BBC News - Five Australian soldiers killed in AfghanistanFive Australian soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan in two separate incidents, defence officials say.
Three soldiers were killed by a man in Afghan army uniform in Uruzgan province on Wednesday, the latest in a series of so-called "green-on-blue" attacks.
In a separate incident, two others were killed in a helicopter crash in Helmand province on Thursday.
PM Julia Gillard said that "in a war of so many losses this is our single worst day in Afghanistan".
Do you know if any interest has been shown or indicated in the US GCV IFV ? Looks like the timings would suit ? Also could we possibly/potentially show any interest in the USMC ACV ?The rough intent of LAND 400 was to provide two main classes of vehicles: the cavalry combat system (an Infantry Fighting Vehicle like CV90, Puma, etc) to replace the ASLAV and some of the M113AS4s and the land combat vehicle system to replace the Bushmasters and balance of the M113AS4s.
As Raven points out things have changed in the past few years. LAND 400 Phase 2 seems to now be solely focused on the cavalry vehicle (now using the name land combat vehicle system) with Bushmaster replacement to come later in a Phase 3 or some other program. It is the replacement of the Bushmasters and combat support M113s that will push LAND 400 over 1,000 units.
However the IFV build is likely to include significant Australian content if not an entire build. Denmark built the turrets for their CV9035s and there were only 45 vehicles on order.
There might be interest in the US GCV, depending on timelines and costs. Its probably too early to say though. The vehicles that have been costed at this stage is the 'High' combination of Puma and Boxer, the 'Middle' combination of CV90 and VBCI and the 'Low' combination of upgraded ASLAVs and M113s (for comparison purposes only, I hope). In each case the tracked vehicle is equipped with a 40mm CTA and ATGM for every third vehicle, and the wheeled vehicle equipped with 12.7mm/40mm RWS.Do you know if any interest has been shown or indicated in the US GCV IFV ? Looks like the timings would suit ? Also could we possibly/potentially show any interest in the USMC ACV ?
Cheers
An interesting option for the wheeled vehicle is the RG 35 (and no doubt will be offered by BAES). With its bullet proof glass windows and deep V hull it looks like a MRAP truck. But its design heritage is from the Ratel and it has a monocoque hull and side mounted engine. Interestingly in the presentation slides (and seen on their promo video) they have designed a version of the RG 35 with periscopes in place of the windows for higher level armour protection. One configuration of this version even has the engine moved to the rear a lowered forward hull and a two man turret. Its basically a thick skinned ASLAV with a deep V anti mine hull. Anyway even the basic 6x6 with windows RG 35 would make for a good APC with a level of armour and mobility above the Bushmaster.There might be interest in the US GCV, depending on timelines and costs. Its probably too early to say though. The vehicles that have been costed at this stage is the 'High' combination of Puma and Boxer, the 'Middle' combination of CV90 and VBCI and the 'Low' combination of upgraded ASLAVs and M113s (for comparison purposes only, I hope). In each case the tracked vehicle is equipped with a 40mm CTA and ATGM for every third vehicle, and the wheeled vehicle equipped with 12.7mm/40mm RWS.
And ADI/Thales are about 10 years ahead of you on that one... But the problem with converting the Bushmaster into a turreted IFV is the effect of the forward engine on centre of gravity and the cross section of the hull on shoe horning in a turret basket. The RG 35 has the advantage of being designed from scratch for these considerations so has an engine that is centrally located without interfering for interior fore and aft movement and can be moved to be between any two axels and a 'fatter' cross section for the turret basket.I've come to believe that something similar could be made of the Bushmaster.
Once in service savings could be made through drivetrain and other systems commonalities the issue would be in increased manufacturing costs related to additional enabling products, i.e. jigs fixtures etc. Worth it, I don't know maybe, it depends how many we want over how long. If we are talking a followon build then it does make sense as you would need to redo anything for a completely new product so everything you are able to reuse from the Bushmaster would become a saving.And ADI/Thales are about 10 years ahead of you on that one... But the problem with converting the Bushmaster into a turreted IFV is the effect of the forward engine on centre of gravity and the cross section of the hull on shoe horning in a turret basket. The RG 35 has the advantage of being designed from scratch for these considerations so has an engine that is centrally located without interfering for interior fore and aft movement and can be moved to be between any two axels and a 'fatter' cross section for the turret basket.
