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Military Technical Institute
Company typeR&D
Industrydefence and aerospace
Founded3 November 1948; 75 years ago (1948-11-03)
HeadquartersBelgrade, Serbia
ProductsWeapons
Missiles
Vehicles
Aircraft
Weapon upgrades
Number of employees
~500 (est.)
ParentSerbian Ministry of Defence
Websitewww.vti.mod.gov.rs

Military Technical Institute (Serbian: Војнотехнички институт, romanizedVojnotehnički institut; abbr. VTI) is a Serbian weapons and aircraft design institute, headquartered in Belgrade, and governed by the Serbian Ministry of Defence. It is a top-level military scientific research institution in Serbia, dealing with research and development (R&D) of new weaponry and military equipment as well as with upgrade of the inventory for both branches of the Serbian Armed Forces: Army (including River Flotilla) and Air Force and Defence.

Institute history

After the World War II, Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia had a need to independently develop military technology and reduce dependence from foreign supply with given political situation of that time and future political course. By a decision of the Secretary of Defense and a proclamation by the Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito, VTI was founded in 1948 as the Military Technical Institute of the Land Forces (Serbian: Vojnotehnički institut Kopnene vojske; abbr. VTIkov) in Belgrade.

In 1973, the VTI was integrated with several smaller military research and development institutes.

In 1992 it assimilated the dissolved Aeronautical Technical Institute in Žarkovo, and minor parts (located in Serbia) of the Nautical Institute (Serbian: Brodarski institut) from Zagreb, supposedly as an effort to reduce developing cost and maintenance. Since 1992 the institute has changed name several times, reflecting the political changes in the country, starting with Technical Institute of the Yugoslav Armed Forces.

Current name is Military Technical Institute. Neither the translation of the name to other languages nor the corresponding acronym have ever been unambiguously defined; both VTI and MTI have been used in English-language documents, against the widely accepted practice not to translate such acronymes.

Today

The institute has 22 laboratories, and it is situated on 212 acres (86 hectares), with 177,000 square meters laboratories and office space, mostly in Belgrade neighborhood of Žarkovo, on the premises of the former Aeronautical Technical Institute. The institute obtained the certificates of compliance to the SRPS ISO 9001 and SRPS ISO/IEC 17025 standards.

Projects

The institute cooperates with Serbian Armed Forces (including its Technical Testing Center) and Yugoimport SDPR in designing and testing new weapons systems.[1]

Military Technical Institute (with assimilated predecessor institutes) developed more than 1,300 weapons. However, not all of them entered use in the Yugoslav (later Serbian) Army. The list includes weapons and systems of other companies in which VTI was partly involved in some stage of developing and those systems are given with references. Institute was in charge for domestically produced weapons systems under licence and modification and modernization of such weapons with introducing new technologies and making new materials and tools for production. There are several new weapons developed from licences products that surpass originals in performance. Examples of licences used for domestic new weapons is a licence for tank T-72.

Aircraft

(above mentioned developed by the Aeronautical Technical Institute)

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Vrabac Mini UAV

Unmanned Ground Vehicles

Unarmed robot
Mali Miloš

Armoured Vehicles

Tanks

Infantry Fighting Vehicles

Armoured Personnel Carriers
Reconnaissance Vehicles

Air Defence Vehicles

Engineering Vehicles

Artillery

Field artillery

Self-propelled artillery

Multiple rocket launcher

Mortars

Anti-tank Weapons

Anti-Aircraft Weapons

Mines and Mine layers

Military trucks

Turrets, cupolas and RCWS[clarification needed]

Missiles

Unguided missiles

Air-to-surface missile

Surface to surface missiles

Projectiles and large calibers ammunition

Rifles, guns, sub-machine guns and snipers

Radars

Electronics, optoelectronic stations, fuzes, homing heads, sensors, etc

MIP 11,[11] TV Homing Heads for Guided missiles, Laser Homing Heads for Guided missiles, System for acoustic source localization - HEMERA,[12] inertial guidance systems for missiles, Explosive reactive armour M99, Battery command and control system for Nora B-52, M07G Mortar ballistic computer, Tank engine protection from wrong start-up, system for automatic control and jamming of mobile telephony, Radio jammers against remotely controlled improvised explosive devices, Software packages for command and control of air defense assets from the command and control centers, MOMS surveillance-sighting system [8]

Upgrades modernization and modifications

Neva-M1T, SA-341, Upgraded Howitzer 105 mm M56/33, Upgraded Howitzer 105mm M101/33, Programs for modernization of the T-55 family of tanks, including their Chinese derivatives, as well as of the T-72 family of tanks, Upgraded BTR-50

Specialized laboratories

Fairs and scientific-technical gatherings

Military Technical Institute regularly exhibits at Partner and IDEX military fairs as well as organizing OTEX scientific-technical gathering.

Technical cooperation

Military Technical Institute cooperates with following overhaul institutes:

Documentary and publishing activity

Making of technical documentation, films and books represents an important part of VTI as publisher, it represents institute output and quantifier of more than sixty years involvement in R&D missions. The institute possesses technical documentation for over 1300 items of weaponry and defense equipment developed through institute history that are introduced in service in the armed forces. This documentation being intellectual property of MoD, it has an outstanding value and use for future projects.

Media

Mali Miloš in action - story about development and use, presented by official Serbia RTS state defense TV channel "Dozvolite" - Little Milos - robot

See also

References

  1. ^ "YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2019-11-22.
  2. ^ "Robot "miloš" srpski vojnik budućnosti (FOTO)". www.novosti.rs. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  3. ^ www.vti.mod.gov.rs http://www.vti.mod.gov.rs/index.php?view=actuality&type=projects&category=1&id=78. ((cite web)): Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. ^ www.vti.mod.gov.rs http://www.vti.mod.gov.rs/index.php?view=actuality&type=projects&category=1&id=75. ((cite web)): Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ Mounir Kaddouri (28 October 2012). "NIMR 107mm Multi Rocket Launcher System". Retrieved 16 July 2018 – via YouTube.
  6. ^ Haider, Haseeb. "First MLRS unit delivered". www.khaleejtimes.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  7. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-9ubouHzkc - testing of Bumble Bee in wind tunnel of MTI
  8. ^ a b http://www.vti.mod.gov.rs/index.php?view=actuality&type=news&id=315
  9. ^ "IMP Računarski sistemi".
  10. ^ "Partner 2015: Program modernizacije radara Instituta "Mihajlo Pupin" - Tango Six". 29 July 2015. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  11. ^ www.vti.mod.gov.rs http://www.vti.mod.gov.rs/index.php?view=actuality&type=projects&category=1&id=76. ((cite web)): Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. ^ www.vti.mod.gov.rs http://www.vti.mod.gov.rs/index.php?view=actuality&type=projects&category=1&id=73. ((cite web)): Missing or empty |title= (help)