Posted on 06/04/2018 8:47:34 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
Konstrukta photos
When the DANA began rolling off Czechoslovakian assembly lines in the late 1970s, there wasnt much else like it. The enormous, 152-millimeter self-propelled howitzer had eight road wheels instead of tracks. Most mobile artillery pieces at that time were tracked, like tanks, and the DANA was the first gun its of its size to roll on wheels while carrying an innovative auto-reloading mechanism for the cannon.
The Czechoslovak Peoples Army wanted the DANA so it wouldnt have to rely as much on the Soviet industry for its needs and the wheels made for a speedy and rapidly-deployable artillery piece, the most significant downside being less off-road maneuverability.
It worked well enough. The self-propelled gun is now battle-tested, with more than 670 built in total and exports to Poland, Libya and the Soviet Union which were handed down to the successor states of Georgia and Azerbaijan, which still have them in service.
Most recently, the Czech military used them in Afghanistan.
The DANA is more precisely a Slovak weapon. In the 1990s, the recently-independent Slovakia with its DANA-producing factories produced the Zuzana, a successor to the Dana which is similar except for its 155-millimeter cannon designed to accommodate standard NATO ammunition. The only other country to ever adopt Zuzana is the Republic of Cyprus.
Now the Slovak company Konstrukta has a very interesting successor to the DANA and Zuzana known as the Zuzana 2. On May 23, 2018, the Slovak army announced it would be the first to acquire 25 Zuzana 2s, which have been in testing since 2014.
The machine is enormous at more than 46 feet long and rather unique looking.
It looks like construction equipment, and it is quite heavy at 37.5 tons, which is 10 tons heavier than the U.S. Armys self-propelled, tracked M-109 Paladin howitzer. Befitting the wheeled configuration and using the M-109 as a comparison, the Zuzana 2 can travel 15 miles faster at 50 miles per hour and has 156 more miles of unserviced range at 372 miles in total.
Like the first Zuzuana, the Zuzana 2 has a 155-millimeter howitzer servicing NATO ammunition. The crew has been reduced to three, from the Zuzana 1s four, due to increased automation.
The reason this machine is appearing now has to do with Slovakias goal of equipping a modern mechanized brigade with an artillery battalion that can respond rapidly to crises whether affecting Slovakia itself or the NATO alliance, which is all the more salient given Slovakias proximity to Ukraine. The Slovak armored corps is still largely comprised of Warsaw Pact-era T-72s and BMP-1 and -2 armored fighting vehicles, although Slovakia is acquiring dozens of Finnish Patria armored vehicles to replace the BMPs.
The most important upgrade to the Zuzana 2 is its MRSI capability or multiple-round simultaneous impact where the fire-control computer crunches the numbers for multiple rounds to fire at different trajectories in short succession, causing each high-explosive shell to land in the same place at the same time.
This makes the Zuzana 2 one of the most advanced artillery systems in the world.
Ping.
That region seems to have always produced intelligently designed and well crafted weapons, for a long long time.
That’s why the Nazis coveted Czechoslovakia, for the Skoda Works.
(Sorry, Polinar Tactical reference.)
CZ makes some of the best weapons in the world.
Rather easily put out of action— in the 41 years or so since this weapon came out. Afghanistan being filled with former soviet bloc weapons, nevertheless. Counter fire weapons systems and detection/computation makes this an eminently past it’s time weapon for any modern adversary (like... the US).
Even in the 70’s Hughes already had counter artillery systems well on their way. UAVs and other systems today. That’s the game.
Their CZ 75 BD is a top of the line 9mm Semi
CZ makes some of the best weapons in the world.
We love our 82s. Best $200 pistols we ever bought.
L
When I was in the Army in the 1970’s some people were trying to get auto-loaders into tanks and SP Arty.
Excellent weapons article.
However, it’s another example of the former Warsaw Pact countries running away from the Soviet/Russian despots.
In Europe and in Asia, most countries are running fast away from Russia and China.
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