 30mm 2A72 autocannon, the same weapon carried by the D and R variants of the BSCh-5. The autocannon has a rate of fire of 300 rounds per minute and can elevate to +60 or -7 degrees. It has a switchable dual ammunition feed, and is typically loaded with one belt of APFSDS armor-piercing ammunition and one belt of contact-fused high explosive ammunition. Total ammunition stowage is 550 rounds, made up of 180 rounds of APFSDS and 370 rounds of HE, each in a single belt. The ammunition belts extend down from the right side of the receiver to the turret floor, and from there wrap around to the rear of the turret, underneath the seats of the commander and gunner.

In addition to the autocannon, all IFV variants of the BSCh-8 have a co-axial 7.5×54mm machine gun based on the GCh-96 GPMG. On G and N variants, this weapon feeds from a single 4,000-round belt next to the gunner. On the D variant, the co-axial MG fires through a port in the right turret cheek and feeds from 200-round ammunition boxes, which are manually reloaded by the commander.

All IFV variants also have a mounting point on the turret rear for a remote weapon station. The 380mm base ring can support RWS installations for 12.7mm heavy machine guns, 7.5mm medium machine guns, and 30mm automatic grenade launchers. The Menghean Army exclusively fits its BSCh-8s with 30mm AGL RWS installations, giving the vehicle an additional tool with which to engage and suppress infantry. The RWS is operated by the vehicle commander, and it has co-axial visual and infrared cameras which double as the commander's independent television sights.

The "N" and "D" variants are both armed with the Type 110 35mm autocannon, which can be upgraded to 50mm with a simple change of the barrel and a few other parts. The ammunition feeds for the N and D variants, however, differ dramatically. The N variant uses the Type 110G version of the weapon, which stores ready cartridges point-up in the right half of the turret and passes them through a vertical turntable to align them with the gun's breech at any elevation. This arrangement, the first ammunition loading system for the Type 110, is compact and space-efficient, but trials revealed serious reliability issues related to the turntable mechanism. The ammunition feed on the production model of the BSCh-8N is artificially governed to 90 rounds per minute, which reduces the risk of jamming but also hampers the weapon's effectiveness. The N-model ammunition feed contains 128 ready rounds, of which 36 are APFSDS anti-armor cartridges and 92 are smart-fused or contact-fused high-explosive rounds. Unique among BSCh-8 variants, the N model stores all ready rounds in an isolated compartment which is separated from the rest of the turret by a steel bulkhead with a thermal ceramic liner. In the event that the ammunition box is penetrated, blowout panels on the turret roof relieve the pressure while the ceramic-lined bulkhead protects the crew from the heat. Only half the vehicle's ammunition, however, is stored this way: 160 more 35mm cartridges are stored under the turret floor. The commander manually loads them into the linkless feed chamber through a locking panel behind his seat and to the right.

The "D" variant also carries the Type 110 autocannon, but in its N variant, which uses a greatly simplified linkless feed. It feeds ammunition from two 76-round boxes inside the turret, again with one box containing anti-tank ammunition (APFSDS or SAPHEI) and the other containing anti-infantry ammunition (smart-fused PABM or HEI). A large linkless feed box behind the turret crew contains 178 more rounds of which 112 are high-explosive and 56 are anti-armor, bringing the total to 320. To restock the ammunition boxes, the D variant lowers its gun to an elevation of 0 degrees, raises two transfer mechanisms to link the below-turret and within-turret linkless feed boxes, and transfers rounds to the turret at a rate of 200 rounds per minute per side. This arrangement greatly reduces the risk of feeding errors in field tests, and allowed the designers to return the rate of fire to 200 rounds per minute. This change came at a cost, however: the Type 110N's rotating feed boxes require more height than the Type 110G's turntable. The design of the turret basket was altered to reduce the added height to 9 centimeters, but the added armor of the bulkier turret added 2 tons to the vehicle's mass. Furthermore, while the BSCh-8G stores its ammunition under the turret crew seats out of the path of most penetrating rounds and the BSCh-8N stores ready rounds in a protected compartment with blowoff panels, the BSCh-8D has only a thin sheet metal panel between the rotating feed boxes and the turret crew, and no barrier between the crew and passengers and the reserve ammunition magazine.

ATGM armament also differs between variants of the BSCh-8. G variants were built with four YDCh-70 ATGMs in armored boxes on either side of the turret. These boxes can withstand rifle-caliber ball ammunition and shrapnel, as well as collisions with branches and falling debris. The YDCh-70 is a very capable ATGM with an overflight top-attack warhead, a range of 6 kilometers, and a speed of 350 meters per second. Its SACLOS beam-riding guidance, however, requires that the IFV fire its missile from a stationary position with unobstructed line-of-sight to the enemy and keep the target in the crosshairs until the missile impacts. This can give an enemy main battle tank time to retreat behind cover or fire on the launch vehicle, destroying it and breaking the lock.

