At
70 (122mm raketomet) :: Československo / ČR / SR (CZK/CZE/SVK) :: Raketomety a taktické raketové systémy". ^ "Československé vojenství - Vaše dotazy - Odpovědi na dotazy 1231.^ RM-70 MULTIPLE ROCKET LAUNCHES WITH POLISARIO FORCES AAIN UM SERUSA POLISARIO CAMP, WESTERN SAHARA (SANITIZED) (Report).Wikimedia Commons has media related to RM-70. Germany - Inherited from the GDR, donated to Greece.East Germany - 265 RM-70 and RM-70M delivered to Greece after the collapse of the GDR.Czechoslovakia - Passed on to the Czech Republic and Slovakia after its dissolution.Czech Republic - 60 RM-70 (decommissioned as of end of 2011 without replacement).Bulgaria - 12 imported in 2009 (reexport, not commissioned in the Bulgarian Army).In 2018 unknown quantity RM-70 and BM-21 Grads sold to the Czech Republic and next donated to unknown North African countries (Libya ?) North Korea - Unknown number purchased from second-hand sources during the Cold War and domestically produced.Nigeria - Unknown quantity, 2 confirmed delivered.Libya - 36 (sold by Czechoslovakia between 1975-1976).Indonesia - 9 acquired around 2003, 8 new RM-70 Vampir acquired in 2016.Greece - 111 RM-70 as of 2016 (formerly East-German).Georgia - 18 Upgraded RM -70 in service as of 2016.
AT & T LAUNCHER UPGRADE
RM-70 Modular is being offered as an upgrade for RM-70 owners. The Slovak Republic signed for 26 upgraded artillery systems with the first one delivered on May 20, 2005. This way the system became fully NATO interoperable. RM-70 Modular allows this artillery system to launch either twenty-eight 122mm rockets, or six 227mm rockets as used on the M270 MLRS.
This rocket launcher can fire both individual rounds and volleys, principally by means of indirect fire. Nevertheless, RM-70 performance remains near the same as Grad even in terms of vehicle's speed and range. The new carrier vehicle provides enough space for carrying 40 additional 122mm rockets pack for reload. RM-70 replaced the Ural-375D 6圆 truck by a Tatra T813 "Kolos" 8x8 truck as carrier platform for the 40-round launcher. After the Soviet Union collapse and the split of Czechoslovakia into the Czech Republic and Slovakia, it was sold to several countries in Africa, America, Asia and Europe. The launcher was being produced in Dubnica nad Váhom ( Slovakia). RM-70 was developed in Czechoslovakia as a successor for the RM-51, achieving initial operational capability with its Army in 1972.