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BMD series Russian IFVs


Cpl Steiner

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BMDs are in CM: Afghanistan, but that's currently the only place they exist.

From what we know about the upcoming Black Sea module, Russian airborne forces are planned, which would imply the BMD. Since there would be some model cross-over with Cold War, and a Cold War module is coming up, that's also a possibility there, albeit one more speculative.

One outlier that could be in Black Sea (but not Cold War) would be the 2S25 Sprut-SD. That's a light, air-droppable tank which fires the same ammunition as the T-90. There are a tiny number of them that exist, so the rarity cost would be high, but that's an interesting option.

(Oh, and the BMD-4 should be on that list for Black Sea)

Edited by domfluff
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On 11/5/2021 at 8:19 PM, db_zero said:

Real vodka or moonshine made from shaving lotion or de-icing fluid? There was another video floating around showing a BMP2 or 3 being driven by drunk Russian soldiers on a street.

They do look like they handle like sport cars.

Aqua Velva used to be a popular substitute in the 70's...

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  • 4 weeks later...

The caption on the airdropped BMD is wrong. That's a BMD-2, whose only cannon is the same 30 mm Woodpecker as on the BMP-2 Yozh. A BMD-3 would have the same twin cannon setup as a BMP-3 does. Back in my Soviet Threat Analyst days, I remember looking with wonderment and and a kind of nationalist military envy at this clever retrorocket setup the Russians used to soft land certain AFVs, reminded me of the launch escape system on the Mercury space capsules.

Regards,

John Kettler



 

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Yep. The system is pretty similar to both the landing system for the Soyuz descent stage, and various methods for landing on the Moon, including that of the Apollo program - the call of "contact light" during the landing footage are the rods extending from below the LEM's feet touching the ground, in the same way that the rods do beneath the pallet the BMD sits on. In the BMD's case, it's an automatic system which triggers the firing of the retrorocket, and for the LEM it was the visual cue to shut off the engine, but the principle was the same.

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10 hours ago, John Kettler said:

The caption on the airdropped BMD is wrong. That's a BMD-2, whose only cannon is the same 30 mm Woodpecker as on the BMP-2 Yozh. A BMD-3 would have the same twin cannon setup as a BMP-3 does.

Nope wrong again!  :rolleyes:

BMD-3_1.jpg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMD-3

It's the BMD-4 and BMD-4M that have the twin cannon arrangement.

The video starts with a BMD-3 then shows wht looks like a BTR-D being loaded onto the aircraft, before showing either a BMD-1 or BMD-2 being dropped out of another aircraft, finally returning a BMD-3 for the landing. 

Edited by Sgt.Squarehead
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