Posted on 01/28/2006 5:12:33 PM PST by SandRat
MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va. (Jan. 26, 2006) -- The Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory hosted an Office of Naval Research presentation of the Ultra Armored Patrol Concept Vehicle to senior Army acquisition officials Jan. 18.
Lt. Gen. Joseph L. Yakovac Jr., military deputy to the assistant secretary of the Army for acquisition, logistics and technology, and his deputy, Maj. Gen. Jeffrey A. Sorenson, attended the hour-long briefing, as did program officers from MCWL and Marine Corps Combat Development Command. A viewing of the vehicle, which features innovative systems and components which potentially could enhance survivability and performance, followed the presentation.
The Ultra is a diesel-propelled, four-passenger vehicle capable of reaching 60 mph. The Ultras blast bucket cabin is built on a Ford F-350 chassis and, when armored, may be able to protect up to four passengers who are arranged in an outward, 360-degree facing orientation. But this has not been tested. Jeffrey Bradel, ONRs manager of Marine Corps maneuver science and technology, led the Jan. 18 presentation and said hollow tubes in the blast buckets frame could theoretically channel the blast from an improvised explosive device to minimize damage to the Ultra and injury to its occupants.
The Office of Naval Research used expertise from academia, industry and government, including the principal design, which was developed by the Georgia Institute of Technology.
Despite Ultras promising design, ONR representatives close to the project are cautious about touting the vehicle as the next humvee.
A lot of the guys on the project are sensitive about throwing around the phrase, humvee replacement, said Colin Babb, science writer and editor of OrigiNatoR, ONRs internal newsletter. The bottom line about Ultra is the vehicle is more about testing the central part, the armored blast bucket. Thats the novel part. Someone could turn that into a vehicle if they wanted to, but really the central idea is testing a combination of components, which is true of most of ONRs prototypes. Theyre about testing the technology and showing it off, not necessarily about building preproduction vehicles, whether theyre ships or land vehicles as in this case.
Yakovac said the Ultras radical design could influence the next generation of the Humvee or its eventual replacement.
Its a concept vehicle, and from it we will get a lot of good ideas for the Army and Marines, as we go about this in a joint manner to best meet the challenges of the future, not only with capability, but the balance of capability with cost, Yakovac said. Neither service can afford to do it alone anymore. Youre talking a quantum leap in costs, in development, production and ownership. Unfortunately, thats what drives all this. Its about how much money modern capability costs. Unless we leverage that together, we wont be able to afford the future.
L
A Rambling Wreck, you might say.
BTTT
That name brings back many memories of the 50,s through the 80's when as an over-the-road 18 wheeler(and sometimes many wheels)driver as well as an oilfield hauler; drilling rigs, gas compressors, pumping units, tubular goods, you name it, after 38 years I very likely hauled everything in the oilfield at least a hundred times a piece.
But I digress from the original subject, "War Wagon" was my C.B. "handle"!
Now be honest doesn't that just make your day?
Goodbye!
VOYAGER
Might hurt the gas milage.
Knowing Marines, C-130 Maybe, because of gross weight but, the others that is probably a cinch.
Just for ugliness alone there should be a civilian model; with much better gas milage after all the HEAVY armor is replaced with standard automotive tin-foil.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.