Apart from the BAE-Patria team with the AMV/CV90 combo Rheinmetall-KMW have the Boxer and the Puma.
Lack of a partner which is already active in Australia may hinder them though.
STK actually has a solid history of developing armoured vehichles, tracked and wheeled. Bionix IFV and the Terrex ICV springs to mind.Realistically, none of them, assuming a tracked IFV solution is sought. Individually only BAE would have a good shot at the IFV requirement with CV90.
Yes, Singaporean AFVs have been exercising at SWBTA for some years.STK actually has a solid history of developing armoured vehichles, tracked and wheeled. Bionix IFV and the Terrex ICV springs to mind.
Annually, these vehicles can be seen romping around SWBTA so I suspect Australian defence officials would already have some familiarity with the capabilities of the Bionix and Terrex.
I watched a YouTube clip of a cv90 dismounting 8 troops the other day? Sure looked like it held 8? The fire power of 40mm gun looked pretty impressive as well...We had it in this thread before. There is just is no serious modern IFV out there with a dismount capability of 8 fully rattled up dismounts in modern gear on mine resistant seats.
Apart from any possible 8 dismount solution becoming a really huge beast it adds considerable development risk.
So one or more things have to go, either protection levels, program risk reduction and/or weight and size. Wheeled platforms will be even more hard pressed to offer protection levels comparable to modern tracked IFVs.
I believe earlier versions could carry 8 but this has changed to 6 dismounts fully equipped, pretty sure the earlier versions would not have been able to support 8 fully equipped soldiers either, they would be lightI watched a YouTube clip of a cv90 dismounting 8 troops the other day? Sure looked like it held 8? The fire power of 40mm gun looked pretty impressive as well...
What changed in the design to reduce dismounts? And do the think the reduce load is a show stopper?I believe earlier versions could carry 8 but this has changed to 6 dismounts fully equipped, pretty sure the earlier versions would not have been able to support 8 fully equipped soldiers either, they would be light
Cheers
Ok thanks for that. Just curious if the cv90 derivative the armadillo would be the way to go with the occasional cv90 charging around providing fire support.....As far as I'm aware the design didn't change. What changed was the equipment carried, 8 soldiers will fit if all they carry are their rifles and not much else.
Once you add in all the extra modern kit like M72s, extra ammo, supplies, radios etc then it's too much. Combine that with the long periods soldiers can now be stuck inside as seen in conflicts like Iraq & Afghan, and 8 just doesn't work.
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Is it a show-stopper? I would suggest yes. It would undo the primary goals of Infantry 2012 and Plan Beersheba.
Land 400 is very much going down the heavy IFV route. They expect an IFV of up to 42 tonnes, which is Puma with top level armour category.Current IFVs can't meet the criteria and would appear to be close enough in weight/armour to the CRV to suggest the same vehicle could suffice.
Unless we go the heavy APC/IFV route.
In this case the options as I see them are Namer, or more risky, an Abrams-based heavy APC. This is where a General Dynamics CRV win could be useful. They produce the Abrams and may be able to produce a cost-effective heavy APC/IFV using the existing stockpile of M1s.
Very much pie-in-the-sky stuff but I believe this option could have merit.
There are some great clips on YouTube of the cv90 range of vehicles. There is even a 120mm turret version. You name it and they have a version of it. Apc, recovery, gun platform. The 40mm armed apc version looked very impressive when combine with AT missiles. As mentioned above it only carries 6 troopers.I always though the CV90 was a Swedish tank. Is the Armadillo based on a tank?
Often, most IFVs are developed as a family of vehicles based on the same chassis i.e. ARV, IFV, bridge laying. From a brigade commander's perspective, you're streamlining the logistics required to conduct operations, which is always a good thing. Also, personally I have some doubts about the usefulness of mounting ATGMs on IFVs.There are some great clips on YouTube of the cv90 range of vehicles. There is even a 120mm turret version. You name it and they have a version of it. Apc, recovery, gun platform. The 40mm armed apc version looked very impressive when combine with AT missiles. As mentioned above it only carries 6 troopers.
Agreed that the vanilla BX2 will probably not meet ADF requirements as it is tailored to domestic requirements, but I'm not counting on that being submitted.Yes, Singaporean AFVs have been exercising at SWBTA for some years.
Bionix II seems a capable vehicle but would need to step up a category to be in the same protection class as CV90 for instance.
At around 25 tonnes GVM and bearing in mind Army is expecting candidate Land 400 IFVs to be up to 42 tonnes GVM, Bionix II would need to add minimum 10 tonnes of armour to be in the game protection wise for the Land 400 IFV. Can't see this vehicle being a candidate, even an upgraded version.Often, most IFVs are developed as a family of vehicles based on the same chassis i.e. ARV, IFV, bridge laying. From a brigade commander's perspective, you're streamlining the logistics required to conduct operations, which is always a good thing. Also, personally I have some doubts about the usefulness of mounting ATGMs on IFVs.
Btw I know I'm being pedantic here but an APC is not an IFV/AFV.
Agreed that the vanilla BX2 will probably not meet ADF requirements as it is tailored to domestic requirements, but I'm not counting on that being submitted.
In terms of armour, apparently the Bionix uses the same add-on armour as the CV90.
Tend to agree. The addition of the ATGW requirement for the CRV was unexpected but welcome. It gives Army more flexibility in deploying the CRV capability and the commander more engagement options on operations.@Meatshield
The Swedish CV9040 are the oldest of the bunch with export customers getting the more capable CV9030 and CV9035 (Mk.II and III).
@bdique
What are your doubts when it comes to ATGMs on IFVs?
I wouldn't want an IFV without them as it offers so much more flexibility.
Heavy long range AT overwatch of the accompanying tanks or ones own advancing infantry. AT ambush and additional of center support in the defense. The ability to blow up structures and bunkers when there is no tank at hand.
And apart from costs nearly no disadvantages. The additional weigth is neglible. Additional space requirements for spare rounds is a point but it depends on how many one wants to carry.