Pbv 302

9907
hits on target since 1999-02-20
Ever since the first world
war the need for some sort of APC (armored personel carrier) has been evident to
accompany the tanks into action. The first attempt was to make 50 Mk IV tanks
into a Mk IX APC with 50 infantrymen in each in 1918. The results are unknown.
Between 1918 and 1939 it was mostly Great Britain and France that experimented
with troopcarries but the resuluts were not encouraging and they reverted to
have their tanks supported by common "leg"infantry. The germans however had
developed the Sdkfz 250 and 251 halftracks that were great successes. The
americans followed suite with the very successful M3 halftrack. The first fully
tracked APC was the canadian Ram Kangaroo that simply was a "deturreted"
ordinary Ram tank. In Sweden the
KP-bil m/42 was
developed by armoring a truckchassi and adding all-wheel drive. A simple but
succesful solution but with some limitations.

The KP-bil m/42 in original version
After the war
it was appreciated that despite the relative success of the halftracks it was
better to go for either fully tracked or fully wheeled vehicles and to accept
the inherent sttrengths and weaknesses in the concepts rather than to produce an
inbetween that has neither. The americans went through the M75 and M59 APC:s and
finally produced the M113 that has been built in over 50000 vehicles. The
germans started with their own Spz Hs 30 but adopted the M113 and later the
succesful Marder in the seventies. Britain prodoced the wheeled Saracen and in
the sixties the tracked FV432 that basicly is a copy of the M113. The Soviets
developed the wheeled BTR-152 in 1946 and in the fifties the BTR-50 tracked APC.
In the sixties the wheeled BTR-60 came that has since been developed into the
BTR-70, the BTR-80 and finally the BTR-90. In the late sixties the BMP-1 was
introduced. In the fifties Sweden recognized the evolving threat of
nuclearcapability and chemical warfare that demands dispersed deployment and
thus high mobility to quickly concentrate the dispersed forces to neutralize an
amphibiuos landing or airborne assault as well as the fact that the battlefield
would be littered with lightly armed but mobile APC:s. The KP was not the answer
to these problems. In 1961 a new vehicle,
the Pbv 301, was
ordered. It was a rebuilt Strv m/41 and only a stopgap vehicle. It was armed
with a 20 mm automatic cannon and the infantry squad could fight mounted which
made it revolutionary nevertheless.

The Pbv 301
Just
as the Pbv 301 were started to be delivered the army ordered the successor Pbv
302 to be delivered starting in 1966. The requirements the vehicle had to meet
were :
- To transport personel on the battlefield under
protection with at least the same mobility as the new tank, the
Strv 103 "S".
- The infantrysquad must be able to fight mounted.
- The armament must enable the vechicle to engage soft
targets, APC:s, slowmoving aircraft and landing craft.
- It must be amphibious.
A number of proposals were
studied from Hägglunds, Bofors, Landsverk as well as foreign concepts. For final
evaluation the Hägglunds proposal and the american M113 were selected. In the
trials the Pbv 302 showed itself to be clearly superior. It is probably the only
combat vehicle ever to have gone unmodified from prototype into seriesproduction.
The first vehicle was delivered in Febuary 1966.
The Pbv 302 weighs 13,5
tons and thus offers protection against small arms fire as well as artilleryfire.
It has shown itself to withstand heavy mashinegun fire from most angles. While
unable to stop anti-tank weapons it has also proved to be able to take hits from
anti-tankmissiles with only minor damage as result. It is a very resilient
vehicle and although a tankmine will damage it severly it has proven to offer
protection better than anticipated. Add on ceramic armor and anti-spall liners
have been developed and were used in Bosnia.
The Volvo Penta 6-cylinder
THD-100 B Diesel gives 270 hp which gives the vehicle a top speed of 65 km/h,
the top speed swimming is 7 km/h. The transmission is a Volvo Penta R-60 with 8
forward gears and two reverse gears. The tracks exist in two versions. The
american M113 track and the swedish M70 track. The vehicle has torsionbar
suspension.

