- M-84 - Wikipedia
The M-84 is a Yugoslav main battle tank based on the Soviet T-72 It is still in service with Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia and Kuwait
- M-84AS1 - Wikipedia
Domestic first-generation explosive reactive armour was applied (comparable to Kontakt-5), covering a bigger area of the front turret and a sizeable portion of the front plate, providing better protection
- M-84 | Military Wiki | Fandom
The M84 uses an automatic loader, which enables it to sustain a firing rate of 8 rounds per minute The cannon's ammunition is stowed underneath the turret (40 rounds) within the hull of the tank This concept was inherited from the original Soviet design for T-72 and is arguably the tank's greatest flaw
- M-84 MBT - Army Recognition
It comes with the new SUV-M-84 computerized fire-control system, including the DNNS-2 gunner's day night sight, with independent stabilization in two planes and an integral laser rangefinder
- M-84: A Yugoslav version of the Soviet T-72 tank
M-84 is the main battle tank developed in Yugoslavia on the chassis of the Soviet T-72 with the license bought from the Soviet Union It was named by the year when it entered into the service It was manufactured from 1984 to 1991 The total number of M-84 tanks produced was around 650
- M-84
The M-84 tank is a Yugoslav-built version of the Soviet T-72 Though lacking many of the modern features used by Western tanks, such as sophisticated fire control and communications equipment, it has computerized fire control system and vehicle optics
- Army Guide
Battle tank M-84A is military vehicle with cross country mobility, weight 42 tons, three men crew (commander, target operator and driver), 9530 mm length (gun forward), width 3590 mm, height 2190 mm, clearance 470 mm and nominal pressure on the ground of 0 813 bar
- M-84 - Tank Encyclopedia
Regarded as one of the best copies of the T-72 main battle tank, the M-84 was a unique product of the Yugoslavian geopolitical situation, combining an Eastern license with Western technology, the tenacity of its own military industry, and the long-standing aspirations of the Yugoslav People’s Army
|