- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Providing the protection of a huge MRAP in a HMMVW sized package: physics gone wild
http://blog.wired.com/defense/2008/11/radical-weight.html
With a production run of up to 10,000 vehicles, we should get in on this program to tap economies of scale and replace the G-Wagon, LSVW and MILCOT in one go.
http://blog.wired.com/defense/2008/11/radical-weight.html
Army May Place Massive Orders for Hulking Trucks
By Nathan Hodge November 17, 2008 | 2:49:00 PMCategories: Ground Vehicles
After investing in a fleet of over 10,000 Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles, the Pentagon is preparing to buy more -- lots more.
The super-sized trucks have been credited with saving many lives, but as reported here previously, the Pentagon's new ride has fared poorly in some terrain: the trucks are too heavy for the primitive roads of Afghanistan; too wide for the alleyways of Iraq; and they are prone to rollover. The military now wants a scaled-down version that will combine the off-road agility of a Humvee and the survivability of an MRAP.
But the real news here is the potential scale of the "MRAP Lite" buy: the Army may buy as many as 10,000 of them. On Friday, the Army posted a pre-solicitation announcement for a vehicle called the MRAP All-Terrain Vehicle, or M-ATV. The announcement -- issued in response to an urgent request from the field -- says the M-ATV order could run from a "probable" production quantity of 2,080 vehicles up to a maximum of 10,000 new trucks.
That's a lot of new trucks. Potential bidders are being asked to deliver five test vehicles for MRAP Lite; the Army will then select as many as five models for further testing. At the end of testing, the government may source vehicles from a single M-ATV producer -- or place production orders with multiple manufacturers.
Designing a nimble, survivable off-road vehicle will push the boundaries of design. The new vehicle is supposed to incorporate protection against explosively formed projectiles and rocket propelled grenades, and that probably means bulking up with an extra layer of armor. While effective defenses have been developed against such threats, the addition of EFP and RPG protection has driven up the weight of the standard MRAP.
Making a vehicle that is both light and survivable is also the goal of the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle, a project to develop a next-gen successor to the Humvee. The Pentagon recently picked three finalists in the JLTV contest. But with more money going to mini-MRAPs, one has to wonder where the money is going to come from for the next-generation truck buy.
With a production run of up to 10,000 vehicles, we should get in on this program to tap economies of scale and replace the G-Wagon, LSVW and MILCOT in one go.