The Army’s LARC-Vs were built in 1964-65 but were stored from 91 to 98 and then rebuilt with new engines. We have 64 LARC-Vs with only 12 in use at anyone time so plenty of life in the fleet. They are used to support the Army’s Amphibious Beach Team (aka Beachmaster) which controls the beach for landing craft and over beach liquid. The 14 LCM8s were built 67-71 (18 built but four disposed since) and have been rebuilt since. Both the LARC-Vs and LCM8s are to be replaced under JP 2048.
Three years on from this post, does anyone have a clearer idea as to what the future of the LARC-V fleet will be? It is almost 15 years since their life-of-type extension.
Are they being replaced? JP2048 has no scope for replacing them that I can see (Phase 6 of that project was looking at riverine craft - which are not LARC-V replacements - but that now appears to have been shelved).
My understanding is that they perform an important albeit unglamourous role in the ship-to-shore transfer of minor cargo (engines, parts, palletised loads etc) and personnel. It is worth noting that the LHDs have nothing smaller than the LCM-1E with which to bring loads ashore; there is no mention of the smaller LCVP craft built in the early 1990s and which are attached to Tobruk (2) and Success (1) with one held in reserve. If you don't want to use or have available a helicopter, do you really want to bring, for instance, engineers, HQ staff or a single rifle section ashore using a 50 tonne capacity LCM-1E?
Renderings of the LHDs continue to show four RHIBs in the well dock behind the LCM-1E landing craft, to what end I'm not sure. If they are SF RHIBs then where is their corresponding trailer and tow vehicle to get them from the vehicle deck, across the steel beach and into the flooded dock? If they do have a future as part of ADAS I'd much rather see LARC-Vs depicted instead - at least they're actually amphibious and can carry meaningful loads.
The LARC-V is unaffected by lack of infrastructure, surf zones or tidal variations, can operate in high sea states and deliver cargo and troops to a transfer point inland. No other ADF platform enjoys such capabilities.