Rooikat

For other uses, see Rooikat (disambiguation).
Rooikat

Rooikat 105
Type Armoured fighting vehicle
Place of origin South Africa
Service history
In service 1989 – present
Wars Operation Boleas[1]
Production history
Designed 1982
Produced 1987 – present
Specifications
Weight 28 t
Length 7.1 m (23 ft 4 in)
8.2 m (26 ft 11 in) with gun forward
Width 2.9 m (9 ft 6 in)
Height 2.6 m (8 ft 6 in) turret roof
Crew 4

Main
armament
1 x Denel GT4 76mm 62-calibre rifled gun, firing an APFSDS round
Muzzle velocity: > 1600m/s.[2][3]
Secondary
armament
2 x MG4 7.62 mm machine guns; 8 x 81 mm smoke grenade dischargers[3]
Engine 10-cylinder water-cooled diesel
414 KW (563 hp)
Power/weight 14.89kW/t
Suspension 8×8 wheeled, Fully independent active trailing arm
Operational
range
1000 km (621 mi)
Speed Road: 120 km/h (75 mph)
Off-road: 50 km/h (31 mph)

The Rooikat (Afrikaans for "Caracal"; literally "Red cat") is a South African armoured reconnaissance vehicle equipped with a stabilised 76mm high velocity gun for organic anti-tank and fire support purposes. It is capable of giving the same performance and using the same ammunition as the Oto Melara 76 naval gun, albeit with new percussion primers.[4]

Development history

Background

From the mid 1960s to the mid 1980s, the standard reconnaissance vehicle of the South African Defence Force was the Eland-90, a four-wheeled armoured car modeled closely after the Panhard AML-90.[5] However, the Eland was designed for border patrols and internal security, and proved ill-suited to countering tank warfare.[6] The Eland's limitations were first observed during combat in Operation Savannah, a 1975 South African incursion into Angola.[6] This led to its supplementation in the late 1970s with the much heavier, six-wheeled Ratel-90 infantry fighting vehicle. The Ratel proved to be a successful interim measure because it could both carry troops and provide fire support.[6]

In 1984, South Africa launched Operation Askari, which saw its mechanized and motorized infantry contingents threatened by large Angolan tank formations for the first time.[7] Both the Ratel-90 and Eland-90 were utilised as improvised tank destroyers but performed inadequately against T-54/55 tanks of the Armed Forces for the Liberation of Angola (FAPLA).[7] The armoured cars were decisively outranged by the Angolan tanks, and their inability to fire on the move resulted in a poor rate of engagement.[8] As a direct result of Askari, the Eland was removed from combat service and a squadron of Olifant tanks kept on permanent standby to assist with neutralising enemy armour during future South African operations.[9]

As early as the mid 1970s, the South African Armoured Corps had issued a requirement for a "heavy armoured car" capable of improving upon the Eland's 4X4 chassis, which limited mobility, and the mediocre range of its 90mm low pressure gun.[10] Research was undertaken for a New Generation Armoured Car project between 1976 and 1979, when three 8X8 prototypes were built by Sandock-Austral and trialled in Potchefstroom.[11] The prototypes were built using the components of the Ratel, Eland, and Alvis Saracen respectively, and were armed with a 77mm HV tank gun.[11] The Saracen and Ratel derivatives could each accommodate four crewmen - gunner, commander, loader, and driver - while the Eland derivative accommodated five, including one passenger.[10] These trials were primarily for the purpose of evaluating the vehicles' performance on different types of local terrain; while none of the three were deemed acceptable for the New Generation Armoured Car programme, the chassis built with Eland components continued to influence later prototypesparticularly with regards to its suspension features.[12]

Rooikat prototypes: the one on the left was built with automotive and chassis components from a Ratel, and the one on the right, an Eland Mk7.