To improve on these faults, the BSCh-8N and BSCh-8D instead use the YDCh-72 ATGM. The YDCh-72 is a non-line-of-sight weapon, transmitting a video feed from its IR-spectrum nose camera to an LCD screen inside the vehicle via a trailing fiber-optic cable. The gunner controls the missile through the middle phase of its lofted trajectory, as its seeker autonomously scans for IR contrast targets and suggests them to the gunner. When the missile acquires the correct target, the operator releases it into automatic terminal mode, allowing it to perform a top-attack strike with precise terminal control and high accuracy. The YDCh-72G is limited to 4,000 meters by the length of its trailing cable, while the N variant of the missile has an improved rocket motor and a finer cable, and can reach 5,000 meters. Though both missiles have a shorter range than the YDG-70, they do not require unbroken line-of-sight contact between the IFV and the target, meaning that in practice a BSCh-8 with a YDG-72 is able to engage more distant targets than a BSCh-8 with a YDG-70. The NLOS guidance mode of the missile also allows a BSCh-8N or D to engage enemy armor threats from a fully concealed position, provided that a dismounted squad member can provide the rough bearing and range of the target. The main disadvantage of this upgrade is the higher cost of the YDCh-72, which resulted in N and D vehicles carrying only two missiles with no reloads.

Mobility

The BSCh-8 is powered by a Samsan SG7N8G V8 water-cooled multifuel diesel engine developing 740 horsepower. With no applique armor or external armament, but with a full internal combat load, the BSCh-8G has a mass of 25 tonnes, for a power-to-weight ratio of 29.6 hp/tonne. This figure, however, changes considerably between different armor levels. The BSCh-8G2 with applique steel plates and ERA has a mass of 28.2 tonnes, for a power-to-weight ratio of 26.2 hp/t, and the BSCh-8N has a mass of 38 tonnes for 19.5 hp/t. The BSCh-8N1's lighter armor kit cuts mass to 32 tonnes for 23.1 hp/t, and the BSCh-8D has roughly the same mass combat-loaded but adds an uprated 880 horsepower engine for a power-to-weight ratio of 27.5 hp/t. BSCh-8N1 hulls refitted with the new engine will bear the designation BSCh-8N2.

At most engine and armor configurations, the BSCh-8 has a power-to-weight ratio in the mid-to-upper 20s, a good range for a heavy IFV. The BSCh-8N with composite applique panels is the main exception, and both its top road speed and offroad mobility suffered as a result, motivating the switch to a mixed ERA and slat armor applique scheme on later variants. Even the BSCh-8N, however, still had a higher power-to-weight ratio than later variants of the BSCh-5.

The main tradeoff of the BSCh-8's armor was its loss of amphibious capability. The BSCh-5 was not an excellent swimmer, and had to be ballasted with passengers or sandbags in the rear compartment to stay balanced, but it was able to cross rivers and lakes relatively easily with little preparation. The BSCh-8 was designed at a time when Menghe anticipated fighting in limited conflicts at a smaller scale, and the return to large-scale maneuver warfare in 2005 stirred up a great deal of debate over whether a non-amphibious IFV would be a liability to the Army. During the BSCh-8's introduction, it was first distributed to mechanized battalions in tank regiments, as Menghean main battle tanks also lack amphibious capability. Subsequently, it was allocated such that each active mechanized regiment had one battalion of BSCh-5s and one battalion of BSCh-8s, such that the regimental commander could summon a unit of amphibious IFVs if it was necessary to perform a forced river crossing. The steady mass-production of the BSCh-8 and the withdrawal of the BSCh-3 and 5 eventually resulted in many divisions lacking any amphibious IFVs, generating a higher-level doctrinal debate about how to adapt to degraded river-crossing capability. Defenders of the heavy IFV concept point out that Menghean mechanized infantry regiments still have at least one battalion each of motorized infantry in amphibious APCs, and that the introduction of company-level logistics lorries already prevented an entire company from crossing a river in force.