The Pbv 302 is armed with
a 20mm automatic cannon m/47D Hispano-Suiza HS 804 that was used on the fighter
aircraft J-29 Tunnan. When the guns were mounted they still were accopmpanied by
the gunbooks from the aircraft telling all about how many round fired at what
date and which aircraft. The gun is gasoperated and initially had a rate of fire
of 540 rounds a minute. This was lowered to 480 round a minute. Muzzlevelocity
is 800 meters/second. Semiautomatic fire as well as full automatic is possible.
Until the late eighties renovation there were two types of ammuntion. The AP
round used 10-round magazines and the HE linked belts of 135. The belt was fed
via a beltfeeder that was complicated and required lots of maintainance to work
well. Today both have been discarded and 30 round magazines are used. The two
different sorts of amunition are being replaced by a singe multi-purpose MPHC-T
round. The standard procedure when engaging a hard target is to fire single
rounds until a hit is scored (almost always with the first round) and then
groups of three rapid single shots are fired until the target is knocked out. At
close range full automatic fire can be used. Soft targets are engaged with full
automatic fire 3-6 round bursts that are aimed slightly short of the target to
achieve maximum schrapnel density on target. The turret can be traversed with
two different speeds. The gunner has 8x magnification in his sight. A Ksp 58 (MAG
58) can be mounted above the automatic cannon in peacetime since there are no
blank round for the cannon. In doublesided maneuvers fire is marked by firing
the mashinegun via the normal drills. It can also be used in early gunnery
drills to save money by firing 7,62 mm tracers in stead of the much more
expensive 20mm amunition. The vehicle is also fitted with smokedischargers for
close protection. The anti-airsight has been changed from a simple ringsight to
a much more modern system that is complicated but allows good hitpropability
against slowmovers.
The infantrysquad can
fight either mounted or dismounted. In the case of a mounted assault the
combathatches are opened by the commander and the infantrymen engage the enemy
with assaultrifles, mashineguns and handgrenades as well as the gun of the Pbv
itself. While 8 men can be seated in the fighting compartment, three on each
side can stand in the open hatches.

Mounted assault
The Pbv 302
is used by ATGM units as well as by mechanized infantry units. These are
different internaly to accomodate the Rb 56 BILL system and only seats five
soldiers in the fighting compartment.
There are several
different versions in use.
- Pbv 302A. The standard transport/IFV version.
- Stripbv 3021. The C3I commandpost for battallion and
brigade commanders and staffmembers.
- Epbv 3022. The forward observer vehicle for
artilleryobservers fire control personel.
- Bplpbv 3023. The battery command control vehicle
organic to the selfpropelled gun batterys.
- Rlpbv 3024. A communications vehicle for directed
radiocommunications.
Two more vehicles were
developed using the Pbv 302 as basis.
- Bgbv 82. An armored recovery vehicle.
- Brobv 941. A bridgelayer.
Neither of the two above
mentioned are in active service having been replaced by further purchases of
Bgbv 81 (Centurion ARV) and Brobv 971 (BLG 60 bridge on T-55 chassi). The Bgbv
82 was not a great success while the Brobv 941 simply had reached the end of
their useful servicelife.
The Pbv 302 has been an
extremely successful design that is still thought of as a splendid vehicle. A
bit short on performance against hard targets of today it is a sure killer of
soft targets and with good mobility, ease of maintainance and high reliability
as well as inexpensive to operate it will continue in service for a few years to
come. It is no longer used for armoured infantry duty, having been replaced by
the more modern CV90, but serves as a vehicle for pioneers, logistics and other
similar purposes. It is still on active duty in international service such as
KFOR in Kosovo. Canadian soldiers in Bosnia were very impressed with it
comparing it to the (in their opinion ancient) M113. Such a modern vehicle was
only in their dreams. When told that it was a thirty year old vehicle they
refused to believe it.