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M53/59 Praga
M53 Praga.jpg
M53/59 Praga, self-propelled anti-aircraft gun of Serbian Army
Type Self-propelled anti-aircraft gun
Place of origin  Czechoslovakia
Production history
Number built More than 330[1]
Specifications
Weight 10.3 tonnes
Length 6.92 m
Width 2.35 m
Height 2.95 m
Crew 4 (driver, commander and two gun operators)

Armor Aluminum
Primary
armament
30 mm twin AA autocannon (900 rounds)
Engine Tatra T 912-2 6-cylinder inline air-cooled diesel
110 hp (82 kW) at 2,200 rpm
Power/weight 10.7 hp/tonne (8 kW/tonne)
Suspension torsion bar
Operational
range
500 km
Speed 60 km/h

The M53/59 Praga was a Czechoslovak self-propelled anti-aircraft gun developed in the late 1950s. It consists of a heavily modified Praga V3S 6 wheel drive truck chassis, armed with a twin 30 mm AA autocannon mounted on the rear for which the vehicle typically carries 900 rounds of ammunition, each gun being gravity fed from distinctive 50 round magazines. The vehicle has an armoured cabin.

In Czechoslovakia it was known as Praga PLDvK vz. 53/59 - "Ještěrka" (PLDvK Model 53/59 - "Lizard"[2]). PLDvK stands for Protiletadlový dvojkanón = Anti-aircraft twin-gun.

The system is optically aimed, and can only be used effectively during the day with good weather conditions. The gun can be dismounted and used independently of the vehicle.

The vehicle is now obsolete, but it can be used effectively as ground support weapon against unarmored or lightly armoured targets (as it was shown during Yugoslav wars). It remains in service with armies of Czech Republic, Egypt, Libya, Slovakia and the Former Yugoslavia.

When Czechoslovakia imported one Soviet-made ZSU-57-2 for testing it considered it to be comparable to M53/59 which was the reason for which Czechoslovakia refused the Soviet SPAAG.[3]

Czech vz. 53/59 "Ještěrka" in Brno.

Contents

[edit] Operators

[edit] Former Operators

  •  Serbia - Scrapped
  •  Czechoslovakia - Passed on to the successor states.
  •  Yugoslavia - 220 ordered in 1965 from Czechoslovakia and delivered between 1965 and 1968.[1] Passed on to the successor states.[6]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

[edit] See also




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