With the combined ERA, steel, and slat armor kit installed, the BSCh-8 has an overall width of 3.75 meters. This is just 5 centimeters shy of the 3800mm width restriction of Menghe's Over Wide and Cargo Max loading gauges, meaning that BSCh-8 IFVs with applique armor installed can be transported on railroad flatcars used in Southwest Menghe and the Innominadan Peninsula. If BSCh-8 IFVs have to be shipped on Menghean rail lines not rated with a Cargo Max oversize loading gauge, the side plates are removed and stored on the flatcar ahead of the vehicle, reducing the hull width to 3.21 meters.

Variants

Major IFV variants of the BSCh-8.

IFV variants

  • BSCh-8G - Initial production model introduced in 2010. Armed with a 30mm 2A72 autocannon and fitted with hardened steel applique plates to provide all-around protection against 14.5mm armor-piercing ammunition.
    • BSCh-8G1 - Fitted with slat armor on the front and sides, though not around the turret or on the hull rear. This armor kit was hastily introduced during the Innominadan Crisis and subsequent occupation, and there are at least four documented versions with slightly different cage designs, though all share the BSCh-8G1 designation.
    • BSCh-8G2 - Fitted with Samsan's Hodu ERA blocks on the upper side plates and redesigned slat armor on the lower side plates. The G2 version leaves gaps in the ERA and slat armor around the steps and handles for crew dismounting.
    • BSCh-8G3 - Similar to the BSCh-8G2, but the handles and steps are cut off and covered over by additional ERA blocks.
  • BSCh-8N - Armed with a Type 110 35mm autocannon (Type 110G version) in an asymmetric turret with blowoff panels on the right side. N variants produced between 2013 and 2016 were fitted with heavy composite armor plates on the front and sides, increasing overall mass to 38 tonnes.
    • BSCh-8N1 - Fitted with a lighter armor scheme which combines hardened steel strike plates, Hodu ERA on the front and upper sides, and slat armor on the lower side plates. It can be distinguished from the BSCh-8G2 and G3 by the number of ERA blocks: The G2 and G3 have two rows, while the N1 has three rows. The N1 also retains the BSCh-8N's asymmetric turret. The designation N1 is applied to existing BSCh-8N hulls refitted with the new armor scheme and new-production hulls built between 2016 and 2018.
    • BSCh-8N2 - Designation for N and N1 hulls refitted with the exhaust-cooling system introduced on the BSCh-8D. In all other respects they resemble the BSCh-8N1.
  • BSCh-8D - New variant introduced in 2018. It is armed with the Type 110N 35mm autocannon, with a higher rate of fire and greater reliability. The turret is symmetrical, but the gun is offset to the rear, with the trunnion behind the gunner and commander. The armor scheme is identical to that of the BSCh-8N2, but a new 880 hp engine improves the vehicle's mobility.
    • BSCh-8D1 - Designation for a BSCh-8D covered with an infrared camouflage net. The net is made of a special layered and cut fabric which reduces the vehicle's signature on thermal optics, including infrared missile seekers. Because the BSCh-8D is already at the safe limit of Menghe's oversize loading gauge, the side sections of the net must be removed for railroad transit. Unveiled in 2021.

