ZSSW-30

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

PlaceoforiginPoland
DesignerConsortium of HSW and WB Group
ZSSW-30
ZSSW-30 turret mounted on the Borsuk IFV during the MSPO 23 defense exhibition.
TypeRemote controlled weapon station
Place of originPoland
Service history
Used byPolish Land Forces
Production history
DesignerConsortium of HSW and WB Group
ManufacturerHSW
Produced2022-present
No. built?/70 (first order)
Specifications
CrewUnmanned

Main
armament
Secondary
armament
ZSSW-30 mounted on BWP Borsuk infantry fighting vehicle
ZSSW-30 mounted on an infantry fighting vehicle variant of KTO Rosomak

The ZSSW-30 (Polish: Zdalnie Sterowany System Wieżowy 30 mm - 30mm Remote Control Turret System) is a Polish remotely controlled turret designed by Huta Stalowa Wola and WB Electronics as a replacement for the Hitfist-30P turret of the Rosomak APC. It is also used on the Borsuk IFV.

History

The ZSSW-30 turret was developed in response to the issues regarding the maintenance and modernization attempts of the Hitfist-30P turrets for the Rosomak APC. Initially the most popular direction was to buy a license for the Hitfist OWS unmanned turret with the rights to produce the majority of components domestically, however it was ultimately rejected as it was feared that the new turret would encounter identical issues, since they were caused mainly by poor cooperation between the Polish industry and Leonardo.[1]

The design requirements were ready in March 2011, and two consortia entered the competition. First one consisting of ZM Bumar Łabędy, OBRUM, OBRSM (currently ZM Tarnów), Wojskowe Zakłady Motoryzacyjne (WZM), Przemysłowe Centrum Optyki (PCO), ZM Tarnów and WAT, and the second one of HSW and WB Electronics. Both contenders offered similar designs - closed turret structure protecting all the mechanisms and electronics with a separate container for ATGMs. The biggest difference between them was that the first design used the remote control weapon station (from the ZSMU-1276 family) as the commander's sight.[1]

Ultimately, the second design was chosen despite the fact that the companies making up the first consortium had way more experience in designing turret systems (for example the turret of the PZA Loara). On March 29, 2013, an agreement was signed between the Ministry of National Defence and the consortium consisting of Huta Stalowa Wola S.A. and WB Electronics, under which a prototype batch of five turrets was to be developed until 2015 and the serial production of the turrets for the Rosomak was to begin in 2016. The program was delayed several times due to the timeframe being unrealistically short and because the MoD, still remembering problems with the Hitfist-30P, decided to eliminate most of the foreign components from the design.[1]

The first mock-up of the ZSSW-30 turret was presented at the MSPO 2014 military expo, with the first prototype being presented a year later when the initial developmental work was finished.[2] Unlike the mock-up, the 2015 prototype already looked very similar to the final design with the main visual difference being the barrel shroud not present on the later prototypes and production variant.[3]

Factory testing of the first turret prototype took place in 2015 and 2016, with the first ATGM test launches on July 14, 2016. The development has been completed in 2019 and the trials began on January 22, 2020.[1] On October 1, 2021, the turret system had officially completed the trials with a positive result, which opened the way to negotiations between the MoD and the manufacturer and to serial production.[4] On July 5, 2022, the Armaments Agency (the procurement agency of the MoD) and the HSW-WB consortium signed a framework agreement for the delivery of 341 turrets for the Rosomak wheeled IFVs as well as an executive contract for the first 70 turrets. The first turrets are expected to be delivered in 2023.[5] On November 21, 2022, WB Group contracted PCO with the production of 70 GOD-1 "Iris" and 70 GOC-1 "Nike" sights for the first batch of ZSSW-30 turrets.

The ZSSW-30 officially entered service in December 2023, when first five Rosomak IFVs equipped with these turrets entered service with the 21st Podhale Rifle Brigade.[6]

Future

On the Defence24 Day conference which took place in May 2023, Remigiusz Wilk, communications director of the WB Group talked about the development and future of the ZSSW-30 turret. One of the main development directions is the implementation of the EyeQ AI into the turret's FCS. These algorithms will give ZSSW-30 a number of advantages over contemporary turret designs, such as the ability to passively (without triggering the target's LWR) measure the distance to multiple targets and mark them on the tactical map, improved target tracking regardless of the weather conditions, the ability to fuze visual data from different sources such as UAVs or other vehicles which will enable the crew to "see" the targets beyond their line of sight and increase their identification range.[7][8]

Description

See also

References

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