No megalength writeup this time, because of time constraints.
The Ön.Lé.Gép. szol.88 "Medvebocs" (
Önjáró Légvédelmi Gépágyú, 1988-ban szolgálatban, "Medvebocs"; Self-Propelled Anti-Air Gun, In Service 1988, "Bearcub") is a self-propelled air defense vehicle of the Royal Hungarian Army. It is built on the chassis of the Pikás 2 main battle tank, and alongside that vehicle, it represents the full revival of Hungarian military engineering after Russian forces restored the Hungarian monarchy in 1944. Rather than facing off against Anglo-French forces on the Prussian and Austrian frontiers, it was first deployed to Hungary's border with Romania, which resented Hungary's continued occupation of Transylvania.
The main armament consists of a twin 35mm anti-air gun derived from the Oerlikon GDF, using drum-stored rather than stacked ammunition clips. Each drum contains 25 spaces for 8-round ammunition clips, and with an additional fifteen rounds in each side of the feed system, the total ready ammunition capacity is 430 rounds. The drums can be reloaded by removing their outside circular covers, but they can also be reloaded from inside the vehicle, with an additional 304 rounds stored in the lower hull and manually reloaded by the driver and commander. Spent casings are ejected from two slots, one on each side, below and forward of the armored drum covers. The drum-based feed system allows the crew to select point-fused HEI(T) or armor-piercing SAPHEI(T) ammunition depending on the threat. APDS and smart-fused ammunition were later developed, but neither type was in service in 1989.
The three-man crew consists of a gunner (turret left), a commander and radar operator (turret right), and a driver (center hull). An air search radar detects targets, and a fire-control radar tracks them, calculates firing solutions, and corrects fire based on outgoing rounds. An electro-optical sight with visual and IR modes allows the vehicle to engage aircraft under radar silence or intense jamming, albeit with reduced effectiveness, and a backup optical sight on the turret roof allows the gunner to engage helicopters and ground targets even if the outer electronics are damaged or non-functional. Eight other periscopes arranged around the turret roof give the gunner and commander a remarkably good view of the battlefield, and of any approaching infantry or light vehicles.
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Currently posting my latest ship art on my
Menghean Navy AU thread, but most of my stuff is on
iiWiki.
A bad peace is preferable to a terrible war.