Three more contenders appeared in 1982: the Bismark heavy tank destroyer, the Cheetah Mk1, and the Cheetah Mk2. The sole Bismark prototype was a joint South African-German project designed with assistance from Thyssen-Henschel.[10] It was an eight-wheeled vehicle which weighed over forty metric tonnes and carried a 105mm Royal Ordnance L7 tank gun.[11] The Cheetah Mk1 was six-wheeled and carried a lightweight 76mm gun or a 60mm breech-loading mortar (adopted from the Eland-60); it resembled a modified TH-400.[10] Also known as "Model 2B", the Cheetah Mk2 was an eight-wheeled vehicle which could also carry the armament installed on the Mk1.[10] These prototypes were trialled in March 1984 and the Cheetah Mk2 was accepted by the South African Army.[13] The Armoured Corps had hoped to simplify logistics by replacing both the Eland and Ratel simultaneously with a new chassis that could double as both a reconnaissance vehicle and an infantry fighting vehicle, similar to the Ratel-90 interim measure, but these plans were shelved.[13] A fourth, multirole eight-wheeled prototype evaluated in 1984 was rejected and a decision was made to retain the Ratel for the foreseeable future while pursuing the separate development of the Cheetah Mk2, now denoted as the Rooikat.[11] In its final form the Rooikat incorporated several features adopted directly from the Eland-90, namely the same auxiliary turret sights[10] and the mounting of all eight wheels on trailing arms, with the same hydropneumatic shock absorbers and coil springs.[12]

The first Rooikats were manufactured by Sandock-Austral beginning in September 1987, and delivered to the South African Army for further tests by December. Another three were delivered in October 1988.[10] The Rooikat did not enter service in large numbers until August 1989, when a single South African armoured squadron began receiving it. Mass production commenced around mid 1990.[10]

Service

Upon its inception in 1994 the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) immediately retired the surviving Eland-90 fleet.[14] Nevertheless, some Elands remained with reserve units as late as 1996 since there were only 176 Rooikats in service at the time.[15] The SANDF subsequently issued a requirement for another 66 Rooikats from Sandock-Austral, which had been absorbed by Land Systems OMC.[16] New SANDF doctrine placed an emphasis on the Rooikat's primary role of reconnaissance, as well as the harassment of enemy rearguard units. In a marked departure from the manoeuvre-oriented anti-tank tactics of the South African Border War, Rooikat crews were also trained to engage tanks only from defile or otherwise static defensive positions.[16]

Just prior to general elections in 1994, the South African Army deployed the Rooikat for internal patrols.[17] During the Southern African Development Community intervention in Lesotho, Rooikats of the Special Service Battalion were called up to reinforce South African mechanized units then skirmishing with Lesotho Army mutineers. The armoured cars arrived in Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, on September 22, 1998 and participated in various security operations.[1]

Variants

Plinthed Rooikat at the entrance to 1 Special Service Battalion, Bloemfontein.

Two versions exist and are designated according to their main guns:

The Rooikat 105 is designed for high mobility day and night combat operations. Passive image intensifiers and thermal imaging equipment for night driving, navigation and weapon deployment permit round-the-clock combat operations. The Rooikat 105 is equipped with a GT7 105mm anti-tank gun. The gun fires the full range of Nato full-pressure 105mm ammunition including generation I, II and III rounds. The gun, fitted with a 51-caliber thermal sleeve encased barrel, fires six rounds a minute. There are two 7.62mm machine guns, one co-axial to the main armament and one at the commander's position, for general purpose ground and air defence. The vehicle is equipped with two banks of 81mm smoke grenade launchers, mounted in a forward firing position on each side of the turret. The system is electrically operated. The smoke grenades form a dense protective smoke screen, which can be sustained using an exhaust smoke generator. The digital fire control system takes data from a suite of sensors and provides an automatic fire control solution. Automatic data input includes target range from a laser rangefinder, target speed and direction derived from tracking the target, crosswind speed, weapon tilt and the characteristics of the weapon. Manual data input includes ammunition type and environmental data. The fire control system allows the Rooikat to engage enemy targets while on the move across rough terrain. The time between laser ranging the target and firing is approximately two seconds. Three variations of fire directing systems are offered. The most complex system incorporates a primary stabilised gunner's sight, automatic computation and implementation of ballistic offset of the weapon, electro-mechanical gun control, stabilised main weapon, gunner's sight with day / night channel slaved to the main weapon and an independent panoramic commander's sight.[20][21]


Rooikat ZA35 Self Propelled Anti-aircraft Gun

This Rooikat version was developed by ARMSCOR in the early 90s. The ZA-35 SPAAG is armed with two Lyttleton Engineering M-35 guns. These guns have a combined rate of fire at 1 100 rounds per minute and fires HE-FRAG rounds against air targets and AP-I against light armored vehicles. The ZA-35 is fitted with an EDR 110 surveillance and tracking radar, which can track up to 100 air targets simultaneously. The antenna can be raised to a height of about 5 meters for increased visibility, when the vehicle is stationary. It can provide targeting data to other nearby SPAAGs and air defense systems, which do not have radars. It is also fitted with a computerized fire control system, fully stabilized gunner's sight and a laser rangefinder.[22]