Now you could fit a turret to the Bushmaster but it would be higher and more to the rear than on a similar footprint and mass RG 35. Which means a less manoeuvrable vehicle, more vulnerable and with less effective firing arcs. It would probably be a lot simpler just to reverse the transmission and swap the forward and rear axles and turn the Bushmaster into a rear engine vehicle for a turret carrier. But then you would have to add side access doors for the dismount team. So basically a new hull design.
Engine block would be protected by the V shaped armoured hull. No need to worry about the South African's getting this sort of thing right - they have been doing mine protected vehicles better than anyone else for decades. The rest of the world started to catch up a decade ago.I was surprised by the weight of the RG35, 18t according to the web. Although I would be worried about the placement of the engine. Given the affects IEDs have on our Bushies, even if V-hull prevented a hull penetration the blast would likely catch the engine block and send the vehicle spinning.
Doing a barrell roll in an 18t vehicle would not be fun. Not that any IED strike is fun. It would be good to know if the engine block is designed to break free under a substantial strike.
Although they may have lost some of their brain bank in that 10 years.Engine block would be protected by the V shaped armoured hull. No need to worry about the South African's getting this sort of thing right - they have been doing mine protected vehicles better than anyone else for decades. The rest of the world started to catch up a decade ago.
The Mbombe? It’s still supposed to be STANAG 4569 Level IV against mine blast.Although they may have lost some of their brain bank in that 10 years.
the latest vehicles coming out from some of their shops are flat bottomed ......
The Army is actually pretty good at raising new units and standing up a 4th brigade and 8th infantry battalion (already have the 7th) wouldn’t take too long. They key thing is the funding for the personnel and facilities. You could either split 1 Bde into two brigades with one at Darwin and the other at Adelaide or split 3 Bde with a new brigade based around 2 RAR specialising in the amphibious role.An interesting aspect of this discussion is how hard it is to get to an 'Army of fours' and the sustainment benefits this would deliver.
Working on 4 identical motorised infantry brigades each able to generate 3 battlegroups based on:
Another squadron of Abrams wouldn’t cost more than $200m. Raising a fourth ACR from LAND 400 again wouldn’t be more than a 10-20% additional cost for more vehicles because a lot of the outlay is on capability (training, maintenance infrastructure) that would be shared without significant scope change by either three or four ACRs. The big cost differential is in the Army’s annual budget with a ~25-30% increase in wages, housing, training and other sustainment costs for the field force.Pretty significant expansion. Costs could be kept down by going all wheeled with the exception of Abrams, Abrams support vehicles and some engineering vehicles but it would still be pretty expensive.
The cultural change would have to more intensive than that because if you let Defence completely self-manage their allotment they would still spend heaps on the same level on useless bureaucracy. You would need a cabinet level push to par back the inefficiency by slashing bureaucratic management and changing the ADF career system.This may also be part of the answer to Abe's ongoing question about Defence productivity. Specifying the capability desired and then requiring defence to deliver that capability in the most cost effective manner would at least raise the possibility of measuring the performance of Defence.
What you have listed there is actually about a doubling of the manoeuvre force, not just increasing by a third. In particular the ACR you describe is about double the size of the planned one, and would need about 335 armoured vehicles. That is some regiment. It would also need an equivalent increase in the rest of the Army to support. Of course, just increasing the Army by a planned Beersheba brigade will be more achieveable.An interesting aspect of this discussion is how hard it is to get to an 'Army of fours' and the sustainment benefits this would deliver.
Working on 4 identical motorised infantry brigades each able to generate 3 battlegroups based on:
1 ACR+ (3 Sabre, 1 Abrams, 2 APC Squadrons - lift for 2 inf battalions)
2 Infantry battalions
1 Artillery regiment (3x6 gun battery equiv.)
1 Engineering regiment (3 squadrons)
1 Support battalion
This requires 12 Sabre squadrons, 4 Abrams, 12 Engineering squadrons, 8 Infantry battalions and 12 artillery battery equivalent.