I’ve been out for over a decade (RACT), just thought it would help retention for the reserves with a resemblance of armour protection and not having to run around in land rovers, alright for RACT but not RAAC. If ASLAV is not as maintenance heavy as M113 would have thought they were a better fit, with hindsight upgrading the M113 while a good idea at the time wasted a perfect opportunity to upgrade the Armoured Corps with a light(ASLAV) medium(Bionix/CV-90/Puma AFV) and heavy(m1 Abrams) fleet of vehicles.
The way they gutted the reserves in the 90's I actually thought it would have been better of getting rid of reserves altogether and the money going to ARA, it would be interesting to find out how many experience members walked out the gate when M113 was withdrawn.
Problem with ASLAV's is that weren't really enough bought even for the ARA, there wasn't enough to equip the Chocs too. M113A1 was entirely obsolete and had to go, but Project Mulgara had been cancelled and the Reserve Armoured units were worse than useless, because they were soaking up funding whilst not contributing to Army outputs, because their vehicles were so crap they spent more time working on them than they did training on them.
They were not deployable for anything beyond Timor, which after the first 12 months or so didn't even really need armour and the fact was (and is) that a person can be converted from a Land Rover to a light armoured vehicle qualification in a matter of weeks, but individual and collective training oppportunities were being hampered by the old vehicles and Army was receiving virtually no benefit from these units whatsoever.
I saw it coming in 2/14 LHR in early 2000. We were all offered Corps transfers as the Regiment was heading towards full ARA status and being fully equipped with ASLAV's (we already had a handful of LAV-25's after the A21 restructuring program collapsed). Some went, a lot didn't but it didn't matter to the unit as it restructured, was re-equipped with modern vehicles and it's been flat out supporting operations ever since.
It was sad when the vehicles were taken away from us and we marched out but the fact is the unit as it was then could not have contributed to modern Army operations and something had to change,
Same thing happened in artillery Corps. Their rubbish old, obsolete 105mm guns were taken away and now they have 81mm mortars they can actually go and live fire and get a good deal of training done. If needed they can actually flesh out infantry mortar units on operations overseas. Not seeing many 105mm Australian guns overseas..
Now the remaining armoured and artillery units can actually train instead of just maintain and I seriously doubt people are leaving just because they use Land Rovers at present instead of M113A1's or 81mm mortars instead of 45 year old 105mm's, when because of this very change, they can actually go away and do something on exercise, rather than spending days preparing your vehicles to go bush and then something else breaks and you don't end up achieving anything anyway. As used to often be the case...