The MS-20 Daglezja is a Polish armoured vehicle-launched bridge on the Jelcz C662 wheeled chassis in service with the Polish Army since 2012.

Ms-20 Dajglezjia
MS-20 Daglezja at military parade in 2014
TypeArmoured vehicle-launched bridge
Place of origin Poland
Service history
In service2012–present
Used by Polish Land Forces
 Vietnam People's Ground Force
Production history
ManufacturerOBRUM
No. built14
VariantsMS-20 Daglezja, MG-20 Daglezja-G,MS-40 Daglezja
Specifications
Length16,5 m
Width2,55 m
Height4 m
MS-20 bridge being deployed
MS-20 Daglezja during trials

History

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The Daglezja program began in 2002, at the request of the Department of Armament Policy of the Ministry of National Defense, OBRUM began to develop tactical and technical assumptions for a modern automotive bridge set. Research and development work began in 2003, and in 2004 a bridge model and the first prototype were created (2005).[1] Due to the failure to provide the planned mass of the set and reliability, work on the program was discontinued. Therefore, OBRUM made a second, thoroughly rebuilt prototype from its own funds in 2008. After successfully passing the tests in 2010, the Department of Armament Policy of the Ministry of National Defense signed an agreement with OBRUM for the implementation of implementation work, which culminated in the delivery of two vehicles of the implementation batch to the army.[1]

The first bridge was taken over on 20 November 2012 and sent to the Engineering and Chemical Troops Training Centre in Wrocław, and the second one was handed over on 10 December 2012.[1] The second one was eventually delivered to the 2nd Engineer Battalion in Stargard the same year.[2] After two implementation series bridges,[clarification needed] 10 series bridges were delivered in 2017.[3]

In 2021, as a result of a 2018 agreement, four MS-20 bridges modified to suit local conditions were delivered to the People's Army of Vietnam.[4]

Based on the accompanying bridge, a whole family of bridges is being built, including an assault bridge on the MG-20 Daglezja-G tracked chassis (on the T-72 tank chassis extended to 14 wheels), the MS-40 support bridge (enabling overcoming obstacles up to 40 m wide), and the Daglezja-P pontoon bridge. The prototype of the assault bridge was built in 2011. After tests, in 2018, the prototype was to be converted to a serial standard and a second copy was to be built.[3]

Construction details

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MS-20 Daglezja is a companion bridge on a wheeled chassis. The entire set consists of: a Jelcz C662D.43-M tractor unit in a 6×6 configuration, a bridge semi-trailer, a bridge layer and the PM-20 span. The PM-20 span was made in such a way that its width can be changed, in the transport position it is 3 m, and in the working position 4 m. In addition, the span has fillings between the girders, enabling, for example, the passage of people and vehicles.[5]

The bridge enables securing crossings or overcoming obstacles up to 20 m wide by tracked vehicles exerting a load of the MLC70 class (this corresponds to a vehicle weight of up to 63.5 tonnes) and wheeled vehicles or their combinations exerting a load of the MLC110 class (weight of up to 73 tonnes).[5]

Specifications

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  • span width:
    • 3 m (in transport condition)
    • 4 m (in working condition)
  • span weight: 15 tons
  • span length: 23 m (25.5 m – with access ramps)
  • load capacity (according to STANAG 2021 standard):
    • 70MLC for tracked vehicles
    • 110MLC for wheeled vehicles

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Andrzej Kiński: Dziś Daglezja, jutro Rydwan, "Nowa Technika Wojskowa" nr 1/2013, s. 33
  2. ^ Marek Jaszczyński: Stargardzki batalion ma supernowoczesny most Daglezja, Głos Szczeciński, 16 grudnia 2012 [dostęp 5-07-2018]
  3. ^ a b Wojciech Łuczak. "Daglezja-G – nowy produkt polskiej zbrojeniówki". Raport – Wojsko Technika Obronność (02/2018). Agencja Lotnicza Altair: 4-12. ISSN 1429-270X.
  4. ^ Mateusz Zielonka (6 May 2021). "Polskie Daglezje dostarczone do Wietnamu". defece24.pl.
  5. ^ a b BRIDGE MS-20 „DAGLEZJA” (in Polish), Bumar-Łabędy, retrieved 2024-09-08

Bibliography

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