BM-13N Katyusha multiple rocket launcher Low-poly 3D model
Home Catalog BM-13N Katyusha multiple rocket launcher Low-poly 3D model

Publication date: 2022-02-26

BM-13N Katyusha multiple rocket launcher Low-poly 3D model

$40

License: royalty_free

author:

OK3D

All content related to this 3D asset—including renders, descriptions, and metadata — is credited to its original author, «OK3D». CGhub does not claim copyright ownership over the content used.
  • Description

BM-13N Katyusha multiple rocket launcher Lowpoly 3D model

Rar file contain Blendfile, Texture folder , FBX , Obj mtl

Centered (in right place) and Seperated parts

Blender 3.0.0

Textured with substance painter

4 Set of material and Texture(Base,Wheels,Glass,Decal)

4k textures (also 2k textures are available)

Pictures rendered in Eevee and Cycles engine

Vertices:95,686

Faces:100,107

Tris: 180,584

Description:The Katyusha multiple rocket launcher is a type of rocket artillery first built and fielded by the Soviet Union in World War II. Multiple rocket launchers such as these deliver explosives to a target area more intensively than conventional artillery, but with lower accuracy and requiring a longer time to reload. They are fragile compared to artillery guns, but are cheap, easy to produce, and usable on any chassis. The Katyushas of World War II, the first self-propelled artillery mass-produced by the Soviet Union, were usually mounted on ordinary trucks. This mobility gave the Katyusha, and other self-propelled artillery, another advantage: being able to deliver a large blow all at once, and then move before being located and attacked with counter-battery fire.

Katyusha weapons of World War II included the BM-13 launcher, light BM-8, and heavy BM-31. Today, the nickname is also applied to newer truck-mounted post-Soviet – in addition to non-Soviet – multiple-rocket launchers, notably the common BM-21 Grad and its derivatives.

Although this type of weapon has existed since the 15th century (Leonardo da Vinci having designed a similar machine), the design of the Katyusha may have been influenced[citation needed] by the Machine infernale of Giuseppe Marco Fieschi (1790–1836) — Fieschi was honored in a religious service at a Moscow church in 1942 at the prompting of the Soviet engineer General Andrei Kostikov [ru], a co-developer of the Katyusha rocket launcher.

3D Model details

  • cgtrader Platform
  • Animated
  • Rigged
  • Ready for 3D Printing
  • VR / AR / Low-poly
  • PBR
  • Textures
  • Materials
  • UV Mapping
  • Unwrapped UVs: unknown
  • Geometry: Polygon mesh
  • Polygons: 100107
  • Vertices: 95686
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