Other combat variants

  • BSCh-8DG - Experimental anti-air variant of the BSCh-8D. It has a short-range 3D air search radar and fire-control radar, as well as an improved optical targeting unit for the gunner, faster traverse and elevation motors, and a muzzle velocity reference device. The YDCh-72 ATGM tubes are retained. Instead of APFSDS and smart-fused HE rounds, the two ammunition feeds in the BSCh-8DG would be loaded with smart-fused HE and prefragmented 35mm AHEAD rounds, the same type used by the DGP-35-2. Each AHEAD projectile contains 152 kinetic submunitions and is programmed to detonate before reaching the target, spreading its fragments in a shotgun pattern. As of 2020, the Menghean Ministry of National Defense is evaluating the BSCh-8DG as a battalion-level air defense weapon which specializes in defeating solitary or swarming light UAVs, but it is not yet in service. In 2021 it shot down a YDJ-48 Salmusa target missile in trials, proving its ability to defend against precision-guided munitions as well.
  • BSCh-8JG - Overarching designation for forward observer vehicles integrated into the Jinri Common Fire Direction System. In practice, individual vehicles would be known by one of the sub-designations below, depending on the baseline IFV variant used. All models are equipped with a high-powered optic, laser rangefinder, and laser designator unit in place of the commander's remote weapon station and have two tall radio antennas mounted on the passenger compartment, which is converted to a radio space and fire planning area. Apart from the loss of the commander's 30mm automatic grenade launcher, all BSCh-8JG variants retain the corresponding IFV variant's gun and missile armament, and they are virtually indistinguishable from a standard IFV at a distance. All models have a crew of 5 (driver, gunner, commander, and two radio operators) and operate at the company level.
    • BSCh-8GJG - Jinri forward observer variant of the BSCh-8G. Because the Jinri CFDS only entered standard use after the introduction of the BSCh-8N, all BSCh-8GJG hulls are re-manufactured from existing BSCh-8G hulls, and all use the BSCh-8G3's armor scheme.
    • BSCh-8NJG, NJG1, NJG2 - Forward observer variants based on the BSCh-8N, N1, and N2, respectively. This was the first vehicle to carry a fire designation unit for the Jinri CFDS.
    • BSCh-8DJG, DJG1 - Jinri forward observer variants of the BSCh-8D and D1, respectively.
  • BSCh-8SB - Mortar carrier with an SB-120 Type 84 120mm muzzle-loading mortar facing to the rear. The turret is removed and the hull roof has two large hatches which fold open to expose the mortar. Produced in small numbers before the introduction of the BSCh-8SBP, and typically not fitted with applique armor beyond the G-model steel plates.
  • BSCh-8SBP - Battalion-level artillery vehicle armed with a single 120mm SBP-120 Type 108 gun-mortar in a new turret.
  • JJCh-4 - Designation for reconnaissance vehicles based on the BSCh-8 IFV. All models are fitted with a large electro-optical sight offering better range and resolution than the RWS control optic on the baseline IFV variants, as well as a surface search radar which can detect vehicles and personnel. In return for these improvements, they sacrifice some of their troop carrying capacity.
    • JJCh-4G - Reconnaissance vehicle based on the BSCh-8G, with a 30mm 2A72 autocannon and YDCh-70 ATGMs. The surface search radar is mounted on top of the large electro-optical sight of the commander. The dismount capacity is reduced to four, and a single radio operator is added in the rear.
      • JJCh-4G1, G2, G3 - Refit designations applied to vehicles fitted with the BSCh-8G1, G2, and G3 armor kits, respectively.
    • JJCh-4N - Reconnaissance vehicle based on the BSCh-8N. In addition to carrying the N variant's asymmetric turret, it also mounts the surface search radar on a hinged mast which can fold flat over the rear hull. This mast, however, is still attached to the turret, and offers no height advantage over the radar mounting point on the JJCh-4G. Like the JJCh-4G, it has a crew of 4 (driver, commander, gunner, radio operator) and space for four dismounts in the rear.
      • JJCh-4N1, N2 - Refit designations applied to vehicles fitted with the BSCh-8N1 and N2 armor kits, respectively.
    • JJCh-4D - Reconnaissance vehicle based on the BSCh-8D. In contrast to the other two, it has a large telescoping mast which extends out of the passenger compartment. This mast is topped by a surface search radar, visual and IR optics, and a laser rangefinder/designator, and can extend to a height of 6 meters above ground level, measured to the center of the lowest optical lens. This allows the crew to survey the terrain from behind trees, hills, or buildings, and extends the radar antenna's field of view. When not in use, the tower retracts into the hull, making it no taller than the electro-optical sight on the turret. Unlike previous JJCh-4 vehicles, the JJCh-4D is fully integrated into the Jinri CFDS, meaning that it can accurately call in artillery, rocket, and air strikes against enemy targets. As a result of the added equipment inside the rear hull, the dismount capacity is reduced to two personnel, typically a radar operator and assistant radar operator.
      • JJCh-4D1 - Refit designation applied to JJCh-4Ds with the BSCh-8D1's IR-masking camo net. New deliveries of this masking net will prioritize JJCh-4Ds, which depend on stealth in order to accomplish their reconnaissance missions.

Support variants

  • BSCh-8DS - Battalion command vehicle. The turret and armament are retained, but the passenger compartment is converted into a planning area for battalion officers.
    • BSCh-8GDS, GDS1, GDS2, GDS3 - Battalion command variants of the BSCh-8G, G1, G2, and G3, respectively.
    • BSCh-8NDS, NDS1, NDS2 - Battalion command variants of the BSCh-8N, N1, and N2, respectively.
    • BSCh-8DDS, DDS1 - Battalion command variants of the BSCh-8D and D1, respectively.
  • BSCh-8SG - Armored recovery vehicle with a forward winch and 8-ton-capacity crane. It has a 7.5mm GCh-96 machine gun in an open hatch for self-defense, but is otherwise unarmed. While its armor kits vary (see below), all variants use the 740-hp engine.
    • BSCh-8SG1 - Fitted with the BSCh-8N's composite armor kit.
    • BSCh-8SG2 - Fitted with the BSCh-8D's ERA and slat armor kit.

Production

Operators

See also