Rooikat SAM

The Rooikat SAM was intended to be used together with the Rooikat SPAAG, this ZA-HVM short-range SAM, would also have been based on the same chassis.[23]:398


Rooikat 35/ZT-3

A prototype Rooikat 35 was also developed with a new turret to incorporate ZT-3 antitank missiles.[23]:399

Technology Demonstrators

One Rooikat was turned into a conventional vehicle electric drive technology demonstrator (CVED) and displayed at AAD2006 in Cape Town in September of that year. The CVED project involved LMT, HIT, IAD, Nezrotek, Hotchinson (France), Kessler Magnet Motor (Germany) and MTU (Germany). VEG Magazine reported in 2006 the vehicle was fitted with a power supply control system feeding eight wheel-hub mounted M67/0 electric units and a two-phase pneumatic gearbox.

Capability

Variants

Variant Description Comment Image
Rooikat 76 Original version Denel GT4 76mm main gun
Rooikat 105 Upgraded versionDenel GT7 105mm main gun
Rooikat ZA 35 Anti aircraft gun platformSPAAG twin 35mm anti aircraft auto cannons
Rooikat SAM Turret with Surface to Air Missile platform Prototype only
Rooikat anti-tank Turret with four antitank missiles Prototype only

Operators

 South Africa - South African National Defence Force: 240 units.[24][25]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Customs, Traditions, History, and Insignia of the South African Armoured Corps" (PDF). Bloemfontein: South African Armour Association. 18 October 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 09 September 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2012. Check date values in: |archive-date= (help)
  2. "Rooikat". South African Army. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
  3. 1 2 "Rooikat armoured car". DefenceWeb. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
  4. Jane's Armour and Artillery, 2001-2002, Volume 23 p. 244-345.
  5. Ogorkiewicz, Richard (2015). Tanks: 100 Years of Evolution. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781472806703.
  6. 1 2 3 Warwick, Rodney. Operation Savannah: A Measure of SADF Decline, Resourcefulness, and Modernisation. Scientia Militaria, 2012, Volume 40 Issue 3 p. 364-377.
  7. 1 2 Lessons of the Border War
  8. "Ratel teen tenk en". Port Elizabeth: International Veterans' Association/South African Forces Club. 2011. Archived from the original on 25 April 2011. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  9. Scholtz, Leopold (2013). The SADF in the Border War 1966–1989. Cape Town: Tafelberg. pp. 158–194. ISBN 978-0-624-05410-8.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Camp, Steve; Helmoed-Römer, Heitman (November 2014). Surviving the Ride: A pictorial history of South African Manufactured Mine-Protected vehicles. Pinetown: 30 Degrees South. pp. 181–190. ISBN 978-1928211-17-4.
  11. 1 2 3 4 "Lesakeng". South African Armour Museum. 2012-12-06. Retrieved 2013-06-18.
  12. 1 2 "South Africa's impressive history in the design and manufacture of armoured vehicles". South African Engineering News. 2014-10-08. Retrieved 2014-07-18.
  13. 1 2 "Fact file: Rooikat armoured car". Defence Web. 2010-01-21. Retrieved 2013-06-18.
  14. Armoured Car, Eland Mk7/90 (RSA) (Gate exhibit), South African Armour Museum, Bloemfontein: South African National Defence Force, 2014
  15. SA Now. South African Communication Service, 1996, Volume 1 p. 24.
  16. 1 2 "South African Defence Review 1998" (PDF). Pretoria: South African Department of Defence. April 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 May 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  17. "The O'Malley Archives". Archived from the original on January 28, 2015. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  18. ARG. "Rooikat Tank Destroyer". Military-Today.com. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
  19. "South African Army preparing immediate response force - IHS Jane's 360". Janes.com. 2014-08-13. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
  20. "Rooikat 105 Armoured Fighting Vehicle". Army Technology. 2011-06-15. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
  21. "Fact file: Rooikat armoured car". defenceWeb. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
  22. ARG. "ZA-35 Prototype Self-Propelled Anti-Aircraft Gun". Military-Today.com. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
  23. 1 2 Foss, Christopher F. (1996). Jane's Tank Recognition Guide. Glasgow: HarperCollins. ISBN 0 00 4709950.
  24. "home". Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  25. Africa: Salvation or Despair
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