BVP M-80
| BVP M-80 ICV/IFV | |
|---|---|
Serbian M-80A in 2011 | |
| Type | Infantry fighting vehicle |
| Place of origin | Yugoslavia |
| Service history | |
| In service | 1979–present |
| Wars | |
| Production history | |
| Designer | Military Technical Institute |
| Designed | 1971, M-80 first version introduced in 1979 |
| Specifications | |
| Mass | 13,850 kg |
| Length | 6.42 meters |
| Width | 2.90 meters |
| Height | 2.20 meters |
| Crew | 3+7 |
| Armor | Aluminum/Aluminum oxide/Titanium boride |
Main armament | 20 mm M-55 (HS 804) cannon 400 rounds9M14 Malyutka (AT-3 Sagger) ATGM 2 Missiles or ATGM launcher |
Secondary armament | coaxial 7.62 machine-gun 2,000 rounds |
| Engine | Daimler Benz OM-403 320 hp |
| Power/weight | 22.6 hp/tonne |
| Suspension | torsion bar |
Operational range | 500 km |
| Maximum speed | 65 km/h on land8 km/h in water |
The BVP M-80 (Serbo-Croatian: Борбено возило пешадије М-80 [БВП М-80]), is a tracked Yugoslav-made infantry fighting vehicle, produced from the 1980s until the country's collapse in the 1990s.